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Home » alumni » Page 3

alumni

Milt (PhD 2015) Research Featured in New Book

October 17, 2016 by wpeeb

Austin Milt’s PhD (2015, Armsworth Lab) work is featured in a nice, one-page color spread in a new book by Craig Groves and Eddie Game: Conservation Planning: Informed Decisions for a Healthier Planet.

The book “will be very well-read within its field – likely the industry leading text for the next 5-6 years if recent history is anything to go by and widely read by grad students and conservation practitioners the world over,” said Milt’s former advisor, Paul Armsworth.

Read more of NIMBioS’s press release.

Milt is currently a Post Doc at the Center for Limnology, University of Wisconsin, Madison.

 

Filed Under: alumni, Armsworth, book, MAIN

Nelson in Knoxville Mercury

September 26, 2016 by wpeeb

FWF alum Stephen Nelson appeared in an article in the Knoxville Mercury on September 21, 2016.

Nelson did research in the Fitzpatrick Lab as an undergraduate; he is now a herpetology keeper at Knoxville Zoo.  The article focuses on what might be a new species of mudpuppy in the Hiwassee River.

 

Filed Under: alumni, Fitzpatrick, MAIN

Editor’s Choice for Read

July 11, 2016 by wpeeb

Quentin Read’s (PhD 2016) recent paper in Oikos has been highlighted as an “Editor’s Choice” article.

The study challenges how we currently conduct biodiversity studies by demonstrating that a high percentage of studies over estimate the effects of diversity and may actually conclude species level effects when those effects are actually driven by hidden nested variation.

“Accounting for the nested nature of genetic variation across levels of organization improves our understanding of biodiversity and community ecology.” (pages 895–904)
Quentin D. Read, Sean M. Hoban, Maarten B. Eppinga, Jennifer A. Schweitzer and Joseph K. Bailey
Version of Record online: 28 JAN 2016 | DOI: 10.1111/oik.02760

Filed Under: alumni, Bailey, graduate, MAIN, publication, Schweitzer

Fulbright for Rewcastle (BS 2015)

May 9, 2016 by wpeeb

Kenna Rewcastle, a 2015 graduate in the College Scholars program, has been awarded a Fulbright US Student Program Grant for 2016–17. She will be going to Sweden to complete research on the impact of climate change on the food source for reindeer herds managed by the Sami indigenous people. Rewcastle, of Apison, Tennessee, who was also a Haslam Scholar as an undergraduate, spent the last year researching climate change as a laboratory and field technician with UT’s Classen Ecosystem Ecology Lab, which was helping with a project funded by the Department of Energy. She also has worked in labs in Denmark, China, Sweden, and Switzerland.

In total, four UT students were awarded Fulbright Grants this year. Read the full press release at TN Today.

Filed Under: alumni, award, Classen, MAIN, undergraduate

Curt Richardson (PhD 1972): Alumni Update

April 14, 2016 by wpeeb

Curt Richardson (PhD 1972) is the second person ever to graduate from UT with a PhD in Ecology, and his career after graduating has been impressive!  This is what he had to say:

No question UT put me on the path to a remarkable career, first at the University of Michigan and then at Duke University for the past 38 years.  Tennessee in 1972 was only one of two Universities offering a PhD in Ecology, and with their strong program and ties to Oak Ridge National Lab it presented me with an unbelievable opportunity to do research in the NSF funded International Biological Program (IBP).  After completing my degree in physiological plant ecology with a minor in soils I was hired directly out of graduate school as an Assistant Professor of Ecology in the School of Natural Resources in Michigan. Postdocs were not required in ecology in those days as the number of graduates were few and the field was growing rapidly.  It was a wonderful school and unlike today money was readily available from NSF, so grants were readily available for research, especially in ecology.  While I was at Michigan, I moved from forestry research and  became interested  in wetlands ecology.  I  worked on one of the first major studies in the U.S. on the ecological and biogeochemical  effects of  waste water additions to wetlands at Houghton Lake Michigan.  My research, I can proudly say, showed that wetlands cannot  efficiently remove phosphorus from the water and that the natural wetland communities were greatly altered by the invasion of cattails.  Importantly, this research stopped EPA from approving the use of natural  wetlands for waste water treatment and thus the field  of constructed wetlands  was born.

After five years at Michigan I was offered a wonderful position to head up the ecology program at Duke’s School of Forestry and Environmental  studies.  This school later became the Nicholas School of the Environment in 1991.  While at Duke, I have been a Professor of Resource Ecology but have also  taken my turn at administrative duties.  Over the years I have been Ecology Program Chairman, Division chair of Ecosystem Science and Policy and even acting Dean of the School.  However, my first love is teaching and research where I have mentored over 150 masters more than 20 PhD students. Twenty-five years ago I founded the Duke University Wetland Center and currently still direct its research activities.  There is no doubt the ecological training and experiences given to me at UT by my professors while a graduate student in the Ecology Program at UT gave me the entree into a wonderful academic and research career in ecology at two great institutions.  

