Biography and education
Page was born in Bakersfield, California, and spent his childhood there until he attended high school in
Porterville, California. He served in the U.S. Army from 1969 to 1972. With support from the
G.I. Bill, he received his undergraduate degree in entomology, with a minor in chemistry, from
San Jose State University in 1976. He was awarded his Ph.D. in entomology from
University of California-Davis in 1980. He began his career as an assistant professor in the Department of Entomology with
Ohio State University in 1986, moving to the University of California-Davis in 1989, where he became chair for UC-Davis's Department of Entomology in 1999. He joined Arizona State University (ASU) in 2004 as founding director of ASU's School of Life Sciences, one of the first interdisciplinary academic units developed under President
Michael Crow's vision of the "New American University." and vice provost and dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the largest college in the university (2011–2013). During this period he forged a platform to accelerate ASU’s transdisciplinary collaboration in the U.S. and Europe, advance educational reform, and jumpstart cutting-edge "virtual" learning formats. He also established ASU's Honey Bee Research Facility. ==Scientific work==
Publications
Journal articles Robert Page has authored or coauthored more than 250 scientific studies or review articles on genetics and evolution of social insect behavior. • Page, R. E. 1980. The evolution of multiple mating behavior of honey bee queens. Genetics 96: 263–273. • Hunt, G.J., R.E. Page, M.K. Fondrk, and C.J. Dullum. 1995. Major quantitative trait loci affecting honey bee foraging behavior. Genetics 141: 1537–1545. • Hunt, G. J, and R.E. Page. 1995. A linkage map of the honey bee, Apis mellifera, based on RAPD markers. Genetics 139: 1371–1382. • Page, R.E., J. Erber, and M.K. Fondrk. 1998. The effect of genotype on response thresholds to sucrose and foraging behavior of honey bees (Apis mellifera L.). Journal of Comparative Physiology A 182: 489–500. • Scheiner, R., J. Erber, and R.E. Page. 1999. Tactile learning and the individual evaluation of the reward in honey bees. Journal of Comparative Physiology A 185: 1–10. • Beye, M., M. Hasselmann, M.K. Fondrk, R.E. Page, and S.W. Omholt. 2003. The gene csd is the primary signal for sexual development in the honeybee and encodes an SR-type protein. Cell 114: 419–429 [cover article]. • Amdam, G.V., K. Norberg, M.K. Fondrk, and R.E. Page. 2004. Reproductive ground plan may mediate colony-level effects on individual foraging behavior in honey bees. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 101: 11350-11355. • Amdam, G., A. Csondes, M.K., Fondrk, and R.E. Page. 2006. Complex social behavior derived from maternal reproductive traits. Nature 439: 76–78 [cover article]. • Nelson, C.M., K.E. Ihle, M.K. Fondrk, R.E. Page, and G.V. Amdam. 2007. The gene vitellogenin has multiple coordinating effects on social organization. PLOS Biology 5: 673–677. • Linksvayer, T. A. and R.E. Page 2009. Honey bee social regulatory networks are shaped by colony-level selection. The American Naturalist 173 (3) E99-E107. DOI: 10.1086/596527. • Page, R. E., T. A. Linksvayer, G.V. Amdam. Social life from solitary regulatory networks: a paradigm for insect sociality. 2009. Organization of insect societies: from genomes to socio-complexity. Harvard University Press, Cambridge. 357–376 • Amdam, G. V. and R. E. Page. 2010. The developmental genetics and physiology of honeybee societies. Animal Behavior 79: 973–980. • Page, R. E., O. Rüppell, and G. V. Amdam. 2012. Genetics of reproduction and regulation of honey bee (Apis mellifera L.) social behavior. Annual Review of Genetics 46: 97–119. • Beye M., C. Seelmann, T. Gempe, M. Hasselmann, Vekemans X., M. K. Fondrk, and R. E. Page. 2013. Gradual molecular evolution of a sex determination switch through incomplete penetrance of femaleness. Current Biology 23: 1–6. • Ihle K. E., O. Rueppell, Z. Y. Huang, Y. Wang, M. K. Fondrk, R. E. Page, and G. V. Amdam. 2015. Genetic architecture of a hormonal response to gene knockdown in honey bees. Journal of Heredity 106: 155–165. • Traynor K. S., Y. Wang, C. S. Brent, G. V. Amdam, R. E. Page Young and old honeybee (Apis mellifera) larvae differentially prime the developmental maturation of their caregivers. 2017. Animal Behaviour. 124: 193–202. Books • • Edited books • Needham, G. R., R. E. Page, M. Delfinado Baker, and C. E. Bowman (editors). 1988. Africanized Honey Bees and Bee Mites. Ellis Horwood Ltd., West Sussex, England, 572 pp. • Breed, M. D. and R. E. Page (editors). 1989. The Genetics of Social Evolution, Westview Press, Boulder, Colorado, 213 pp. • Erickson, E. H., R. E. Page, and A. A. Hanna (editors). 2002. Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Africanized Honey Bees and Bee Mites Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Africanized Honey Bees and Bee Mites. The A.I. Root Co., Medina, Ohio, 379 pp. ==References==