Maya Nehme
- Graduate Student
University Park, PA 16802
Education:
- Dual Ph.D. degree candidate in Entomology and Comparative and International Education
Biography:
PhD project at Penn
State:
Currently, I am working on the semiochemicals of the Asian
Longhorned Beetle, Anoplophora glabripennis; an invasive wood-boring
species introduced from China to USA in 1996 with wood-packing material.
I am testing the attractiveness of the synthesized pheromones of these beetles to assess their potential use as lure in monitoring traps both in China and USA and testing different trapping techniques to optimize trapping potential.
Adviser: Dr. Kelli HooverStudy Abroad with SUSPROT Program:
Spring/Summer 2007
I worked with Dr. Joop vanLoon in Wageningen
University on the Colorado Potato Beetle pheromones, testing the response of
European populations to the pheromone and plant volatiles previously identified
and tested in the U.S. In the process, I learned the Electroantennography
technique and more about the beetle biology and physiology.
During the same summer, I visited INRA-Versailles for two weeks and worked with Dr. Frederic Marion-Poll on gustative learning of Spodoptera caterpillars and pheromones of Rhinco beetles. I also got the chance to visit other laboratories in INRA and learn about the different techniques and research projects.
Awards:
AIARD Future Leader Forum Scholarship - June
2008
Lloyd E. Adams Memorial Grant-in-aid Award - June 2007
Ardeth &
Norman Frisbey International Student Award - April 2007
Penn State Student
Leader Scholarship - January 2007
Education:
B.S. Agricultural Engineering, Lebanese
University
M.S. Plant Protection, American University of Beirut
Research Interests:
1- International Forest Management:
I am
interested in Forest conservation and management, mainly in terms of managing
insect outbreaks in forest ecosystems. My BS and MS projects were part of the
FAO TCP/LEB/0169 entitled: “Protection of the Forests with Particular Emphasis
on the New Pest Cephalcia Tannourinensis Infesting Lebanon Cedars”. I
also did some volunteer work in Forest plantations and regeneration projects
throughout Lebanon in cooperation with local and international NGOs.
2- Insect behavior and chemical
signaling:
I am also interested in the chemical signaling between insects and
in insect-plant interactions. My focus area is the study of insect reproductive
behavior and the role of pheromones in mate-finding and recognition. My previous
research (my B.S. and M.S. theses projects) was based on the study of pheromones
of Cephalcia tannourinensis and Ernobius spp. attacking
Cedrus libani spring and summer buds, respectively, in the cedar forest
of Tannourine in Lebanon. I also studied the kairomonal signal produced by the
summer buds that affects the oviposition of females Ernobius spp. Since
I believe that forest insect management should be conducted using the safest
approach, my study of semiochemicals aims at using these as a monitoring tool to
predict insect outbreaks.
Link to Curriculum Vitae

