Ward C. Wheeler

Divisional Chair and Curator
Invertebrate Zoology

Education
  • Harvard University, Ph.D., 1988
  • Yale College, B.A., 1985

Research Interests

Ward Wheeler’s research focuses on the systematic relationships among and within insects, crustaceans, and chelicerates. His laboratory at the AMNH sequences DNA and reconstructs evolutionary trees to determine how these taxa and their anatomy and DNA have evolved over the past 500 million years. Dr. Wheeler has built a series of high performance cluster computers to analyze these data, some of the fastest used in phylogenetic research in the world. He has developed theory and algorithms to interpret evolutionary patterns of DNA and anatomy. This technology is put to use in the American Museum's quest to link extinct lineages with the DNA, morphology, and behavior of species that survive today. Dr. Wheeler joined the AMNH staff in 1989 and since then has authored over 100 scientific publications, several books and software packages, and has been awarded a US patent in DNA sequence analysis.

Teaching Experience

  • Faculty Appointments
    • Adjunct Professor, Columbia University, 1991-present
    • Adjunct Professor, NYU, 1991-present
    • Adjunct Professor, CUNY, 1989-present
  • Courses Taught
    • Molecular Evolution, Molecular Systematics, Tutorial in Molecular Evolution, Theory and Use of POY
    • Systematics and Sequence Analysis, Helsinki, Finland, 2004
    • Molecular Systematics, Tucumán, Argentina, 2002
    • Computational Systematics, Espoo, Finland, 2001
    • Computational Systematics, Copenhagen, Denmark, 2000
    • DNA Sequence alignment et seq, Helsinki, Finland, 1999
    • Molecular Systematics, Uppsala Sweden; Helsinki, Finland, 1998
    • Molecular Systematics, Helsinki, Finland, 1995
    • Molecular Character Analysis, Tulgarn, Sweden, 1993
  • Graduate Advisees
    • 10 students advised since 1994. Recent students include: 
      • Andres Varon, CUNY
      • Robert Schelly, Columbia University
      • Taran Grant, Columbia University
      • Julian Faivovich, Columbia University
      • William Leo Smith, Columbia University
  • Graduate Committees
    • Andres Varon, CUNY (chair)
    • Taran Grant, Columbia University
    • Julian Faivovich, Columbia University
    • William Leo Smith, Columbia University
    • Robert Schelly, Columbia University
    • Daniel Thornton, Columbia University
    • Benjamin Evans, Columbia University