Laura Sullivan-Beckers is an associate professor of evolutionary biology at Murray State University.[1] She is credited with the discovery of Hebetica sylviae, a species of treehopper, named for her daughter Sylvie Beckers.
Early life and education
Originally studying human forms of communication and earning a bachelor's in Spanish from the University of Tulsa, Sullivan-Beckers became fascinated with the ways birds communicate, and went back to school almost immediately, graduating from Northeastern State University in 2002 with a Bachelor of Science in Biology. She then pursued a Ph.D. in Biological Sciences from the University of Missouri, publishing her doctoral research and graduating in 2008.[2]
In the summer of 2016,[3][4] Sullivan-Beckers asked her 2-year-old daughter Sylvie to water some seeds she had just planted in the backyard of their home. Sylvie overwatered the soil, and small, bright green treehoppers began to float to the top. Sullivan-Beckers noted the oddity of tree-dwelling insects to be dead and buried in the ground.[5] She soon began collecting samples from her backyard, including 72 of the new species,[4] and sent them to Dr. Stuart McKamey,[6] a collaborative researcher at the USDA.[7] “As soon as it was confirmed as a new species, I knew I wanted it named after Sylvie. She was at the heart of the discovery, and it’s not every day a mother gets the chance to name a species after her child,” she said.[5] The species is a variety of treehopper from the Darninae tribe. Sullivan-Beckers co-authored an illustrated description of the insects with Stuart H. McKamey which was presented at Entomological Society of Washington.[8]
"Mate Choice and Learning". Encyclopedia of Animal Behaviour. Elsevier. 2010[14]
"Female Preference Functions Provide a Window Into Cognition, the Evolution of Communication, and Speciation in Plant-Feeding Insects". The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Evolutionary Psychology. OUP. 2012[15]
^McKamey, Stuart H.; Sullivan-Beckers, Laura (August 2019). "First Record of the Treehopper Tribe Darnini (Hemiptera: Membracidae: Darninae) from Eastern United States Based on Specimens of a New Species Excavated from Hoplosoides wasp Nests". Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington. 121 (3): 449–460. doi:10.4289/0013-8797.121.3.449. ISSN0013-8797.