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Awards

Carl Hjelmen and Richelle Marquess Named Outstanding Graduate Students

February 17, 2017 by Rob Williams

Carl Hjelmen, right, with Entomology Department Head Dr. David Ragsdale. Photo by Rob Williams.
Carl Hjelmen, right, with Entomology Department Head Dr. David Ragsdale. Photo by Rob Williams.

COLLEGE STATION, Texas–The Department of Entomology recently named Ph.D. student Carl Hjelmen and MS  student Richelle Marquess as the newest Oustanding Graduate Students at a special recognition seminar on Thursday.

Hjelmen is advised by Dr. Spencer Johnston and is researching the evolution of genome size in Drosophila species. During the past year, Hjelmen has prepared and submitted a manuscript titled “The mode and tempo of genome size evolution in the subgenus Sopophora” and was a contributing author of another paper titled “The effects of natural selection and repetitive elements on genome-size evolution in North American Fireflies.”

Hjelmen has served on two leadership roles during his grad school career, including President and Vice President of the Entomological Graduate Student Organization. He served as the social activities chair and was chair of the Southwestern Branch Entomological Society of America’s Photo Salon for 2 years. Hjelmen currently is a team member of the graduate Linnaean Team which took first place during the Linnaean Games at the Southwestern Branch meeting in 2016 in Tyler.

He also has volunteered at various outreach programs at various local elementary schools and at the university, as well as at Boonville Days at the Brazos Valley Natural History Museum. Hjelmen also represented the Department at the Entomological Society of America meetings, as well as the Ecological Integration Symposium and Texas A&M’s annual Student Research Week.

Richelle Marquess, right, with Entomology Department Head Dr. David Ragsdale. Photo by Rob Williams.
Richelle Marquess, right, with Entomology Department Head Dr. David Ragsdale. Photo by Rob Williams.

Marquess recently graduated in December 2016 with her Master of Science in Entomology and is currently working with Dr. Spence Behmer’s laboratory part-time as a research technician on projects related to her thesis titled “The role of food protein-carbohydrate content on nutrient regulation strategies and wing morph determination in the wing polymorphic cricket Gryllus firmus.”

During her time at A&M, Marquess has been involved in various outreach activities including insect presentations at Rock Prairie Elementary’s STEM Night, Greens Prairie Elemantary’s Open House, and at a local children’s camp in Millican. She also has served as a teaching assistant for the General Entomology course (ENTO 201) in 2015 and 2016.

“Richelle’s passion for entomology is contagious, and it shows when she is doing outreach activities. It is when she is truly in her element. I can also honestly say that Richelle has taught me much about how to handle live insects/arthropods,” Behmer said.  “I predict her passion and enthusiasm for all things insects will be greatly missed in the department when she eventually moves on to her next position.”

Alex Payne Wins Award for Her Research at National Conference

February 9, 2017 by Rob Williams

Alex Payne in front of a mural. Photo by Rob Williams
Alex Payne. Photo by Rob Williams

GALVESTON, Texas—Congratulations to Ph.D. student Alex Payne as she recently received an award for Best Student Paper from the American Association of Professional Apiculturists for her talk at the organization’s annual American Bee Research Conference in Galveston in January, 2017.

Payne is mentored by Dr. Juliana Rangel. Her talk at the symposium was titled “The effects of honey bee (Apis mellifera) queen insemination volume on colony growth”.

Her presentation looked at how the volume of semen in a queen who was artificially inseminated affects the overall growth of a honey bee colony over time by comparing hives led by high-inseminated queens to hives with low-inseminated queens.

In her research, Payne wanted to determine if the insemination volume of the queens had any effect on a colony’s growth over time. She said the results of the study concluded that insemination volume did not have an impact on the growth and productivity of the colony. Payne also said that the information from her study helpsqueen breeders and commercial beekeepers when they evaluate the quality of their queens.

Payne enjoyed presenting her research to the audience during the conference and was excited to receive the award from the organization.

“There were a lot of great student presentations at the conference, so I was surprised but happy to learn that I had won an award,” Payne said.

Dr. Max Summers Honored with Lifetime Achievement Award

January 26, 2017 by Rob Williams

Dr. Max Summers holding award with Dr. David Ragsdale
Dr. Max Summers, left, with Department Head Dr. David Ragsdale. Photo by Rob Williams.

COLLEGE STATION, Texas—The Department of Entomology honored Dr. Max Summers with the Department of Entomology Lifetime Recognition award during the January regular faculty meeting.

Summers is a Distinguished Professor Emeritus and former holder of the Endowed Chair in Agricultural Biotechnology. Summers promoted inquiry-driven and knowledge-based research that generated more than $40 million in grants and patent income and over 375 scholarly publications in quality, high impact peer-reviewed journals.

