Degrees:
Ph.D., Univ. of Florida
B.S., Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst
Dr. Rachel Keeffe’s lifelong love of reptiles and amphibians inspired her to explore biology research opportunities during her undergraduate studies at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. These research experiences ignited her desire to pursue a PhD in Zoology at the University of Florida, where she studied the evolutionary morphology and biomechanics of frogs and gained teaching experience in courses such as Herpetology and Vertebrate Biodiversity. Dr. Keeffe continued her academic training as a postdoctoral research fellow at Mount Holyoke College, where she studied patterns of coevolution in snake genitalia. At Mount Holyoke, Dr. Keeffe mentored over a dozen undergraduate research students and taught Vertebrate Anatomy annually each fall. Throughout her career, Dr. Keeffe has developed a teaching style focused on hands-on learning experiences, collaborative learning environments, and using art as a means to understand scientific concepts. She is excited to incorporate these teaching skills into her classes and research lab at Trinity College and continue training the next generation of scientists.
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Evolution
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Functional Morphology
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Geometric Morphometrics
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Biomechanics
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Anatomy
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Herpetology
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Ichthyology
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Scientific Illustration
BIOL-127
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Living Marvels: The Evolution of Life on Earth
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BIOL-182
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Evolution of Life
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Evolution
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Functional Morphology
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Geometric Morphometrics
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Biomechanics
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Herpetology
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Ichthyology
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Phylogenetic Comparative Methods
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- Keeffe RM, Zhang B, Anderson PSL, Brennan PLR (2025) Evolutionary morphology of genital spines informed by puncture mechanics. Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 29220251698.
- Keeffe RM, Hedrick B, Bartoszek I, Easterling I, Brennan PLR (2025) Morphological Variation in the Genitalia of the Burmese Python. Journal of Morphology 286:e70045.
- Fernandes CC, Keeffe RM, Pinilla CE (2024) Microsternarchus
schonmanni, a new species of weakly electric fish (Gymnotiformes:
Hypopomidae, Microsternarchini) from the Mamoré-Guaporé River Basin,
Brazil. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia,
168: 237-249.
- Keeffe RM, Brennan PLR (2023) Vaginas. Current Biology, 33(12), R670-R674.
- Keeffe RM, Blob RW, Blackburn DC, Mayerl CJ (2022) XROMM analysis of feeding mechanics in toads: interactions of the tongue, hyoid, and pectoral girdle. Integrative Organismal Biology, obac045.
- Keeffe RM, Blackburn DC (2022) Diversity and function of the fused anuran radioulna. Journal of Anatomy, 241(4), 1026-1038.
- Keeffe RM & Blackburn DC (2020) Comparative morphology of the humerus in forward-burrowing frogs. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 131(2), 291-303.
- Blackburn DC, Keeffe RM, Vallejo-Pareja MC, Vélez-Juarbe J (2020) The earliest record of Caribbean frogs: a fossil coquí from Puerto Rico. Biology Letters, 16(4), 20190947.
- Blob R, Lagarde R, Diamond K, Keeffe RM, Bertram R, Ponton D, Shoenfuss H (2019) Functional diversity of evolutionary novelties: Insights from waterfall-climbing kinematics and performance of juvenile gobiid fishes. Integrative Organismal Biology, 1(1), obz029.
- Spoelhof J, Keeffe RM, McDaniel S (2019) Does reproductive assurance explain the incidence of polyploidy in plants and animals? New Phytologist, 227(1), 14-21.
- Keeffe RM, Hilton EJ, Thome-Souza M, Fernandes CC (2019) Cranial morphology and osteology of the sexually dimorphic electric fish, Compsaraia samueli Albert Crampton (Apteronotidae, Gymnotiformes), with comparisons to C. compsa (Mago-Leccia). Zootaxa, 4555(1), 101-112.
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- Graduate Research Fellowship Program, National Science Foundation, 2017
- Natural History Collections Summer Research Scholarship, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, 2017
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