Dr. Dianella Howarth Earns Prestigious National Science Foundation Grant

December 07, 2011

Dianella Howarth, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Biological Sciences, was recently awarded a major grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to conduct research based on her abstract, The Role of Gene Duplication in the Floral Symmetry in Dipsacales.

The grant, which is worth $550,000, is a first for Dr. Howarth, who has been interested in plant evolution ever since she was a child. “My parents are both scientists, so I was always exposed to evolution and things of that nature,” said Dr. Howarth, a native of Hawaii. “I actually started with science fairs in seventh grade. I soaked fruit in waters and discovered that it could survive —  even after floating in salt water.”

Dr. Howarth’s project uses Dipsacales (which includes honeysuckle) to examine the genetic basis of evolutionary shifts in flower symmetry. “Some flowers have nice little bells where all the petals are the same and some are more complicated,” she explained. “I look at floral symmetry – how a flower is going to be shaped – and the genes that control that shift.”

“The main idea is to understand gene use,” she said. “If we understand what exactly the genes are doing, then the sky’s the limit in terms of what we can do and what kinds of flowers we can make.”

Dr. Howarth submitted revisions to her winning proposal while visiting her parents in Hawaii and then began the stressful process of waiting for a response from the NSF. “Typically, you hear sometime in mid-May for a January submission at around 10 o’clock at night,” she said. “So, for about a month, I’d sit at my computer at 9:50 p.m. waiting to hear. Finally, after stressing out, I called the program director and he called me back.”

The sizable grant includes money for supplies and research materials. It also includes funding for the lab’s most precious resource — people. “I really depend on the people in my lab,” said Dr. Howarth, who will be adding two undergraduates and a post-doctoral candidate to her staff. “The work of my students and the data they compiled played a significant role in my research. They made this grant possible.”

Dr. Howarth, who earned her doctoral degree at Harvard University and did her post doctoral work at Yale University, is impressed by the students at St. John’s and has a particular fondness for her current class. “This semester, I’m thrilled with the crop I have in my intro to bio ecology evolution course,” she said. “The thoughts they have are so novel. They approach problems and questions in ways that I can’t even imagine.”

Next for Dr. Howarth is a return to her Hawaiian roots, as she will be studying Hawaiian plant flora in her Queens campus lab. “I’m really interested in Hawaiian biogeography and evolution,” she said. “I like to keep my toes in Hawaii.”