
Dr Heather Whitney
BSc(Lond.), PhD(Bristol), F.L.S.
Current positions
Reader in Plant Interactions
School of Biological Sciences
Contact
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Research interests
I am primarily interested in how the structure of the plant surface can influence both biotic and abiotic interactions. I use a range of techniques to investigate these interactions including plant molecular biology, optical analysis, biomimetics and animal behavioural assays.
My research group is currently investigating the control of iridescence production in phylogenetically diverse leaves. Very little is known about leaf iridescence despite the fact that is found in at least 64 different species in 26 families. I was awarded an European Research Council (ERC) starting grant, which started January 2011, to look at the mechanisms and development of iridescence production and its genetic basis in Selaginella uncinata. This species can produce a vivid metallic blue iridescence over its surface, dependent on light conditions. The ERC starting grant is a lab-based plant development and molecular biology project focusing on developing Selaginella uncinata as a model system, and will use a transcriptome-based approach to identify the genes controlling the production of iridescence and behavioural methods to determine the impact of iridescence on animal vision.
Other current areas of interest include:
- Plant surface gloss
- The impact of surface structure on plant wettability and temperature
- Plant insect interactions (pollination and herbivory)
- Bee behaviour
- Iridescence in algae
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
BioReplication for Optical Coatings and Light Intendance (BROCLI)
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Biological SciencesDates
01/08/2022 to 30/01/2024
Nanomaterial delivered switches to control synthetic cassettes in plants
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Biological SciencesDates
31/01/2022 to 30/01/2023
Nanomaterial delivered switches to control synthetic cassettes in plants
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Biological SciencesDates
01/11/2021 to 31/10/2022
8076 - BBSRC FTMA- Blueberry Optics for James Hutton Limited
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Biological SciencesDates
01/02/2021 to 30/11/2021
Developing Carbon dot to supercharge biochar and as a novel product for hydroponics
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Biological SciencesDates
01/10/2018 to 31/03/2019
Thesis supervisions
Biodiversity and physiology of Begonia iridoplasts
Supervisors
Exploring the mechanisms of iridescence as camouflage
Supervisors
Structural colour in plants and algae
Supervisors
Augmenting photosynthesis to enhance crop productivity using carbon dots
Supervisors
The use of carbon nanodots as a new method of genetic modification and gene editing in crop plants
Supervisors
Dynamic iridescence of Phyllagathis rotundifolia
Supervisors
Optimisation of carbon dot-facilitated wheat transformation
Supervisors
The developmental biology of the Nepenthes trap rim, a superhydrophilic, antiadhesive plant surface
Supervisors
The impact of carbon dot nanomaterials on two cultivars of common wheat
Supervisors
Expanding Floral Multimodality
Supervisors
Publications
Recent publications
14/05/2023Interactions between color and gloss in iridescent camouflage
Behavioral Ecology
Beetle iridescence induces an avoidance response in naïve avian predators
Animal Behaviour
Bumblebees can detect floral humidity
Journal of Experimental Biology
Floral humidity in flowering plants
Frontiers in Plant Science
Floral temperature patterns can function as floral guides
Arthropod-Plant Interactions