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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

2015

J. Kirchman, J. Ralston, D. Ermacor 2015, A New Wood Warbler Hybrid (Oreothlypis celata x O. ruficapilla) from the Adirondack Mountains, New York, The Wilson Journal of Ornithology 127, 21-28. 10.1676/14-052.1

2014

J. Kirchman, K. Schneider 2014, Range Expansion and the Breakdown of Bergmann’s Rule in Red-Bellied Woodpeckers (Melanerpes carolinus), The Wilson Journal of Ornithology 126, 236-248. 10.1676/13-087.1

2013

J. Kirchman, J. Ralston 2013, Predicted Range Shifts in North American Boreal Forest Birds and the Effect of Climate Change on Genetic Diversity in Blackpoll Warblers (Setophaga striata), Conservation Genetics 14, 543-555. 10.1007/s10592-012-0418-y

2012

J. Kirchman, E. Schirtzinger, T. Wright 2012, Phylogenetic Relationships of the Extinct Carolina Parakeet (Conuropsis carolinensis) Inferred From DNA Sequence Data, The Auk 129, 197-204. 10.1525/auk.2012.11259
J. Kirchman 2012, Speciation of Flightless Rails on Islands: A Dna-Based Phylogeny of the Typical Rails of the Pacific, The Auk 129, 56-69. 10.1525/auk.2011.11096
J. Kirchman, M. LeCroy, L. Horst 2012, Rediscovery of Missing Specimens Once Held at Vassar College, Including the Holotype of Baudo Guan Penelope ortoni, Bulletin of the British Ornithologists’ Club 132, 222-224.
J. Kirchman, J. Ralston 2012, Continent-scale Genetic Structure in a Boreal Forest Migrant, the Blackpoll Warbler (Setophaga striata), The Auk 129, 467-478. 10.1525/auk.2012.11260

2011

J. Kirchman, J. Ralston, N. Gifford 2011, Stable Isotope Analysis of Fall Migration Stopover by Six Passerine Species in an Inland Pitch Pine-Scrub Oak Barren, The Wilson Journal of Ornithology 123, 548-556. 10.1676/10-174.1

2010

R. Kays, J. Kirchman, A. Curtis 2010, Rapid Adaptive Evolution of Northeastern Coyotes via Hybridization with Wolves, Biology Letters 6, 89-93. 10.1098/rsbl.2009.0575
R. Kays, J. Kirchman, A. Curtis 2010, Reply to Wheeldon et al. ’Colonization History and Ancestry of Northeastern Coyotes’, Biology Letters 6, 248-249. 10.1098/rsbl.2009.1022