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Katie Marshall

(She/her)
Associate professor, Zoology, University of British Columbia

The long-term goal of my research is to understand how abiotic stress filters through physiology to shape species abundance and distribution. While abiotic stressors such as temperature have been used very successfully to predict population growth, distribution, and diversity of insect species, integration of the mechanisms of how these stressors are experienced by individuals from alteration of physiology through to fitness impacts has lagged. Inclusion of these mechanisms is crucial for accurate modelling predictions of individual (and therefore population-level) responses. My research to date has focused on how the impact of frequency of stress (rather than the duration or intensity of stress) is a superior predictor of both survival and reproductive success , and used insect cold tolerance as a model system.

BSc(Hons) Acadia 2007
PhD Western University 2013
Killam Postdoctoral Fellow (UBC) 2013-2015
NSERC Postdoctoral Fellow 2016
Assistant Professor, University of Oklahoma 2016-2018
Assistant Professor, UBC 2018-2023
Associate Professor, UBC 2023 - present

Experience

  • 2023–present
    Associate professor, University of British Columbia