Thomas Dyer Seeley
Thomas Dyer Seeley was a winner of the Humboldt Prize in Biology in 2001.
Background
Seeley was born on June 17, 1952. He went to elementary, middle and high schools in Ithaca, NY. He married Robin Hadlock Seeley and the couple had two children.
Education
Seeley earned his A.B. (summa cum laude) in Chemistry from Dartmouth College in 1974 and, four years later, his Ph.D. in Biology from Harvard University.
Appointments
Seeley held the following academic appointments:[1]
Year | Appointment |
---|---|
1978-1980 | Junior Fellow, Society of Fellows, Harvard University |
1980-1986 | Assistant and Associate Professor, Yale University |
1986-1992 | Assistant and Associate Professor, Cornell University |
1992–present | Professor of Biology, Cornell University |
1993-1994 | Visiting Fellow, Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin |
2001-2004 | Visiting Professor, University of Würzburg |
2005-08, 13-14 | Chairman, Cornell University, Department of Neurobiology and Behavior |
2013- | Horace White Professor in Biology, Cornell University |
Honors and awards
In 1966 Seeley was an Eagle Scout. In 1974 he received the Hartshorne Chemistry Medal from Dartmouth College. Four years later he was elected a Junior Fellow at Harvard’s Society of Fellows and in 1983 he was awarded the Morse Prize Fellowship from Yale University. For a year from 1992, he was a Guggenheim Fellow and then the next year got a Fellowship from Berlin’s Institute for Advanced Study. In 1994 he received the Hambleton Award from the Eastern Apicultural Society.
A species of bee was named after him Neocorynurella seeleyi in 1997 and a year later he received the Gold Medal for the Best Science Book, (The Wisdom of the Hive). Seeley received the Alexander von Humboldt’s Senior Scientist Prize in 2001 and was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences that same year. In 2008 he was an elected fellow for the Animal Behavior Society and in 2013 he gave the keynote address at the 33rd International Apimondia Congress in Kiev.[2]
Publications
Seeley wrote the following books: Honeybee Ecology: A Study of Adaptation in Social Life, published by Princeton University Press, The Wisdom of the Hive: The Social Physiology of Honeybee Colonies, published by Harvard University Press, the Honeybee Democracy, published by the Princeton University Press.[3]
References
- ↑ "Thomas D. Seeley Short CV". Cornell University. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
- ↑ "Irish Beekeepers Summer Course 2015" (PDF). The Federation of Irish Beekeepers Association. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
- ↑ "Thomas D. Seeley Biologist". Cornell University. Retrieved 18 May 2015.