• About ME

    Aspiring Exoparasitologist - the future of parasitology

    Parasites are the great manipulators...are you in control?

    Current Interests

    Many types of parasites have been shown to cause extreme deviations in the host’s normal behavior, even leading to the host’s suicide to complete their lifecycles. Bacteria that are usually first obtained during birth in humans has been shown to cause personality deviations and weight gain in lab mice. Ophiocordyceps unilateralis is a fungi famous for creating zombie ants. Toxoplasmosis gondii is a coccidian intercellular protist that triggers intense attraction in rodents towards felines, overriding fear sensors. Species of nematode hairworms in crickets activate uncontrollable water-seeking behaviors that cause the host to drown themselves. A final example is Dracunculus medinensis (Guinea worm), which in humans causes an intense localized burning in the legs causing the host to seek out water to “cool” the inflamed area while the worm stealthily deposits its eggs into the water to continue its lifecycle.

     

    While these examples of parasite manipulations are extreme, they are ecologically isolated. I would hypothesize that there are influential parasitic interactions at the most foundational level of our environment; the primary production of food webs.

  • "In spite of the fact that parasites represent more than half of all living species of plants and animals, their role in the evolution of life on earth has been substantially underestimated"

     

    P. W. Wilson

  • Education

    "An investment in knowledge pays the best interest" - Benjamin Franklin

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    Temple University

    2017

    Ph.D. Student in Biology

    R. W. Sanders Lab

    Temple University Department of Biology - Philadelphia, PA

    Parasitism, protistology, mixotrophy, ecology

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    Pennsylvania State University

    2010-2012

    M.Sc. in Ecology

    I. Cattadori Lab

    The Pennsylvania State University, Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences - University Park, PA

    Thesis - Van Kuren, A.T., Stimuli promoting the arrested development of gastrointestinal helminthes in the European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus): the role of climate, host immunity, and intensity of infection. Accepted May 2, 2012.

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    Pennsylvania State University

    2004-2010

    B.Sc. in General Biology

    C. G. Mahan Lab

    The Pennsylvania State University, Altoona Campus - Altoona, PA

  • Publication

    Van Kuren, A.T., Boag, B., Hruban, E., Cattadori, I.M. 2013. Variability in the Intensity of Nematode Larvae from Gastrointestinal Tissues of a Natural Herbivore. Parasitology. 140, Issue 5, 632-640.

     

  • Areas of Interest

    Parasitism

    The great manipulators

    Mixotrophy

    The honest foundation

    Hypobiosis

    The sleeping beauties

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  • Reach Out

    1900 North 12th Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19122-6078
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