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University of Missouri- St. Louis Biology PhD student awarded grant for field research in Guyana

Last Updated on Monday, 22 September 2014, 22:39 by GxMedia

Gyanpriya Maharaj

(UMSL DAILY http://blogs.umsl.edu/)  Gyanpriya Maharaj had already collaborated with Godfrey R. Bourne on several ecological projects before enrolling at the University of Missouriā€“St. Louis.

Maharaj studied butterflies with Bourne in her home country, Guyana, before joining the biology associate professorā€™s UMSL lab in 2012. In that time she has made steady progress and is now a third-year doctoral candidate in biology.

This past summer she returned to Guyana for a two-month stint to continue her research on butterflies. Her trip and fieldwork were funded by a research grant from The Rufford Foundation, a charity based in London, which gives out small grants for nature conservation projects in the developing world. She received a little over $8,000.

ā€œThe grant is earmarked for conservation-based research in developing countries, so working in Guyana perfectly fits the bill,ā€ she said.

During her field research this summer, Maharaj investigated the foraging habitats and flower preferences of three species of butterfly. She specifically focused her research around Lantana camara, a species of tropical flowering plant.

ā€œThe information gathered from this project will provide baseline information for habitat conservation and restoration efforts,ā€ she said.

Bourne said based on Maharajā€™s findings an experimental garden will be established.

ā€œBased on the success of this demonstration garden Priya hopes that its replication on a larger scale in degraded forestlands will mitigate butterfly species erosion throughout the Neotropics,ā€ Bourne said.

Maharaj conducted her fieldwork this summer at CEIBA Biological Center, located in a rainforest near Georgetown the capital of Guyana. Thatā€™s where she collaborated with Bourne on several projects, prior to her coming to UMSL. Bourne is the co-founder and executive director of the center, which is linked to UMSL through a formal memorandum of understanding with the Whitney R. Harris World Ecology Center.