Faculty Profile
Bobbi S. Low, Ph.D.
Professor

G142a Dana
Ph.D. Evolutionary Zoology, 1967, University of Texas
M.A. Evolutionary Zoology, 1964, University of Texas
B.A. Biology (Honors), 1962, University of Louisville
Teaching and research in evolutionary and behavioral ecology; resource control and reproductive success in vertebrates, including humans; integration of evolutionary theory and resource management; resources and reproductive variance; reproductive and resource tradeoffs for modern women.
Awards and Grants:
President, Human Behavior and Evolution Society (2002-2005); Director of the Evolution and Human Adaptation Program at the University of Michigan. Author of Why Sex Matters (Princeton, 2000), and co-author and co-editor of Institutions, Ecosystems, and Sustainability (CRC Press, 2001), along with Robert Costanza, Elinor Ostrom, and James Wilson.
Research Interests:
The use of evolutionary theory to understand human activities, particularly patterns of resource use. Specific areas include: degree of sexual dimorphism and mating systems; ecological aspects of marriage systems; sex differences in resource use; and the behavioral ecology of conservation. Dynamic modelling of ecosystems and human decision systems, and their interactions.
Evolutionary and behavioral ecology of wildlife species; resource control and reproductive success in vertebrates, parental strategies in vertebrates; integration of evolutionary theory and resource management.
Current/Recent Research:
The ecology of human resource use; Sex differences in human resource use. Resource control and reproductive success: Relevance for sustainability and demographic transitions. Analysis of fertility, mortality, survivorship, and family persistence for individuals of different categories of resource control in 19th-century Sweden, and 20th century China.
Teaching Interests:
Behavioral Ecology and Conervation (Environ 415/EEB424 and Environ 416), Human Resource Ecology (NRE 505)
Selected Publications:
- Low, B.S. 2000. Why Sex Matters: A Darwinian Look at Human Behavior. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
- Low, B.S. 2000. Sex, wealth, and fertility: Old rules, new environments. L.