Together with his former student, Gale Smith, Summers was responsible for the pioneering and enabling research that developed the baculovirus expression vector system (BEVS). BEVS has been routinely used in agricultural and medical research for basic research, gene discovery and for the commercial development of vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics. Among its numerous impacts on society, BEVS has been used in the development of vaccines for the prevention of several human cancers, thus saving hundreds of thousands of lives a year.

In subsequent research, Summers demonstrated that mutations of integral proteins within the inner nuclear membrane may result in diseases associated with muscular and lipid dystrophies. This research not only generated new mechanistic theories for membrane protein trafficking and targeting to the eukaryotic cell inner nuclear membrane; but also a variety of possible applications for agriculture, human health, and medicine. These include novel pathobiological insights to a number of important diseases and knowledge basic to new approaches for insect pest control.

Rebecca Hapes, left, receiving her pin from Dr. David Ragsdale
Rebecca Hapes, left, receiving her pin from Dr. David Ragsdale. Photo by Rob Williams.

In 2001, he was listed as one of the top 250 most highly cited microbiologists in the world: Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) Most Highly Cited. His research was collaborative and multidisciplinary while simultaneously garnering extensive international recognition from his peers. Summers significantly advanced the field of molecular cell biology and his research results have generated tremendous benefit to the global community through the development and distribution of human and animal pharmaceuticals.

Summers is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a Fellow in the American Academy of Microbiology and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Patricia Pietrantonio, left, receiving her pin from Dr. David Ragsdale. Photo by Rob Williams.
Patricia Pietrantonio, left, receiving her pin from Dr. David Ragsdale. Photo by Rob Williams.

He also was president of the American Society for Virology, chair of Class VI of the National Academy of Sciences, and named Inventor of the Year by the Houston Intellectual Property Law Association.

Summers served on various boards including the Entomological Society of American Foundation Board of Councilors, and the Texas Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, and was editor of Virology, and executive editor of Protein Expression and Purification. He was a Foundation for Microbiology Lecturer of the American Society for Microbiology and received the first Distinguished Alumni Award from the Purdue University School of Agriculture in 1992.

Robert Jensen with Dr. David Ragsdale. Photo by Rob Williams.
Robert Jensen, left, with Dr. David Ragsdale. Photo by Rob Williams.

He also has served on the U.S. Department of Commerce Biotechnology Technical Advisory Committee, the National Academy of Sciences Council of the Government-University-Industry Research Roundtable, and the Chiron Corporation Biotechnology Research Award Nominating Committee. He was a panelist of the Accountability and Federally Funded Research Panel, a subcommittee of the Committee on Science, Engineering and Public Policy on Government Performance and Results Act.

Summers received an A.B. degree in biology in 1962 from Wilmington College and a PhD in entomology from Purdue University in 1968. Dr. Summers was an Assistant and an Associate Professor of Botany at the University of Texas before moving to Texas A&M as a Professor of Entomology in 1977. He retired in 2011.

In addition to the Lifetime Achievement presentation, Rebecca Hapes and Dr. Patricia Pietrantonio received pins for 20 years of service and Robert Jensen and Felicita Anzualda received pins for 30 years of service.

Tomberlin Named AgriLife Research Fellow, Extension Entomology, IPM Agents Receive Superior Service Awards

January 13, 2017 by Rob Williams

Dr. Jeff Tomberlin, right, with Dr. Craig Nessler, Director of Texas A&M AgriLife Research. Photo by Rob Williams.
Dr. Jeff Tomberlin, right, with Dr. Craig Nessler, Director of Texas A&M AgriLife Research. Photo by Rob Williams.

COLLEGE STATION, Texas—The Department of Entomology has started the New Year off right as it celebrates the recipients of the latest round of awards given at the 2017 Texas A&M AgriLife Conference.

The awards were given during the Research and Extension awards presentation on Tuesday in the Memorial Student Center’s Bethancourt Ballroom.

Dr. Jeff Tomberlin was honored as a Texas A&M AgriLife Research Faculty Fellow, an honorific title he will keep throughout his tenure at Texas A&M.  This was awarded for his outstanding research in the field of forensic entomology.

Tomberlin is an Associate Professor with the Department and is Director of the Forensic & Investigative Sciences Program and principal investigator of the Forensic Laboratory for Investigative Entomological Sciences (F.L.I.E.S.) Facility (forensicentomology.tamu.edu) in the Department of Entomology at Texas A&M University.

Tomberlin has attracted more than $2.2 million in the past five years and the results of his studies are widely published and cited worldwide. He is also active in various U.S. forensic science associations and has served as American Board of Forensic Entomology president.

“I am so honored to receive such a recognition from Texas AgriLife Research,” Tomberlin said. “Such an award only inspires me to continue to pushing forward with my research for the benefit of humanity.”

The Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service also awarded the Superior Service Award to the Arbovirus Team and the North Region – Cotton Resistant Weed Management Team during the ceremony.

The Arbovirus Team consists of Dr. Sonja Swiger, Dr. Mike Merchant, Dr. Holly Jarvis Whitaker (Coordinator of Educational Media and Online Curriculum Development-Texas A&M AgriLife Communications), Steve Byrns, Diane Bowen, Bill Watson, Wizzie Brown, and Molly Keck (Extension Program Specialist III) and Robin Williams.

Inside-2
The Arbovirus Team with Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service Director Dr. Doug Steele. From left to right are: Dr. Steele, Holly Jarvis Whitaker, Molly Keck, Sonja Swiger, Rob Williams, Diane Bowen, Bill Watson, Steve Byrns, Mike Merchant, and Wizzie Brown. Photo by Janet Hurley.

The team was awarded for their outstanding efforts in developing and providing educational materials to help protect Texans from the West Nile Virus and Zika from 2012 to 2016.

According to the nomination, the team was started as a response during the West Nile Virus outbreak that hit Texas in 2012. In response to the outbreak, Swiger was named to lead a task force charged with developing and delivering educational program on mosquito management.

With the emergence of WNV as a significant health threat in the mid to late summer of 2012, the team delivered 2 AgriLife press releases, 13 blog posts, 1 web publication, 3 mosquito and WNV specific websites, 3 newsletter articles, 20 newspaper articles, 5 videos, 16 radio and TV interviews and 13 WNV seminars. The efforts of the Extension Entomology group in 2012 educated thousands and aided county and municipal officials in understanding the problem and rapidly initiating mosquito control programs. Mosquito control programs initiated in urban areas reduced levels of WNV infection.

The first phase of the Zika campaign began in 2016 with the creation of reported 17 presentations on mosquitoes and Zika, six Trainings for County Extension Agents, 68 newsletter articles written, 3 articles in magazines for pest management professionals, 97 newspaper/on-line articles, and 36 TV and radio programs.

“Your excellent work has been recognized at a very high level and in a very meaningful way! Your work went a long way in getting people the information they needed to stay healthy,” said Dr. Charles Allen, Associate Department Head for Extension Entomology Programs.

In addition to the Arbovirus Team, Extension Agents-IPM Blayne Reed and Kerry Siders received Superior Service Award for the Team category. Reed and Siders were part of the North Region – Cotton Resistant Weed Management Team.

Ann Pool Receives Staff Meritorious Service Award

December 15, 2016 by Rob Williams

Ann holding her award
Ann Pool, right, with Dr. David Ragsdale, Department Head

COLLEGE STATION, Texas — The Department of Entomology at Texas A&M University would like to congratulate Ann Pool on receiving the 2016 Department of Entomology Staff Meritorious Service Award.

Pool, an Academic Advisor II in the Department’s Advising office, received the award during a special reception in the fourth floor atrium on Wednesday, December 14.

Since joining the Department in 2013, Pool has been instrumental in the daily academic operations in the department, taking care of most of the undergraduate academic advising for the Entomology, Forensic and Investigative Sciences, and the certificate in Public Health Entomology.

Pool is also in charge of the various outreach programs that the department holds and has conducted information sessions every semester for parents, current and prospective students looking to either join the Department or change majors into either of the three programs the Department offers.

“Ann is incredibly knowledgeable and is always willing to help, regardless of the circumstance,” the nominator states. “Ann gives freely of her time to student, faculty and colleagues across the campus. She is highly respected among the advising community.”

Pool also works closely with Dr. Pete Teel on behalf of the Department to host the annual 4-H and FFA insect judging workshops and clinics and contests that are held in the spring. In the past three years, their efforts have increased participation by at least 25 percent. The clinics have also have helped several of the participants to become winners in both Top Ten team and Top Ten Individuals in the FFA contests.

“These events take place on the weekends, and Ann gives freely of her time, working tirelessly to ensure that these events run smoothly, that participants have a fabulous experience and leave with a positive impression of the department and the college,” the nominator said.

She is a member of both the National Academic Advising Association and the University Advisors and Counselors. In the summer of 2015, she has helped with assessing and redesigning the New Advisor Orientations that were offered by the UAC. Pool and her subcommittee also coordinated and facilitated new advisor orientations during the 2015-2016 academic year to help those new to the advising community altogether, as well as to Texas A&M, to become familiar with the University’s advising policies and procedures.

“I believe this speaks volumes not only of her dedication and service to the advising profession, but also to the students attending and those who will attend Texas A&M University,” the nominator said. “She has spent countless hours creating an orientation program for advisors who will interact with thousands upon thousands of students in an effort to ensure that accurate and consistent messaging is taking place across campus.”

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