Yates Fellowship for Fovargue
Rachel Fovargue (Armsworth Lab) has received a 2016-2017 Yates Dissertation Fellowship! The fellowships provide recognition and financial support to outstanding doctoral students in all fields of study at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville during the dissertation process. Congratulations, Rachel!
McKenzie Receives Honorable Mention for Prestigious Scholarship
Undergraduate Patrick McKenzie received an honorable mention in the highly prestigious Goldwater Scholarship program. Students cannot apply directly for the scholarship; they must be nominated by their institution. To be selected among all his peers at UT and then to receive an honorable mention at the national level is a testament to his promising research career potential.
Patrick also received an REU position at the Harvard Forest Summer REU program, working on a forest simulation modeling project.
The Barry Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education Program was established by Congress in 1986 to honor Senator Barry Goldwater, who served his country for 56 years as a soldier and statesman, including 30 years of service in the U.S. Senate. The purpose of the Foundation is to provide a continuing source of highly qualified scientists, mathematicians, and engineers by awarding scholarships to college students who intend to pursue research careers in these fields.
Center for Tree Science Fellowship for Ware
Ian Ware (Bailey Lab) has received the Center for Tree Science Graduate Research Fellowship with the Morton Arboretum. The fellowship provides $9500 for students to attend the US Forest Service workshop: Gene Conservation of Tree Species, field research funding, and sequencing funding.
Curt Richardson (PhD 1972): Alumni Update
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.
Teaching Award for Hendy
Justin Hendy (Small Lab) received an award for Outstanding Graduate Teaching during the 2016 Graduate and Professional Student Appreciation Week at UT. He received the award for his work as the BioLit 150 head teaching assistant. To quote the program from the award ceremony:
“Justin has taught Biology 150 discussion sections and has served as the head teaching assistant for the last three semesters. His leadership extends to not only preparing the GTAs each week, but also to making revisions and changes to the curriculum as needed. He is a caring and thoughtful teacher and an excellent organizer / leader.”
Congratulations, Justin!
Lash Receives Mountain Lake Biological Station Fellowship
Chloe Lash (Kwit Lab) has been awarded a fellowship to conduct research on ant seed dispersal this summer at Mountain Lake Biological Station (MLBS) through the University of Virginia’s Horton H. Hobbs, Jr. Endowment Fund. The fellowship provides up to $3,500 towards room, board, and user fees at the station. There, Chloe will also be serving as a mentor for MLBS’s long-running NSF-supported Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) program, where she will advise an undergraduate awardee’s work on ant seed dispersal.
Marathon Finish for Fitzpatrick
Associate Professor Ben Fitzpatrick placed sixth in the Covenant Health Knoxville Marathon on Sunday! His time was 2:58:12. Congratulations, Ben!
New Greenhouse Manager
Jeff Martin will join the Department on 11 April 2015 as the new greenhouse manager.
Jeff received his B.S. From Clemson University in horticulture and has a masters degree in Plant Science from UTK, with a minor in entomology. He has experience with growing a variety of wild, horticultural, and crop plants under greenhouse, garden, and farm conditions (Atlanta Botanical Garden, Clemson Research Greenhouses, AmeriCorp, UT Organic Unit greenhouses and fields) and has experience both in staff management and in working with research faculty, students, volunteers and the public in these diverse settings. As an AmeriCorp volunteer conducted community outreach education, mentoring programs for the public and for at risk youth centered on gardening, and taught K-12 afterschool programs on nutrition, ecology and gardening. Jeff has training in pest management (conventional and IMP with beneficials), plant propagation, and has handled budget, timetable and spreadsheets. The Division of Biology can look forward to working with him in the near future.
Lampley Receives Graduate Research Assistantship
Jayne Lampley (Schilling Lab) is one of just 26 graduate students across UT who have received a 2016 Summer Graduate Research Assistantship from The Office of Research and Engagement. The GRAs are funded by the Scholarly and Research Incentive Funds. Selected faculty projects receive $3,600 in support of student stipends for work completed during the summer.
Her project is called “Analysis of an Evolutionary Radiation in Trillium.”
Congratulations!
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