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College of Agricultural & Life Sciences

Physical Address:
E. J. Iddings Agricultural Science Laboratory, Room 52
606 S Rayburn St

Mailing Address:
875 Perimeter Drive MS 2331
Moscow, ID 83844-2331

Phone: 208-885-6681

Fax: 208-885-6654

Email: ag@uidaho.edu

Searching for New Species

妻友社区 doctoral student Karina Silvestre Bringas and her advisor in the College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, Chris Hamilton, spent a month hiking unexplored areas of 鈥渟ky islands鈥 in search of undiscovered tarantula species.

Spanning from southeastern Arizona and southwestern New Mexico into northwestern Mexico, the Madrean Sky Islands aren鈥檛 islands in the traditional sense 鈥 they鈥檙e remote mountains covered with Madrean pine and oak forests, isolated by harsh deserts rather than water. And they are considered hot spots for biodiversity.

In support of their groundbreaking research, Bringas and Hamilton earned the prestigious , which is awarded annually to graduate students and their advisors who advance equity and inclusion in science through their work.

The pair learned they鈥檇 been accepted for the fellowship in spring 2023 and are a third of the way through the three-year Gilliam Fellows Program. U of I is allowed a single entry per year for the fellowship and had never previously submitted a winning application. Bringas and Hamilton, who were nominated by U of I Vice President for Research and Economic Development Chris Nomura, will share $53,000 toward personal development and fellowship-related training.

The program will offer Bringas lessons in advancing equity and inclusion in science, in addition to opportunities to present her research at conferences. She also gets to present her project annually at a September symposium the fellowship organizes for its active recipients. Hamilton, an assistant professor in the Department of Entomology, Plant Pathology and Nematology who specializes in the biodiversity of moths and spiders, will attend a conference in 2024 hosted by the fellowship, focused on teaching with equity and inclusion in mind. The funding will also support Hamilton鈥檚 plans to bring accomplished scientists of Indigenous ancestry on campus to inspire U of I students from underrepresented populations.

Bringas earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in biochemistry from San Diego State University before pursuing her doctorate in entomology at U of I. She鈥檚 a participant in the university鈥檚 Bridge to Doctorate Program, which provides funding for Indigenous doctoral students. Bringas is indigenous to southern Mexico.

During a pair of two-week trips to explore the Madrean Sky Islands, Bringas helped find about 10 previously undescribed tarantula species. She鈥檚 ventured to about 15 of the 65 sky islands, focusing most of her search time on the Mexican side.

鈥淲hen we came in, we believed there would be at least one endemic tarantula species per sky island, especially at the higher elevation ones,鈥 said Bringas, who plans to pursue a career as a science teacher or professor. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been to so many of these mountains already and there are still so many to go, and we鈥檝e been finding a lot of tarantulas that have not been described before.鈥

Hamilton started his search for tarantulas in the Madrean Sky Islands after joining U of I in 2018, and the project gained steam a couple of years later when he received a grant through the National Science Foundation鈥檚 Faculty Early Career Development Program. He鈥檚 visited more than 30 of the sky islands, initially focusing the search on the American side, where there鈥檚 ample access from federal lands. More recently, his project has been granted unprecedented access to private lands on the Mexican side, with help from several collaborators in Mexico.

鈥淥n the Mexican side all of the land is private,鈥 Hamilton said. 鈥淪o far, we feel like based on talking with landowners and ranchers, we鈥檙e the first people they鈥檝e ever had up in their mountains.鈥

The next major thrust of the research project will be sequencing genomes of several tarantula species from the mountains and surrounding desert. They鈥檒l focus on genes related to physiology and evaluating genomic changes.

A portrait of a woman.
Doctoral student Karina Silvestre Bringas and advisor Chris Hamilton earned the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Gilliam Fellowship in 2023, awarded to graduate students and advisors who advance equity and inclusion in science through their work.
A close up image of a female tarantula.
A previously undescribed female tarantula was found by the research team during a trip in 2023.

Article by John O鈥機onnell, College of Agricultural and Life Sciences

Photos provided by Chris Hamilton

Published in March 2024

Contact

College of Agricultural & Life Sciences

Physical Address:
E. J. Iddings Agricultural Science Laboratory, Room 52
606 S Rayburn St

Mailing Address:
875 Perimeter Drive MS 2331
Moscow, ID 83844-2331

Phone: 208-885-6681

Fax: 208-885-6654

Email: ag@uidaho.edu