Erika Lorraine Milam, Ph.D.
Charles C. and Emily R. Gillispie Chair of the History of Science
Princeton University
Born in 1974 in Bonn, Germany
Studied Biology at Carleton College and the University of Michigan and History of Science at the University of Wisconsin
Project
Timescapes of Behavior: Long-Term Research and the Birth of Behavioral Ecology
By measuring, collecting, and analyzing, long-term projects in behavioral ecology have translated animals’ lives into vibrant understandings of the changing landscapes in which they live. Ecologists have measured changes in animal populations and behavior from season to season, each year’s observations adding to the scientific value of observations carefully acquired in previous decades. When these projects started as small, scrappy enterprises, their horizon of expectation extended only a few years into the future. By the 1990s, the accumulation of longitudinal data meant that incoming students could start analyzing questions before they even ventured to the field. Valuable on their own, in intellectual synergy these data provide a remarkable record of our planet’s ecosystems’ transformations in the past half century.Each chapter of my planned book follows the history of an animal and a place where scientists have studied its behavior for decades. As research tools have changed along with the requirements for receiving permission, so too have scientific practices and the forms of collaboration required to sustain science in the long term. The shared experiences of negotiating research permits, months spent away from campus, writing grants to the same agencies, and the tendency, as projects diversified, to study multiple animals at the same site, contributed to a shared sense of enterprise, despite the profound differences in landscapes and animal biology. Behavioral ecology as a discipline thus came to embrace organismal diversity as part of its mandate, just as conservationists lauded biodiversity as a sign of a healthy landscape.
From laughing hyenas to endangered jays, the lifetimes of individual animals make tangible how they are adapting, or not, to changing local conditions. Their fates, and ours, are woven together through time and place.
Recommended Reading
Milam, Erika Lorraine. Looking for a Few Good Males: Female Choice in Evolutionary Biology. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010.
Milam, Erika Lorraine, and Robert A. Nye, eds. Scientific Masculinities. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015.
Milam, Erika Lorraine. Creatures of Cain: The Hunt for Human Nature in Cold War America. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2019.
Colloquium, 07.11.2023
The Hyena & the Jay: Long-term Research and the Birth of Behavioral Ecology
Publications from the Fellows' Library
Milam, Erika Lorraine (Cambridge, 2021)
The evolution of Darwinain sexualities
Milam, Erika Lorraine (Pittsburgh, Pa, 2019)
The stigmata of ancestry : reinvigorating the conflict thesis in the American 1970s
Milam, Erika Lorraine (Princeton, 2019)
Creatures of Cain : the hunt for human nature in Cold War America
Milam, Erika Lorraine (Chicago, IL, 2015)
Scientific masculinities Osiris ; second series, volume 30
Milam, Erika Lorraine (Baltimore, 2011)
Looking for a few good males : female choice in evolutionary biology Animals, history, culture