My  major research efforts have focused on wetlands as nutrient sinks and chemical transformers on the landscape.  Fortunately, I have  directed research on some of the most important wetland issues of our time, including long-term studies on the effects of nutrient phosphorus additions in wetlands in Michigan, Pocosin peatlands losses in North Carolina, the restoration of the Everglades of Florida and more recently scientific assessment of wetland restoration potential in the Iraq marshes. Since 2000 I have focused on restoring all the wetlands and streams on the Duke University campus and in 2007 the University dedicated 25 acres of the campus as SWAMP (Stream Wetland Management Assessment Park).  Currently, I  direct  research on  a large multi-institutional DOE grant on carbon sequestration and GHG losses in peatlands (Minnesota to Panama), and I am  a CO-PI in the nanomaterials project (NSF CEINT Center) where I  direct research on nanomaterial effects on wetland plants and water chemistry.

I have  authored or co-authored  over 175 peer-reviewed papers.  Recent books include “Methods in Biogeochemistry of Wetlands in 2013 and  “The Everglades Experiments: Lessons for Restoration in 2008. I have  been listed in Who’s Who in Science annually since 1989 and was elected President of the Society of Wetland Scientists in 1987-88. In 2006, I  received the National Wetlands Scientist of the Year Award from the Environmental Law Institute.  I am an elected  Fellow of the Society of Wetland Scientists, the Soil Science Society of America, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. I  received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Society of wetland Scientists in 2013.  Importantly,  these career achievements  cannot outshine the real value  of having the opportunity to work  with great students and people over the past four decades.

Filed Under: alumni, MAIN

John Reynolds (PhD 1973): Alumni Update

April 14, 2016 by wpeeb

John Reynolds (PhD 1973) was the third person to receive a PhD from the Ecology program at UT.  It is thanks to his input that the department has an alumni blog!  This is what he had to say:

The attached article captures my scientific research up to 2012.  In April, I published a major paper on Tennessee earthworms and will publish another in about one year.  Earthworm research is only one of 12 disciplines in which I have published and these have been published in whole or in part in 51 languages in 55 different publications totaling over 350 articles and books.  Earthworm research has been a family affair as I have co-authored 3 papers with my wife (Wilma), one with my eldest daughter (Kristin) in French, 10 with our middle daughter (Deborah) (9 in Spanish and one in English and Japanese), and one with our youngest daughter Jennifer.  Wilma and I have been married for over 50 years and we returned to Canada in 1973 from Knoxville where our eldest daughter was born. The next two daughters were born in Fredericton, New Brunswick; each daughter has two children.

After graduation from UT I worked for Tall Timbers Research Station for three years. Then I was an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Forestry at UNB Fredericton for 3 years.  I sold my earthworm collection to the Canadian National Museum (six countries bid for the right to purchase it).  With the proceeds we bought a house and I retired for 3 years to complete a law degree.  After which I joint the Fredericton Police Force for 10 years, 5 as a Constable and 5 as an Inspector where I taught at all the Police Academies across Canada.

I was then asked to apply for the position of Dean of Resource Technology at Sir Sanford Fleming College. I won the competition as served for 6 years until the government changed and education and health budgets were severely reduced.  For a year I consulted on various projects in Canada, Bermuda, Argentina and the United States.  Consulting on short term projects was stressful, wondering where the next job would arise.

I studied for a commercial licence and went to work for Schneider National in Green Bay, one year as a driver, 6 months as a trainer and then 7 and a half years as a manager.  At the age of 65, I decided it was time to stop working for others and we used the office and lab in our house for consulting which I am still doing today. 

Aside from my research work, I have been very active in the various Masonic Orders serving as the District Deputy Grand Master in all Orders.  During the non-winter months, I am an avid lawn bowler.

Filed Under: alumni, MAIN

UPDATE: NSF GRFP Award for Daws; Honorable Mentions for Lash, Ramsey, Dunkirk

April 7, 2016 by wpeeb

One of our alumna has been awarded an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship this year: Sarah Caroline Daws (BS 2015)!

In addition, three EEB students/ alumni have been awarded NSF GRFP Honorable Mentions:

  • Chloe Lash (Current graduate student, Kwit Lab);
  • Adam Ramsey (BS 2013; now PhD student in Biological Sciences at University of Memphis);
  • Nora Dunkirk (BS 2014) [apologies for omitting Ms. Dunkirk in the original post].

Congratulations!

Filed Under: alumni, fellowship, graduate, Kwit, MAIN, NSF

Tenure-Track Position for Shah (PhD 2011)

April 6, 2016 by wpeeb

Premal Shah, a PhD student who graduated from EEB in 2011, is now an Assistant Professor of Genetics at Rutgers University, as of January 2016.  Congratulations!

Filed Under: alumni, graduate, MAIN

Williams, Edwards, and Ramsey in the American Journal of Botany

March 28, 2016 by wpeeb

Prof. Joe Williams is the organizer of a special issue of the American Journal of Botany and lead author on the cover paper.

The issue also features a paper from Joe that has two undergraduate alumni co-authors (Jacob A. Edwards and Adam J. Ramsey), both now in graduate schools elsewhere.  The work was completed while they were students at UT.

Congratulations!

Filed Under: alumni, MAIN, publication, undergraduate, Williams

The Value of EEB

March 2, 2016 by wpeeb

A March 1 article in the UT Daily Beacon fights the granola-crunching stereotype of the EEB major and explains why studying Ecology and Evolutionary Biology is so important, whether you want to be a doctor, a conservationist, or an informed citizen.

“Ecology majors battle hippie stereotypes for science” by Heiler Meek, Staff Writer

Filed Under: alumni, MAIN, newspaper

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