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Awards

Wharton Receives Lifetime Achievement Recognition

January 8, 2020 by Rob Williams

Congratulations to professor emeritus Dr. Bob Wharton as he received the Department of Entomology’s Lifetime Achievement Recognition.

Since joining the Department in the early 1980s, Wharton was well-liked for his teaching and mentoring of graduate students and his success in teaching has resulted in a number of superbly-trained, equally passionate, and independent-thinking graduate students graduating from the Department.

He has served on 4 thesis and dissertation committees for 8 consecutive years and created an atmosphere of candid discussion and self-discovery for students and promoted inquiry-driven and hypothesis- based research, which resulted in his students becoming integral components of his research program. As a result, students have written several grant proposals, published original research results in quality, high impact peer-reviewed journals and presented at national and international meetings and symposia.

Wharton maintained a research program at the forefront of systematics while contributing substantially in the very practical and applied discipline of biological control of invasive species. His program was international in scope, with a wide range of collaborators across the globe. The specialized subjects of research were the fruit-infesting tephritid flies and their natural enemies which form a model system for the research effort.

Tephritid fruit flies are key pests of edible fruits worldwide, with millions of dollars spent every year in the U.S. in detection and eradication efforts. Such are their abilities to cause devastation in crops across a broad range of commercially important host plants that regulatory agencies even worry about this group of flies being bred and released by terrorists to disrupt food supplies in the southern tier of states, from California to Florida.

The flies also have been the poster child for sympatric speciation, an area of research that has challenged many traditional assumptions on evolution. A conclusion drawn from the work conducted over the past 50 years primarily on temperate, North American species is the remarkable host fidelity exhibited by these flies.

The data generated during the applied research program are now being used Wharton and his colleagues to address differences between tropical and temperate tephritids in patterns of host plant utilization, and the underlying causes. One paper on this subject, recently accepted for publication, was accorded high praise by the subject editor, “This research addresses one of the dominant, high-profile models of speciation in animals.”

Over the last 10 years of his career, Wharton secured several grants including 2 NSF-PEET-Monographic Research on Parasitic Hymenoptera competitive grants, CONACYT, California Department of Food and Agriculture, USDA-IFAS, and USAID. This level of support generated an average of 5 peer-reviewed, refereed journal articles per year for much of his career.

 

Kerns Receives TPPA Academic Agency Award

January 3, 2020 by Rob Williams

David Kerns in front of mural. Photo by Rob Williams
David Kerns. Photo by Rob Williams

Congratulations to Professor and Extension Specialist Dr. David Kerns as he received the Texas Plant Protection Association’s Academic Agency Award during the 2019 Texas Plant Protection Conference.

Kerns is also the Assistant Department Head for Extension Programs and Statewide IPM Coordinator. He received the award for his outstanding dedication and service to Texas agriculture and to the Texas Plant Protection Association.

“I am very honored to receive the award and credit the people I work with for the recognition,” Kerns said.

 

 

 

Texas A&M Entomology Sweeps Awards at ESA National Meeting

November 26, 2019 by Rob Williams

Dr. Jim Woolley, right receiving a plaque recognizing his work as an editor in chief of Thomas Say Publications from 2003-2019. Photo by Entomological Society of America.
Dr. Jim Woolley, right receiving a plaque recognizing his work as an editor in chief of Thomas Say Publications from 2003-2019

Fifteen students, the Sugarcane Aphid Team, and two retired faculty members in the Department were recognized at the 2019 annual meeting of the Entomological Society of America meeting in St. Louis.

The four-day-long event featured speakers from universities across the nation, symposia, and student poster and paper contests, as well as mixers and networking events held at the America’s Center and the Marriott Grand St. Louis Hotel.

Professor Emeritus Dr. Jim Woolley received recognition for being editor in chief of the Thomas Say Publications from 2003-2019 during the Professional Awards breakfast on Tuesday, November 12.

Professor Emeritus Dr. Frank Gilstrap was named 2019 Honorary Member of the ESA for his extraordinary contributions to the ESA through his career while he was with the Department of Entomology, Texas A&M AgriLife Research.

Ph.D student Jocelyn Holt also was recognized as being named the Southwestern Branch recipient of the John Comstock Award for her outstanding research and other contributions in entomology and the ESA.

