. Annual report. Harvard University. Museum of Comparative Zoology. Andrew A. Biewener Charles P. Lyman Professor of Biology Director, Concord Field Station Chair, Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology Prof. Biewener's research focuses on the biomechanics, neuromuscular function, and control of animal movement. His goal is to understand general principles that govern the biomechanical and physiological design of vertebrate neuro-musculoskeletal systems. Scott V. Edwards Professor of Biology Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology Curator of Ornithology Prof. Edwards' research focuse


. Annual report. Harvard University. Museum of Comparative Zoology. Andrew A. Biewener Charles P. Lyman Professor of Biology Director, Concord Field Station Chair, Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology Prof. Biewener's research focuses on the biomechanics, neuromuscular function, and control of animal movement. His goal is to understand general principles that govern the biomechanical and physiological design of vertebrate neuro-musculoskeletal systems. Scott V. Edwards Professor of Biology Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology Curator of Ornithology Prof. Edwards' research focuses on the evolutionary biology of birds and relatives, using the guiding principles of population genetics, geographic variation, genome evolution, systematics, and natural history. Current projects include utilizing genomic technologies to examine sex chromosome and genome evolution across the reptile-bird transition, speciation analysis and phylogeography in Austrailian and North American birds, as well as genomics of host-parasite co-evolution in House Finches and their bacterial pathogens. i "5 I si Gonzalo Giribet Professor of Biology Curator of Invertebrate Zoology Prof. Giribet's primary research focuses on the evolution and biogeography of invertebrate animals. Working in molecular systematics since the field's early days, he is also interested in philosophical aspects of sequence data analysis, emphasizing homology-related issues. Prof. Giribet's interests have remained diverse, with research concentrating in arthropods—including arachnids, myriapods, insects, and crustaceans—in locations around the world, and he is the primary investigator for a National Science Foundation's Assembling the Tree of Life grant. Consequently, researchers in the Giribet Lab have studied a wide range of invertebrates since the lab's inception in 2000. Current projects in the Giribet Lab include a multidisciplinary study for Assembling the Protostome Tree of Life, Assembling the Biv


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