Richard H. Adams Data-verified

Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.

High Impact

Researcher

Last publication 2025 Last refreshed 2026-05-16

faculty

37 h-index 106 pubs 6,827 cited

Biography and Research Information

OverviewAI-generated summary

Richard H. Adams' research focuses on the application of computational and statistical methods to evolutionary biology and phylogenetics. His work investigates the complex relationships between traits, evolutionary history, and data, particularly through the development and application of robust phylogenetic regression techniques. Adams has published on topics ranging from the evolutionary history of beetles along the Antarctic Polar Front to the genomic basis of invasive species like the Diaprepes root weevil, exploring their adaptations and potential for spread.

His research also delves into the evolutionary patterns of other organisms, including rattlesnake venom gene expression and the demographic history of bed bugs in relation to human expansion. Adams is supported by a National Science Foundation grant for modeling the phylogenetic architecture of biodiversity. He has a significant publication record, with 110 publications and over 7,200 citations, and an h-index of 39, indicating a substantial impact in his field. He actively collaborates with researchers at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville and the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station.

Metrics

  • h-index: 37
  • Publications: 106
  • Citations: 6,827

Selected Publications

  • Rediscovery of the greater chestnut weevil highlights the power of digital platforms in biodiversity research and conservation (2025)
  • Estimation of genome-wide coupling in rattlesnake hybrids provides insight into the process of speciation and its progress (2025)
  • Robust regression rescues poor phylogenetic decisions (2025)
    2 citations DOI OpenAlex
  • 250 Million Years of Convergent Evolution and Functional Divergence of Glycoside Hydrolase Family 28 Genes in Xylophagous Beetles (Cerambycidae and Buprestidae): Insights Into Horizontal Gene Transfer, Gene Dynamics, Synteny and Adaptive Divergence (2025)
  • Genomic architecture of the pole borer, <i>Neandra brunnea</i> (Cerambycidae: Parandrinae) <i>,</i> sheds light on the evolution of wood-feeding in longhorn beetles (2025)
  • Were bed bugs the first urban pest insect? Genome-wide patterns of bed bug demography mirror global human expansion (2025)
    6 citations DOI OpenAlex
  • Unique physiological and regulatory activity drives divergent toxin and non-toxin gene expression in rattlesnake accessory venom glands (2025)
  • Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Flood-Irrigated Rice as Affected by Phosphorus Fertilizer Source (2025)
    1 citation DOI OpenAlex
  • Insights into longhorn beetle (Cerambycidae) evolution from comparative analyses of the red-headed ash borer (<i>Neoclytus acuminatus acuminatus</i>) genome (2025)
  • Mitochondrial DNA Genetic Variation of Feral and Managed Honey Bee, Apis mellifera1 , Colonies from Oklahoma (2025)
    1 citation DOI OpenAlex
  • A Tale of Too Many Trees: A Conundrum for Phylogenetic Regression (2025)
    7 citations DOI OpenAlex
  • Disentangling a genome-wide mosaic of conflicting phylogenetic signals in Western Rattlesnakes (2025)
    2 citations DOI OpenAlex
  • TraitTrainR: accelerating large-scale simulation under models of continuous trait evolution (2024)
    2 citations DOI OpenAlex
  • A chromosome-level reference genome for the common bed bug, <i>Cimex lectularius,</i> with identification of sex chromosomes (2024)
    3 citations DOI OpenAlex
  • Functional and evolutionary insights into chemosensation and specialized herbivory from the genome of the red milkweed beetle, <i>Tetraopes tetrophthalmus</i> (Cerambycidae: Lamiinae) (2024)
    1 citation DOI OpenAlex

View all publications on OpenAlex →

Federal Grants 1 $399,831 total

NSF PI Aug 2025 - Jul 2028

STAR: Modeling the phylogenetic architecture of biodiversity

Cross-BIO Activities $399,831

Collaboration Network

69 Collaborators 39 Institutions 9 Countries

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