PROJECTS

This section presents my current and previous research projects in botany, ecology, and natural history

Resolving the Taxonomy of Caribbean Mistletoes

The objectives of this project are to resolve the phylogenetic relationships and clarify the taxonomy of the endemic lineage of Caribbean mistletoes Dendropemon (Loranthaceae), including nomenclatural updates, a monographic treatment, and electronic identification keys

Documenting the Biodiversity of Parasitic Plants from the Caribbean Islands

The focus of this long-term project is to prepare a taxonomic treatment covering all lineages of parasitic plants reported for the Caribbean region

Other objectives are to prepare interactive keys to recognize species in the field and to compile information on their natural history and reproductive biology for educational and conservation purposes

Although some species of parasitic plants in the Caribbean are widespread weeds (such as the Love Vine), there are others that are endemic to small islands and critically endangered

Floristic Studies in the West Indies

One of my long-term projects is to study the floristic diversity of the Caribbean islands, aiming to prepare a comprehensive taxonomic treatment for the region with interactive keys and images

Several components of this project are in collaboration with regional and international botanists, including Dr. Pedro Acevedo (Smithsonian Institution), Dr. Jackeline Salazar (Dominican Republic), Agronomist William Cinea (Haiti), Mr. Eddy Martinez (Cuba), Mr. Alcides Morales (Puerto Rico), Dr. Fred Burton (Cayman Islands), and Mr. Keron Campbell (Jamaica)

Studies on the Flora of Puerto Rico

This long-term project aims to clarify the taxonomy of the flora of Puerto Rico, including new findings, documenting the urban flora such as cultivated and newly naturalized plants, and building interactive keys

The project also involve the collaboration with biologists and conservation agencies to identify specimens, explore botanically important areas, and propagate endangered species

Selected publications

Assessing the Diversity of Neotropical Wild Cinnamon Trees

This project, leaded by Dr. Jackeline Salazar (National Autonomous University of Santo Domingo and Grupo Jaragua, Dominican Republic), is focused on redefining the current genera of Wild Cinnamon Trees (Canellaceae) in tropical America, describing new species, and evaluating populations for conservation efforts

Understanding the Ecology and Population Genetics of the Hemiparasitic Scarlet Paintbrush, Castilleja coccinea (Orobanchaceae), in Eastern North America

In collaboration with Dr. Claude dePamphilis and Dr. Uma Venkatesh from Penn State University and other national and international researchers, we are evaluating the factors involved in the overall decrease of the iconic Scarlet Paintbrush, Castilleja coccinea, across eastern North America

This project also contemplate developing critical information to propagate this species and to promote the long-term conservation of extant populations

Ecology of Mistletoes and Tropical Plants

I have participated in several projects focused on the ecology of forest dynamics, seed predation in tropical plants, and seed dispersal of mistletoes, many of them in collaboration with Dr. Tomás Carlo from Penn State University

We conducted experimental seed plantings on several host trees with fruits dispersed by frugivorous birds and measure the survival and performance of mistletoe seedlings

Mistletoes can grow well in more species of trees than is usually observed in nature, but their seeds do not usually arrive to them because birds decide where to “plant” them

Instead, birds take mistletoe seeds to the trees they feed the most, and even when they are difficult hosts to get established, the high intensity of seeds received helps the mistletoe to get a chance to reach the right branch and thrive

Pollination Biology and Fecundity of the Caribbean Tree Goetzea elegans (Solanaceae)

This project was focused on Goetzea elegans, an endangered tree endemic to Puerto Rico and member of a basal lineage of the Nightshade family (Solanaceae)

This study, in collaboration with Dr. Eugenio Santiago (University of Puerto Rico-Río Piedras), explored two components: the species’s breeding system using cultivated plants, and the fecundity of the largest known wild population. In the first component, pollen crossings were performed to test for fruit set, seed number and seed viability

Also, the pollination efficiency between a native bird (Coereba flaveola) and the introduced honey bees (Apis mellifera) was compared

For the second component, I explored how the distance to the nearest flowering neighbor and nearby flowers in the community influenced the fruit production, seed number, and seedling viability of these rare trees

Interdisciplinary Collaborations

I have been involved in multiple inter-disciplinary projects, including studies on paleobotany, phytochemistry, genetic structure, ornithology, and genomic analyses of viruses

These studies include the description of a new species of fossilized Kauri tree from about 64 million years ago (Agathis immortalis), a new species of mistletoe-specialist bird from Borneo (the Spectacled Flowerpecker, Dicaeum dayakorum), a new species of aroid herb from the Philippines, and inferring the first genome and resolving the phylogeny of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus

For a complete list of my scientific publications, please visit

Google Scholar or Research Gate

If interested in obtaining printed or electronic copies of these publications, please contact me

For more information on parasitic plants and the Caribbean flora,

visit my Blog and Links

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