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Mark Moffett
Research Associate, EntomologyEducation
Ph.D. Harvard University, 1987
B.A. Beloit College, 1979
Research Interests
Social biology of ants; the emergence and organization of societies across the animal kingdom; the physical structure of rainforests and other ecosystems.
Previous positions:
- Research Fellow, the Skeptics Society (2019 and ongoing).
- Visiting Scholar, Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University (2014-2020).
- Research Scholar, National Evolutionary Synthesis Center, Duke University (2015).
- Research appointment, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley (1998-2005).
- Visiting Scholar in Anthropology at the Peabody Museum, Harvard University (1997-2000).
- Research Associate, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University (1991-1997).
- Associate Curator, Entomology, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University (1987-1991).
Selected Publications:
- 2021. Ant colonies: Building complex organizations with minimal brains and no leaders. Journal of Organization Design 10:55-74 (invited review, coauthored by ten academic business leaders)
- 2020. Apples and oranges, ants and humans: The misunderstood art of making comparisons. Skeptics 25(1):8-9.
- 2019. Marauder ants. In Encyclopedia of Social Insects. CK Starr, editor. NY: Springer, p 569-76.
- 2017. Outnumbered: A new dominant ant species with genetically diverse supercolonies from Ethiopia. Insectes Sociaux 64(1):141-147 (coauthors DH Sorger, M Lowman).
- 2014. Why ants don’t play. American Journal of Play 7(1):20-26.
- 2013a. Comparative canopy biology and the structure of ecosystems. Pp 13-54 in, Margaret Lowman, Soubadra Devy, and T. Ganesh, editors. Treetops at Risk: Challenges of Global Canopy Ecology and Conservation. New York: Springer.
- 2013b. Human identity and the evolution of societies. Human Nature 24(3):219-267.
- 2012a. Supercolonies of billions in an invasive ant: What is a society? Behavioural Ecology 29 (5): 1263-1265.
- 2012b. Supercolonies, nests, and societies: Distinguishing the forests from the trees. Behavioural Ecology 29(5):938-939.
- 2011. Ants and the art of war. Scientific American 305(12):84-89.