Research on Pitcher Plants and their Inquilines
Sarracenia purpurea, or the purple pitcher plant, forms cup shaped leaves that readily fill with rainwater. These leaves make nectar when first opened, attracting ants and other prey that fall in and drown, providing nutrients for the plant. The open, water-filled leaves provide a habitat for a well-studied community including dipterans, mites, rotifers, protozoa, yeast, and bacteria, most of which ultimately depend on the prey captured by the host plant. These small ecosystems are ideal for experimental community ecology.
Old Research
For the last thirty years (!), we have investigated the ecology of these small aquatic communities, incluidng investigating spatial patterns among communities (Harvey and Miller 1996), consumer vs. resource control (the work of Jamie Kneitel, including Kneitel and Miller 2002), metecommunity dynamics (Kneitel and Miller 2004), ecosystem dynamics (Gray et al. 2006, Mouquet et al. 2008), and, more recently, selection and evolution in protozoa (led by Casey terHorst; terHorst 2010, Miller et al. 2014). We have continued to collaborate with wonderful colleagues on this work, especially Sarah Grey, Aaron Ellison, Nick Gotelli, Dominique Gravel, Bill Bradshaw, and Christine Holzapfel.
Current Research
Still completing a paper on dispersal and leaf heterogeneity, as well as a study of how the evolution of the protozoa affects the bacterial communities.