Dustin Reichard

Associate Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences

Education

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Dustin Reichard teaches a variety of classes in Organismal Biology, Evolution, and Animal Behavior. His research focuses broadly on the evolution of animal behavior with a particular emphasis on birds. He investigates research questions related to why behaviors are adaptive and beneficial to the organism (ultimate reasoning) as well as understanding the hormonal mechanisms that cause organisms to behave in a particular way (proximate reasoning). 

Historically, Dr. Reichard's work focused on animal communication, specifically understanding the forces that shape the structure of birdsong and how birds use song to convey information during social interactions. In addition, he investigated how circulating hormone levels affect singing during social interactions, and in turn, how those same interactions feedback to change hormone levels after the interaction ends. 

More recently, his lab's focus has shifted somewhat to investigating how parents respond to predatory threats at their nest, and he has also leveraged large publicly available datasets to investigate questions over longer time scales. These studies are mostly conducted in the field with free-living songbirds, predominantly Dark-eyed Juncos, House Wrens, and Carolina Wrens. For more details, please check out some of the publications listed below (*denotes an OWU undergraduate co-author) or reach out to Dr. Reichard directly. 

Areas of Interest/Expertise

Recent Media

Selected Publications