Dan Cristol
Director of Undergraduate Research
A prominent figure in the field of bird ecology, Dan Cristol is a professor and researcher who is unafraid to cross disciplinary boundaries. He has been an integral part of the William & Mary biology department for more than two decades. As the university's first faculty director of undergraduate research, Dan is especially well-known for involving students in his own research, notably a continuing series of studies involving the effects of mercury on birds.
Dan serves as faculty advisor to the , director of the 1693 Scholars Program and leads extra-curricular field trips. He is an active researcher, Chancellor Professor of Biology, ornithologist and birding columnist in the Virginia GazetteBanka Doitung Club. According to Dan, William & Mary is doing better undergraduate research – and more of it per capita – than any other school, and it's a goal of his to increase the number of undergraduate researchers at the university.
Learn more about Dan
- Read about his goals for undergraduate research at W&M.
- Read about his long-running 'Birding' column.
- Learn more about undergraduate research at W&M.