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Dr. John Knox

  

Education

     Undergraduate Degree: A.B., Drew University, 1964

     Graduate Degrees: M.S., University of Maryland

          Ph.D., Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

  

Joined W&L Faculty in 1976

  

Courses Taught at W&L

    Field Botany (Biology 230)

    Evolution Seminar (Biology 295)

    Biological Diversity (Biology 246)

    Plant Diversity (Biology 235)

    Evolution (Biology 340)

  

Current Research Interests

     I am interested in describing and explaining patterns of plant distribution occurring in nature.  For many years I have been studying Helenium virginicum, a rare plant that is globally limited in distribution to 30 sinkhole ponds in Augusta and Rockingham Counties, Virginia, and 30 wetlands in Missouri.  Work in my lab helped to establish the distribution of this plant and provided some explanations for its rarity.  The plant is now protected by the state of Virginia and the federal government's Endangered Species Act.  Rarity seems to reflect tolerance by the plant of a rare habitat that offers relatively little competition because  of the stressful combination of its soil chemistry and variable hydroperiod.  Other factors that may contribute to the plant's rarity that we are studying are: a self-incompatible breeding system, special requirements for seed germination, and the extreme variability of the hydroperiod at the sinkhole ponds.

     I am collaborating with a W&L colleague, molecular biologist, Dr. Maryanne Simurda, who is sequencing ITS regions of the nuclear DNA in an effort to determine the evolutionary history of H. virginicum in relation to its closest relatives.  The final stage of this study has revealed that H. virginicum is a monophyletic taxon, distinct from other similar Helenium species, and that it has a remarkable disjunct distribution between Virginia and Missouri.  We have found that the sister group to H. virginicum is a cluster of  H. autumnale populations that grow on the Bruce Peninsula, Ontario, Canada.

    In 2001 I began a long-term experiment in collaboration with colleagues (Drs. Hurd, and Hamilton) to study the question of whether decreasing the diversity of plant species living together in a community decreases resistance of that community to invasion.  This is an important question today, at a time when alien species are seen as a threat to native species, and when the rate of species extinction is high, and so we are trying to understand the ramifications of these losses.  The work is being carried out at a research site on campus where 66 plots each 3 m X 3 m in area have been sown with native plant species at three levels of diversity (3, 12, and 24 species).  Over  15 years we shall be monitoring plots for evidence of differences in resistance to invasion, and seeking an understanding of the mechanisms responsible through the study of three trophic levels.  

Recent Publications

  • Simurda, M. C., D. C. Marshall, and J. S. Knox.  2005.  Phylogeography of the narrow endemic Helenium virginicum (Asteraceae), based upon ITS sequence comparisons.  Systematic Botany 30 (4): in press.
  • Adams, V. M., D. M. Marsh, and J. S. Knox.  2005.  Importance of the seed bank for population viability and population monitoring in a threatened wetland herb.  Biological Conservation 124: 426-436.
  • Simurda, M. C. and J. S. Knox.  2000.  ITS sequence evidence for the disjunct distribution between Virginia and Missouri of the narrow endemic Helenium viginicum (Asteraceae).  Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society  127: 316-323.
  • Knox, J.S., F.W. Sterns Jr., and C.K. Dietzel.  1999.  Factors controlling the distribution and abundance of the narrow endemic, Helenium virginicum (Asteraceae): antiherbivore defense?  Banisteria 13:95-100.
  • Messmore, N. A. and J.S. Knox.  1997.  The breeding system of the narrow endemic, Helenium virginicum (Asteraceae).  Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 124(4):318-321.
  • Knox, J. S.  1997.  A nine year demographic study of Helenium virginicum (Asteraceae), a narrow endemic seasonal wetland plant.  Journal of  the Torrey Botanical Society 124(3): 236-245.
  • Knox, J.S., M.J. Gutowski, D.C. Marshall, and O.G. Rand.  1995.  Tests of the genetic bases of character differences between Helenium virginicum and H. autumnale (Asteraceae) using common gardens and transplant studies.  Systematic Botany 20(2):120-131.
  • Knox, J.S. and A. Knox.  1987.  Seed plants of the Chessie Trail.  Pages 29-69 in L.I. Bland, ed. Field guide to the Chessie Nature Trail.  Rockbridge Area Conservation Council, Lexington, Va.
  • Barr, D.J.S., N.L. Desaulniers, and J.S. Knox.  1987.  Catenochytridium hemicysti N. Sp.:  morphology, physiology, and zoospore ultrastructure. Mycologia 79(4):587-594.
  • Knox, J.S.  1987.  An experimental garden test of characters used to distinguish Helenium virginicum Blake from H. autumnale L. Castanea 52(1):52-58.