Research Bio
Onja Razafindratsima is an ecologist, broadly interested in tropical ecology, plant-animal interactions and community ecology. She also aims to apply her research findings to biodiversity conservation. Much of her work has been conducted in the tropical forests of Madagascar, with a focus on lemurs and plants. However, she has been collaborating on ecological research in other systems. She has been involved in projects that aims to:
- provide new insights about the roles and impacts of frugivorous vertebrates in terrestrial systems as seed dispersal agents,
- identify mechanisms that underlie the structure of ecological communities
- characterize biodiversity responses to ecological changes (e.g., land use, defaunation, invasive species)
- investigate the drivers and consequences of species extinctions
- apply ecological research to guide forest restoration and biodiversity conservation
She often uses an integrative approach combining empirical work, such as field surveys and experiments, with simulation-based modeling and phylogenetic tools to address her research questions at various spatial and temporal scales.
Research Expertise and Interest
tropical ecology, community ecology, plant-animal interactions, primatology, biodiversity
Teaching
Ecology [ESPM C153 - 001]
Special Study in Integrative Biology [INTEGBI 298 - 380]
Graduate Research [INTEGBI 299 - 380]
The Animal In You: Evolutionary Traces In The Human Body [INTEGBI 38 - 001]
Ecology [INTEGBI C153 - 001]
Supervised Research: Biological Sciences [UGIS 192C - 058]
Special Study in Integrative Biology [INTEGBI 298 - 373]
Graduate Research [INTEGBI 299 - 373]
Supervised Research: Biological Sciences [UGIS 192C - 061]
Ecology [ESPM C153 - 001]
Graduate Research [INTEGBI 299 - 373]
Ecology [INTEGBI C153 - 001]
Supervised Research: Biological Sciences [UGIS 192C - 084]