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Dr. Jeremy J. Kirchman

Curator of Birds and Mammals
jeremy.kirchman@nysed.gov
518-474-1441

I am broadly interested in the evolution and biogeography of birds, but most of my research focuses on populations found on islands. Islands have long been considered “natural laboratories of evolution”, and studying birds on islands teaches us much about speciation, extinction, and adaptation.  I have a special interest in one group of birds, the rails (Rallidae), which are great island colonists, found even on the most remote oceanic islands.  Many rail species have evolved to become totally flightless on islands that lack mammalian predators. Closer to home, I am studying several species of birds that breed in “islands” of coniferous (boreal) forest isolated above 3000 feet of elevation in New York’s mountain ranges. I want to know if these populations of Bicknell’s Thrush, Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, Spruce Grouse and other boreal forest specialists are genetically isolated and evolving independently of one another. These high-elevation populations may be imperiled as the climate continues to warm.

Publications

2020

J. Kirchman, Naima Starkloff, Andrew Jones, Benjamin Winger, Yen-Hua Huang, Paulo in-R, Wendy Turner 2020, Drivers of community turnover differ between avian hemoparasite genera along a North American latitudinal gradient, Ecology and Evolution , . 10.1002/ece3.6283

2019

J. Kirchman, Alyssa Fitzgerald, Jason Weir, Joel Ralston, Ian Warkentin, Darroch Whitaker 2019, Genetic structure and biogeographic history of the Bicknell’s Thrush/ Gray-cheeked Thrush species complex, The Auk 137, . 10.1093/auk/ukz066
J. Kirchman, Carlos Cadena, Paulo in-R, Camila omez, Nicholas Bayly, Staffan Bensch, Alyssa FitzGerald, Naima Starkloff, Ana alez-Prieto, Keith Hobson, Judith Ungvari-Martin, Heather Skeen, Mar\ Casta\~no 2019, Migratory birds as vehicles for parasite dispersal? Infection by avian haemosporidians over the year and throughout the range of a long-distance migrant, Journal of Biogeography 46, 83-96. 10.1111/jbi.13453
J. Kirchman, Joel Ralston, Lydia Lorenc, Melissa Montes, William DeLuca, Bradley Woodworth, Stuart Mackenzie, Amy Newman, Hilary Cooke, Nikole Freeman, Alex Sutton, Lila Tauzer, Ryan Norris 2019, Length polymorphisms at two candidate genes explain variation of migratory behaviors in blackpoll warblers (Setophaga striata), Ecology and Evolution 9, 8840-8855. 10.1002/ece3.5436
J. Kirchman, J. Ralston, Alyssa FitzGerald, S. Scanga 2019, Observations of habitat associations in boreal forest birds and the geographic variation in bird community composition, The Wilson Journal of Ornithology 131, 12-23. 10.1676/18-14

2018

J. Kirchman, Naima Starkloff, Alyssa FitzGerald 2018, Testing the predictive capabilities of ecological niche models: a case study examining Red-bellied Woodpeckers, Ecosphere 9, e02496. 10.1002/ecs2.2496

2017

J. Kirchman, Joel Ralston, Alyssa FitzGerald, Darroch Whitaker, Ian Warkentin 2017, Taxonomy and distribution of the imperilled Newfoundland Gray-cheeked Thrush, Catharus minimus minimus, Avian Conservation and Ecology 12, 10. 10.5751/ACE-00976-120110
J. Kirchman, A. Van Keuren 2017, Altitudinal Range Shifts of Birds at the Southern Periphery of the Boreal Forest: 40 Years of Change in the Adirondack Mountains, The Wilson Journal of Ornithology 129, 742–753. 10.1676/16-164.1
J. Kirchman, R. Guthrie 2017, The Curious Case of the First Specimen Record of Virginia’s Warbler (Oreothlypis virginiae) from Eastern North America, The Kingbird 67, 2-6.

2016

J. Kirchman, J. Ralston 2016, The Adirondack archipelago, Adirondack Journal of Environmental Studies 20, 17-27.