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Dr. Jeremy J. Wright

Curator of Ichthyology
jeremy.wright@nysed.gov
518-283-9005

My research utilizes my experience as a museum-trained ichthyologist to inform my pursuits as an ecologist and evolutionary biologist, and vice-versa. Broadly speaking, I use biochemical, toxicological, and behavioral information to explore the evolution of venomous fishes, within a rigorously developed phylogenetic framework, which is derived from collections-based morphological and genetic data. This work has resulted in the discovery of previously unrecognized biodiversity and the resolution of evolutionary relationships in my groups of interest, while also representing the first steps to gaining a greater understanding of defensive venoms and the development of an important anti-predatory adaptation in a globally ubiquitous group of organisms, which represent a significant component of many areas’ aquatic vertebrate biodiversity. 

Additionally, I have recently initiated systematic examinations of several of New York’s native fish species, which have revealed the likely presence of undescribed fish species in our state’s watersheds. Because these species are also widely distributed throughout North America, these studies have the potential not only to improve our understanding of the diversity, evolution, and assembly of our own native fauna, but to make significant contributions to the resolution of longstanding ichthyological questions at a broader, national scale.

Publications

2015

E. Landing, S. Westrop 2015, Late Cambrian (middle Furongian) Shallow-Marine Dysoxic Mudstone with Calcrete and Brachiopod–Olenid–Lotagnostus Faunas in Avalonian Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Geological Magazine 152, 973-992. 10.1017/S001675681400079X
E. Landing, VanAller Hernick, F. Mannolini, D. Potvin-Leduc, R. Cloutier 2015, Middle Devonian (Givetian) Sharks from Cairo, New York (USA): Evidence of Early Cosmopolitanism, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 60, 183-200. 10.4202/app.2012.0101

2014

Williams, M., Zalasiewicz, J., Waters, C., Landing, E., 2014. Is the Fossil Record of Complex Animal Behaviour a Stratigraphical Analogue for the Anthropocene?, in: Waters, N., Zalasiewicz, J., Williams, M., Ellis, M., Snelling, A. (Eds.), A Stratigraphical Basis for the Anthropocene. Geological Society of London, London, pp. 143-148.
E. Landing, S. Westrop, J. Adrain, T. Karin 2014, Trilobite Biostratigraphy of the Stairsian Stage (upper Tremadocian) of the Ibexian Series, Lower Ordovician, Western United States, Memoirs of the Associaiton of Australasian Palaeontologists 45, 167–214.
E. Landing, G. Retallack 2014, Affinities and Architecture of Devonian Trunks of Prototaxites loganii, Mycologia , 1143-1158. 10.3852/13-390
E. Landing, G.J. Retallack 2014, Affinities and architecture of Devonian trunks of Prototaxites loganii, Mycologia 106, 1143-1158. 10.3852/13-390
E. Landing, G.J. Retallack 2014, Affinities and architecture of Devonian trunks Prototaxites loganii. Supplement., Mycology 106, . doi:10.3852/13-390

2013

G. Geyer, E. Landing, M. Brasier, S. Bowring 2013, Cambrian Evolutionary Radiation: Context, Correlation, and Chronostratigraphy—Overcoming Deficiencies of the First Appearance Datum (FAD) Concept, Earth-Science Reviews 123, 133-172. 10.1016/j.earscirev.2013.03.008
E. Landing, M. Williams, M. Mohibullah 2013, First Middle Ordovician Ostracods from Western Avalonia: Paleogeographical and Paleoenvironmental Significance, Journal of Paleontology 87, 269-276. 10.1666/12-065R1.1
E. Landing, S. Westrop, S. Bowring 2013, Reconstructing the Avalonia Palaeocontinent in the Cambrian: A 519 Ma Caliche in South Wales and Transcontinental Middle Terreneuvian Sandstones, Geology Magazine 150, 1022-1046. 10.1017/S0016756813000228