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Dr. Christoph Kurze


Research interests


I am interested in understanding the intricate relationships between hosts and parasites. My research has led me to focus in particular on important questions about bee health.

Primarily, I study ants and bees as model systems to addresses questions such as:

  • What factors shape the transmission dynamics of diseases in ant colonies? What can we learn from ants to develop effective strategies to reduce disease transmission?
  • How do parasites manipulate their hosts, and what mechanisms do hosts evolve to counter adapt?
  • How and which environmental features affect bee health and colony fitness across the complex urban ecosystem?
  • What are the sublethal risks that emerging infectious bee diseases pose to the health of individual bees and the fitness of the entire colony?

By exploring these and related questions, my research seeks to deepen our understanding of the complex interplay between hosts and parasites. Ultimately, I hope that my work can contribute to conservation and protection of bees as critical pollinators.


Figure 1. My study species include (A) the honey bee (Apis mellifera), (B) bumble bees (Bombus terrestris), (C) carpenter ants from Brazil (Camponotus rufipes) infected with a "zombie ant fungus" (Ophiocordyceps unilateralis), and (D) from North America (Camponotus pennsylvanicus), displaying traphallaxis (food exchange). 


Bee health research


Figure 2. Experimental setups we use to study (A) flight performance, (B) foraging behaviour in bumble bees, and (C) honey bee cognition using classical conditioning.  


Disease transmission research


Figure 3. (A) Experimental setup to study disease transmission dynamics and fungal spores spread in ant nests using (B) gfp transgenic fungal spores. (C) In addition to analysing ant movement, I use network analysis tools to study the relationship between ant interactions (see video 1 below) and transmission risks.

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Video 1. In close collaboration with Dr. Yizhe Zhang (University of Notre Dame), we trained a deep learning model to detect individual ant movement and trophallaxis (food exchange) between ants.


Curriculum vitae


2020-current

Postdoc, Universität Regensburg (Prof. Dr. Erhard Strohm)

2019

Feodor Lynen Return Fellow, MLU (Prof. Dr. Robert Paxton)

2016-2018

Postdoc/Feodor Lynen Fellow, Penn State (Dr. David Hughes)

2012-2016

PhD, MLU Halle (Prof. Dr. Dr. hc Robin Moritz)

2015

DAAD doctoral fellow, UWA Perth (Prof. Dr. Boris Baer)

2010-2012

MSc Biodiversity, Evolution & Ecology, FU Berlin

Thesis at IZW Berlin (Dr. Marion East & Prof. Dr. Heribert Hofer)

2010

ERASMUS at University of Aberdeen

Honors project/Bsc thesis (Dr. Jeremy Sternberg & Prof. Dr. John Speakman)

2007-2010

BSc Biology JLU Gießen


Grants and fellowships


2019

Feodor Lynen Return fellowship, Alexander von Humboldt foundation

2018

Feodor Lynen postdoctoral fellowship, Alexander von Humboldt foundation

2016

Junior Scientist Grant, The Genetics Society
IGSS Award, invited speaker at the International Congress of Entomology

2015

DAAD fellowship, German academic exchange service, for research visit in Australia
ABF Award, Foundation for the Preservation of Honey Bees, Inc.

2014

Evenius Award, German society of bee research (AG Institute für Bienenforschung)
student travelgrant 2014, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg

IUSSI student travel award 2014, International Union for the Study of Social Insects

2009

ERASMUS scholarship


Publications


For publications, please visit:

Google Scholar

ResearchGate


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Dr. Christoph Kurze


Raum D4.1.305

+49-941-943-2997

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