Thirteen students also received awards for their posters and presentations during the Student Competition for the President’s Prize, including:

Graduate 10 Minute Papers

Mackenzie Tietjen speaking during the paper presentation sessions. Photo by Lauren Beebe
Mackenzie Tietjen speaking during the paper presentation sessions. Photo by Lauren Beebe

Mackenzie Tietjen: First Place – Medical, Urban, and Veterinary Entomology section, Diversity for her paper titled “Assessing host associated differentiation in Dermacentor variabilis (Acari: Ixodidae)”

Constance Lin – First Place in the Medical, Urban, and Veterinary Entomology – Ecology and Behavior 1 for “Raising the “anty” in decomposition ecology: Effects of vertebrate carrion on fire ant colony performance

Mark Janowiecki – First Place in Medical Urban and Veterinary Entomology – Life History for “Seasonality and spatial distribution of Reticulitermes spp. (Blattodea: Rhinotermitidae)

Blake Elkins – Second place Plant – Insect Ecosystems – Biocontrol of Insects 2 for “Species complex and population variation of natural enemies of sugarcane aphid across gradients of landscape composition and structure”

Jose Santiago – First Place in Physiology, Biology and Toxicology, Insecticide Resistance for “Monitoring the susceptibility of Helicoverpa zea (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) populations collected in Texas to Cry1Ac, Cry2Ab2 and Vip3Aa using F2 screens”

Ruth Henderson with her poster. Photo by Pierre Lau.
Ruth Harrison with her poster. Photo by Pierre Lau.

Crys Wright – First Place in the Plant – Insect Ecosystems – Biocontrol of Insects 2 “Testing for fecundity compensation in parasitized sugarcane aphids”

Undergraduate 10 Minute Papers

Drew Little – Second Place in the Systematics, Evolution, and Biodiversity 2 for “Analysis of Stimulus in the phase-related behavior of Schistocerca piceifrons”

Carolina Wilson – Second Place in Plant – Insect Ecosystems for “Effects of fungal endophyte treatment and herbivory on extra floral nectar carbohydrate composition”

Undergraduate Posters

Alex Payne, right, speaking about her poster during the poster session. Submitted photo.
Alex Payne, right, speaking about her poster during the poster session. Submitted photo.

Ruth Harrison – Plant – Insect Ecosystems 1 for “Pollinator assemblages across different levels of landscape development in the Post Oak Savannah ecoregion”

Sabrina Quintanilla – Physiology, Biochemistry and Toxicology for “Lipid preferences in laboratory-maintained colonies of the red imported fire ant (Solenopsis invicta)

Xiaotian Tang with his poster. Submitted photo.
Xiaotian Tang with his poster. Submitted photo.

Graduate Posters

Xiaotian Tang – First Place in Plant – Insect Ecosystems, Plant Disease Vectors for “‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ inhibits apoptosis in Bactericera cockerelli gut to facilitate its acquisition and transmission”

Alexandria Payne – First Place in Physiology, Biochemistry, and Toxicology for “Interspecies virus transmission between ants and honey bees (Apis mellifera)

John Grunseich in Plant – Insect Ecosystems, Biology Control for “A specialist herbivore uses chemical cues from host-plant roots to avoid induced defenses and elevated predation risk”

Pierre Lau, right, receives the La Fage Award from Li-Byerly Hongmei. Photo by Photo by Dr. James Nieh.
Pierre Lau, right, receives the La Fage Award from Li-Byerly Hongmei. Photo by Photo by Dr. James Nieh.

Ph.D. student Pierre Lau also received the International Union for the Study of Social Insects, North American Section’s 2019 Jeffery P. LaFage Student Award for Applied Research on Social Insects during a special recognition event.

The Jeffery P. La Fage Student Award for Applied Research on Social Insects recognizes a graduate student for distinguished research and scholarly activity on social insects, with an emphasis on applied projects.

Members of the Sugarcane Aphid Team received the 2019 Plant-Insect Ecosystem Integrated Pest Management Team Award, sponsored by Corteva Agriscience. The team established thresholds and sampling protocols for sugarcane aphids and incorporated aphid resistant sorghum hybrids into management, and identified and evaluated natural enemies for regulating the aphids.

