People

Person Details

External Faculty
Sonia Sultan
Wesleyan University, Middletown

Sonia E. Sultan is an evolutionary ecologist who studies the interplay of genetic and environmental factors in biological inheritance and individual development. She is currently Professor of Biology at Wesleyan University, Connecticut, USA, where her plant 'evo-eco-devo' research group studies how plants develop and function differently in response to different environmental conditions, in particular to factors that vary in nature such as light and shade, soil moisture, and key nutrients. To examine these responses, Sultan's lab determines response patterns or norms of reaction for genetic individuals collected from natural populations. These experiments reveal how flexible repertoires of response give rise to functional and reproductive variation, and how these repertoires differ genotypically and epigenetically. Sultan has long been a major contributor to the empirical and conceptual literatures on individual response plasticity and its relation to both ecological breadth and adaptive evolution. In Fall 2015, she published many of these ideas in a monograph entitled Organism and Environment: Ecological Development, Niche Construction and Adaptation (Oxford University Press; short-listed for the Royal Society of Biology Best Graduate Text); she has subsequently extended her conceptual work to address the concept of biological agency.

Sultan graduated summa cum laude in History and Philosophy of Science at Princeton University, and received a PhD degree from Harvard University. She was awarded an independent CPB Post-Doctoral Fellowship at the University of California’s (Davis) Center for Population Biology and spent three years there before joining the Biology Department faculty at Wesleyan in 1994. Sultan has been a guest researcher at the University of Otago and the Liggins Institute in New Zealand and was a 2012-13 Resident Fellow of the Berlin Institute for Advanced Study (Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin). In Spring 2023 she was awarded a Visiting Fellowship at the Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution and Cognition (KLI) outside Vienna, and was subsequently appointed to the Institute's External Faculty.