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Two KBS graduate students awarded NSF Fellowships PDF Print E-mail

Congratulations to KBS graduate students Danny O’Donnell and Bonnie McGill, recipients of 2013 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships.

Danny is a first-year PhD. student working with Dr. Elena Litchman at KBS. He is pursuing a dual degree in Zoology and Ecology, Evolutionary Biology and Behavior. As an NSF Fellow, Danny will study trait evolution in phytoplankton and how the evolution of traits affects their community ecology.

Danny plans to begin experiments this summer at Lake Baikal in Siberia.

Bonnie is a first-year Zoology PhD. student in MSU’s Environmental Science & Policy program. Bonnie is a student in Dr. Steve Hamilton’s aquatic biogeochemistry and ecosystem ecology lab at KBS. As an NSF Fellow, Bonnie plans to continue her research into how plants and soil microbes influence the movement of nitrogen (common in fertilizers) in agricultural landscapes. Read more about Bonnie and her research in a recent blog she wrote for the KBS Long-term Ecological Research Program web site.

For more information about this year’s class of NSF fellows, click here.

 
Research by KBS Faculty featured in National Geographic PDF Print E-mail

KBS faculty members Drs. Phil Robertson and Sieglinde Snapp are featured in "Fertilized World," an article examining commercial fertilizer use around the globe, in the May 2013 issue of National Geographic magazine.

Read the article online here.

 
KBS's Nicholas Ballew receives Hensley Scholarship PDF Print E-mail

KBS congratulates Nicholas Ballew, recipient of the Dr. Marvin Hensley Endowed Scholarship.

Established in 1995 to further the disciplines of zoological and biological science, the scholarship recognizes outstanding undergraduate and graduate students pursuing education in vertebrate zoology with emphasis on field study.

The scholarship is administered by the Department of Zoology at Michigan State University.

Ballew was recognized at the 2013 College of Natural Science Annual Awards program, held on April 12 in East Lansing. He will receive a $7500 scholarship award this fall.

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At KBS, Ballew studies how behavioral traits impact fitness at different life stages in largemouth bass, one of the nation’s most popular sport fish species. Specifically, he investigates whether bass populations can evolve to become less vulnerable to fishing pressure—meaning, can they adapt over time in ways that make them more difficult to catch?

Ballew measures characteristics such as foraging behavior and levels of combativeness in young fish living in KBS experimental ponds. He then records data about their survival rates and reproductive success—and even fishes in the ponds to look for relationships between a fish's behavioral traits and its ‘catchability.’ Ballew’s research could someday prove useful for fishery managers and policymakers.

Ballew plans to complete his data collection and analysis this summer, and to apply his scholarship award toward analyzing DNA samples.

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Marvin "Max" Hensley joined the MSU faculty as an assistant professor of Zoology in September 1956. Hensley taught a variety of courses in the field of vertebrate biology, including animal distribution, biology of vertebrates, and herpetology, and encouraged laboratory and field experience.

Hensley’s classic study, ‘Ecological Relations of the Breeding Bird Population of the Desert Biome in Arizona,’ conducted at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, influenced noted ecologists including Robert MacArthur.

Hensley earned a B.A. from Greenville College in 1946; an M.S. from the University of Illinois in 1948; and his Ph.D. from Cornell University in 1951. He taught at Gettysburg College before arriving at MSU.

Hensley received the MSU College of Natural Science Alumni Association Distinguished Faculty Award in 1985. He retired from MSU in 1986.

 
Research on Using Marginal Lands for Biofuels Published in Nature PDF Print E-mail

Dr. Ilya Gelfand, KBS research associate, and Dr. Phil Robertson, KBS faculty member, have published an article on the use of marginal lands as a source of biofuels crops in the current issue of Nature.

Data for the study was taken from 20 years of research at the KBS Long-term Ecological Research (LTER) site. The study looks at using land unsuited for food crops to grow plants to be used in biofuel production.

To read more about this research, see the MSU press release here.

 

 
Christine Sprunger Awarded Ford Predoctoral Fellowship PDF Print E-mail

Congratulations to Christine Sprunger, Ph.D. candidate in Dr. Sieg Snapp's lab, on being awarded a Ford Predoctoral Fellowship in June 2012 for her research on "Roots of Perennial Cropping Systems and their Significance on Carbon Sequestration and Food Security."

This fellowship will provide Christine with a stipend and research funds for the next three years. Also, she was able to attend the Ford Fellows conference in September, which gave her the opportunity to meet other 2012 Ford Fellows.

 
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