- dgsmith@ucdavis.edu
- http://www.anthropology.ucdavis.edu/people/fzdgsmit/molecular-anthropology-labo…
Education
- Professor, PhD, University of Colorado, 1973
- I received my B.A. degree from the University of Kentucky, Lexington, a Certificate in Population Studies from the East-West Population Institute of the University of Hawaii, Manoa campus in Honolulu, and my M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Colorado, Boulder. I pursued postdoctoral research in human genetic epidemiology at the Human Genetics Department of the University of Michigan Medical School and at the Institute for Cancer Research of the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia.
About
Research Interests 
My past interests and  research have focused on studies of the transmission of and  susceptibility to diseases, population genetic processes, and  phylogenetic history of both human and non-human primates, the breeding  and management of captive colonies of non-human primates and the  influence of social structure and behavior on population structure.  Current interests include the biogeography of genus Macaca, genetic  evidence for circumstances pertaining to the peopling of the New World,  and the use of both modern and ancient DNA to assess ancestor-descendant  relationships.
Recent Publications 
Smith, D. G., S.  Kanthaswamy, J. Viray and L. Cody, 2000. Additional highly polymorphic  microsatellite (STR) loci for estimating kinship in rhesus macaques  (Macaca mulatta). American Journal of Primatology 50:1-7. 
Viray,J.,B.K.Rolfs  and D.G.Smith. 2001. A comparison of the frequencies of MHC Class II  DQA1 and DQB1 alleles in Indian and Chinese rhesus macaques (Macaca  mulatta). Comparative Medicine 51:555-561. 
Kaestle, F. and D.G.  Smith, 2001. Ancient mitochondrial DNA evidence for prehistoric  population movement: The Numic Expansion. American Journal of Physical  Anthropology 115:1-12. 
Kanthaswamy,S. and D.G.Smith. 2002. Population subdivision and gene flow among wild Orangutans. Primates 43:315-327. 
Deinard,A.S.,N.W.Lerche  and D.G.Smith. 2002. Polymorphism in the rhesus macaque Macaca mulatta)  NRAMP1 gene:lack of an allelic association to tuberculosis  susceptibility. Journal of Medical Primatology 31:8-16. 
Eshleman,  J.A., R.S.Malhi and D.G.Smith. 2003. Mitochondrial DNA studies of Native  Americans:Conceptions and misconceptions of the population prehistory  of North America. Evolutionary Anthropology (in press).
