Kyle Martin interviewed for 'Chicago Tribune' Halloween article on creepy plants

Kyle Martin (Biology, ’13) was interviewed by the Chicago Tribune for an October 13, 2015 article titled “From creepy to dangerous, some plants a perfect Halloween fit.”

Martin, currently a doctoral student of plant biology at Cornell, specializes in brood-site deception, the act by some plants of masking themselves in order to fool a pollinator.

“A lot of flowers provide a treat, like a sweet-smelling treat or a nectar reward for the service of pollination,” said Martin. “But all the flowers I study are tricksters. They trick their pollinators and don’t give a treat back.”

The article discussed a variety of plants that are fitting with the Halloween theme, including the corpse flower, which Martin said is the scariest plant he has ever seen.

Martin completed an honors thesis titled “Induced Defenses in Brown Macroalgae” in Ursula Roese’s laboratory while at UNE. He was nominated for the Junior Academic excellence Award by a unanimous vote of the Department of Biology and received the Outstanding Student in the Biology Department award for 2012-2013.

Read the article