Judith X Becerra

Judith X Becerra

Associate Research Scientist, Biosphere 2
Associate Research Professor
Associate Professor, Entomology / Insect Science - GIDP
Associate Research Scientist, BIO5 Institute
Member of the General Faculty
Member of the Graduate Faculty
Primary Department
Department Affiliations
Contact
(520) 621-9397

Research Interest

Judith Becerra, PhD, is an evolutionary ecologist interested in insect-plant interactions. Her current research combines ecological, biogeographycal, and chemical information with molecular phylogenetics to identify macroevolutionary patterns of host shifts, co-adaptive forces shaping coevolution and evolutionary strategies of plant chemical defenses. She is also interested in plant and insect diversification and ecological chemical interactions between insects and plants. Extensive research has been pursued in the Mexican tropical dry forests with the plant genus Bursera and their herbivores, the beetle genus Blepharida. These two groups have interacted for the last 100 million years and are both highly diverse, with spectacular adaptations and counteradaptations.

Publications

Larios, E., Burquez, A., Becerra, J. X., & Venable, D. L. (2016). Natural selection on seed size through the life cycle of a desert annual plant. ECOLOGY, 95(11), 3213-3220.

Under stressful circumstances, seed size has important consequences for germination, survival, and reproductive success; all of these are important components of plant fitness. This study investigates the relationship between seed size and fitness in the Sonoran Desert winter annual Dithyrea californica. This species represents a unique opportunity to study natural selection on seed size in the wild due to a serendipitous detail of its life history: the seed coat remains attached and unchanged to the root throughout its life. It is thus possible to excavate the root and measure the seed size that originated each plant. We measured the relationship between seed size and germination by comparing seed sizes of germinated and dormant seeds in the field over four consecutive years. We also measured the effect of seed size on survival and reproductive success using data from censuses of plant mortality and fecundity of survivors, relating survival and fecundity to the size of their initial seed size, and the number of conspecific neighbors. Larger seeds had a higher probability of germination than smaller seeds. Plants originating from larger seeds had higher survival rates and higher fecundity than plants originating from smaller seeds. The amount of precipitation had a beneficial effect on plant fecundity and influenced seed-size survival selection. Plant competition decreased plant fecundity but not survival, creating a detrimental environment for plants only to grow and reproduce. This is the first study to show empirical evidence of seedsize selection throughout the whole life cycle in a natural setting. Further, maternal provisioning has benefits that persist into adulthood, and environmental interactions are important in determining survival and fecundity.

Olivier-Espejel, S., Sabree, Z. L., Noge, K., & Becerra, J. X. (2012). Gut Microbiota in Nymph and Adults of the Giant Mesquite Bug (Thasus neocalifornicus) (Heteroptera: Coreidae) Is Dominated by Burkholderia Acquired De Novo Every Generation. ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY, 40(5), 1102-1110.
Becerra, J. X., Ge, X., & Venable, D. L. (2017). Hybridization in the Elephant tree, Bursera microphylla.. American Journal of Botany.
Noge, K., Kimura, H., Abe, M., Becerra, J. X., & Tamogami, S. (2012). Antibacterial Activity of 4-Oxo-(E)-2-hexenal from Adults and Nymphs of the Heteropteran, Dolycoris baccarum (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae). BIOSCIENCE BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOCHEMISTRY, 76(10), 1975-1978.
Evans, P. H., & Becerra, J. X. (2007). Non-terpenoid essential oils from Bursera chemapodicta. FLAVOUR AND FRAGRANCE JOURNAL, 21(4), 616-618.