Teaching

Santosh Kumar Rana, Ph.D. (PI)

Assistant Professor, Department of Chemical and Biological Sciences
Curator, Carl F. Chuey Herbarium

Dr. Santosh is a plant molecular and evolutionary biologist whose research bridges taxonomy, ecology, genomics, and climate science to understand plant adaptation, speciation, and invasion dynamics. He currently leads the Rana Lab of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Youngstown State University, where he investigates the genetic and ecological processes that shape plant biodiversity in both native and introduced ecosystems.
Dr. Rana Magar earned his Ph.D. in Botany with specialization in plant molecular and evolutionary biology. His work spans multiple continents, from Himalayan alpine systems to grasslands and invasive species in the United States, integrating herbarium collections, field research, genomic sequencing, and computational modeling.
His ongoing research includes a USDA-funded collaborative project on the genomic invasion risk modeling of Saccharum spontaneum (wild sugarcane), in partnership with the USDA, the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI), and Avalo. This work combines genotype–environment association analyses, ecological niche modeling, and ploidy estimation to predict invasion risk under current and future climate scenarios. He also leads population transcriptomic studies on cryptic speciation in Stellera chamaejasme, using RNA-seq to uncover the genetic basis of morph differentiation.
At Youngstown State University, Dr. Rana Magar’s future research program will focus on:
1. Genomics of wild sugarcane (Saccharum spontaneum) invasion risk.
2. Genomic seed zones for climate-smart restoration in Ohio
Dr. Rana Magar has mentored students from undergraduate to Ph.D. level, given invited seminars internationally, and published across the fields of ecology, evolution, and conservation genomics. He is committed to fostering an inclusive, collaborative research environment and translating scientific findings into actionable conservation strategies.

Teaching | BIOL 2602L General Biology: Organisms and Ecology Laboratory (Spring 2026)
Structure and function of plants and animals including, biological diversity and basic physiology. Two hours of lab each week.