BotanyMegan Sullivan
2019 The Garden Club of America Fellowship in Tropical Botany

Megan Sullivan is a PhD candidate at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. Her research uses ecological theory to understand why tropical forests have such high tree species biodiversity. She aims to apply these theories in disturbed ecosystems, where they are understudied. Her project examines seedling regeneration patterns and species functional trait information to understand how selective logging—a low-level, wide-scale, human disturbance—changes which species regenerate and survive in logged forests compared to unlogged forests. Results of this study will contribute to understanding how logging changes the biodiversity and function (e.g. carbon stock potential or fruit- bearing potential to support wildlife communities) of Afrotropical forests.
The Garden Club of America Fellowship in Tropical Botany
To promote the preservation of tropical forests by enlarging the body of botanists with field experience.
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