Research Bio
Tierra Smiley Evans is an assistant professor of Emerging Zoonoses at the School of Public Health with a joint appointment in the department of Integrative Biology. Her research investigates how anthropogenic forest change alters the ecology and evolution of zoonotic viruses. The Smiley Lab studies the relationship between global forest change, biodiversity loss and disease emergence and how we expect patterns of disease spillover at newly created forest edges to impact human and wildlife health.
Research Expertise and Interest
zoonotic infectious disease, anthropogenic forest change
Teaching
Directed Undergraduate Research [INTEGBI 191]
Supervised Internship [INTEGBI 197]
Supervised Independent Study and Research [INTEGBI 199]
Special Study in Integrative Biology [INTEGBI 298]
Graduate Research [INTEGBI 299]
Supervised Independent Study and Research [INTEGBI 99]
Thesis Course [INTEGBI H196A]
Thesis Course [INTEGBI H196B]
Independent Research [PBHLTH 299]
Special Study in Integrative Biology [INTEGBI 298]
Independent Research [PBHLTH 299]