Welcome

The Department of Biology is a community of teacher-scholars, with faculty representing the full breadth of biological specializations — from molecular genetics to landscape/ecosystem ecology.

Our goal is to provide hands-on experiences through classroom laboratories and undergraduate research.  Our faculty and our 45 graduate students welcome our undergraduate majors to engage in independent research ongoing in 23 labs, plant, animal and fungal research/teaching collections, a greenhouse, a sixty-seven acre Nature Preserve adjacent to campus and larger land holdings in the area, as well as access to extensive globally significant surrounding state and federal parks and forests. 

We seek to enable our graduates to gain sound scientific knowledge, learn the skills needed to create new knowledge, the excitement and appreciation of scientific discovery, and the ability to convey that information and enthusiasm to society.  We are dedicated to engaging students in outstanding teaching and we believe that our research and discovery inform the science that we teach.

Mongo, the Corpse Flower

Mongo, the Corpse Flower

Appalachian State University's Titan Arum, or "corpse flower," is expected to bloom this November at the Department of Biology's Greenhouse. The bloom will be the plant's first since it arrived in Boone over a decade ago.

Department Spotlights

Faculty & Staff

Why did you become a biologist (and specifically what type of biologist you are)?

Being a biologist was not a set life path or choice I made- I kind of stumbled into it. I have always...

Alumni

Picture of Erin McCombs

What do you currently do?

I am the Conservation Director for Southern Appalachia with American Rivers. American Rivers is a national river advocacy organization headquartered in...

Graduate Students

Dalton Sizemore

How did you become interested in biology?

Biology has always been a special subject for me. I graduated from high school thinking I wanted a BA in Political Science and wanted to go...