The team includes Brent Bean (United Sorghum Checkoff Program), Robert Bowling (Bayer Crop Science and former AgriLife Extension faculty), Michael Brewer (Texas A&M AgriLife Research – Corpus Christi), David Buntin (University of Georgia), Norman Elliott (USDA-ARS, Southern Plains), Amanda Jacobson (Corteva Agriscience), John Gordy (Syngenta Crop Protection and former Ph.D. student), Ronald Navarrete-Ganchozo (Bayer Crop Science), Nick Seiter (University of Illinois), Jason Thomas (University of Idaho and former M.S student), and Dr. Jim Woolley (Professor Emeritus – Texas A&M University).

Since its creation, the team has published 20 journal articles, 12 Extension publications and developed nine web resources as a result of their work.

Grad Student Wins Jeffery La Fage Award

November 25, 2019 by Rob Williams

Pierre Lau, right, receives the La Fage Award from Li-Byerly Hongmei. Photo by Photo by Dr. James Nieh.
Pierre Lau, right, receives the La Fage Award from Li-Byerly Hongmei. Photo by Photo by Dr. James Nieh.

Congratulations to Ph.D. candidate Pierre Lau as he received the 2019 Jeffery P. LaFage Student Award for Applied Research on Social Insects during the Entomological Society of America annual meeting in St. Louis.

Lau is completing his Ph.D. research at Texas A&M under the direction of Dr. Juliana Rangel where his doctoral work is focused on how to improve honey bee nutrition, with a focus on bees’ preferences for specific ratios of protein-to-lipid within pollen resources.

Lau’s findings so far suggest that bee pollen-to-lipid ratio preferences are substantially different from the ratios found in commercially-available pollen substitutes, which have traditionally been touted as being “high protein” to promote brood rearing.

In addition, Lau has explored variation in the types of pollen collected by bees at different places across the U.S.; characterized bee salt preferences; and developed an artificial honey bee diet that will set the stage for future tests of how bee diet nutrient content affects honey bee fitness.

Lau’s letter writers note that in addition to his critical research work focused on pollen, he is highly enthusiastic about education and outreach, helping beekeepers connect the dots between nutrition and colony health.

Lau holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Environmental Systems from the University of California, San Diego.

The Jeffery P. La Fage Student Award for Applied Research on Social Insects recognizes a graduate student for distinguished research and scholarly activity on social insects, with an emphasis on applied projects. The award consists of a plaque and an honorarium.

Department Names 2019 Perry Adkisson Distinguished Seminar Speaker Award

November 20, 2019 by Rob Williams

Dr. Andrew Suarez, right, with Dr. Pete Teel, Regents Professor, Interim Department Head
Dr. Andrew Suarez, right, with Dr. Pete Teel, Regents Professor, Interim Department Head

Congratulations to Dr. Andrew Suarez from the University of Illinois on receiving the annual Dr. Perry Adkisson Distinguished Seminar Speaker Award.

Dr. Suarez received the award during a special seminar on November 7 in Room 103 of the Heep Center.

Dr. Suarez is professor and head of the Department of Animal Biology and Professor in the Department of Entomology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

One of the world’s leading ant ecologists, Dr. Suarez uses ants as a model system to answer broad ecological questions that span questions in invasion biology and evolutionary biology. According to Google Scholar, Suarez’ works have been cited more than 14,000 times and has been published in journals such as Nature, Science, Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, and Ecology.

Dr. Suarez also has been an instructor for the world renowned “Ant Course,” which is an intensive course for myrmecologists from across the world.

His research and teaching efforts have received numerous awards, including the Department Executive Officer Fellow in 2014, CISRO Distinguished Visiting Scientist in 2015, the University of Illinois Campus Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching and the LAS Dean’s Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching in 2017.

The recognition of Distinguished Speakers is supported through a generous gift provided by Dr. Perry and Frances Adkisson.  Dr. Adkisson, former Entomology Department Head and member of the National Academy of Science, became Chancellor of the Texas A&M University System.  He served as President of the Entomological Society of America and was honored as a Fellow of the Entomological Society of America.  His career research discoveries and applications of Integrated Pest Management were of global impact.  He became the first recipient of all three of the world’s major prizes in agriculture, the Alexander von Humboldt Award, the Wolf Prize, and the World Food Prize.

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