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Teaching Faculty


The rangeland ecology and management program includes some of the leading teachers and ecologists in the profession. All faculty members are active in diverse aspects of range ecology and management research, and several participate in service and outreach activities throughout the West. These experiences keep our curriculum exciting and pertinent.

Stephen Bunting

Stephen Bunting
Professor

Specialty Areas of Interest: Community and landscape ecology; Fire ecology and behavior

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Fisheries Professor Alex Fremier

Alex Fremier
Assistant Professor

Fremier received his doctorate from U.C. Davis in 2007 for his research on restoration of floodplain landscapes. His interests center on weaving fluvial geomorphology into restoration and landscape ecology to improve management of riparian ecosystems and flood-prone areas. His research focuses on issues involving riparian habitats, floodplain and riverine systems, and hydrological processes.

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James Kingery

Jim Kingery
Associate Professor Emeritus

Specialty Areas of Interest: * Forest grazing * Range management * Forest range relationships * Rangeland restoration

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Karen Lauchbaugh

Karen Launchbaugh
Director of the U-Idaho Rangeland Center and Professor of Rangeland Ecology

Specialty Areas of Interest: Plant-animal interactions; Grazing management; Animal behavior

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Paul McDaniel

Paul McDaniel
Professor


(208) 885-7012 | paulm@uidaho.edu

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Beth Newingham

Beth Newingham
Assistant Professor

Specialty area of Interest: Processes that affect restoration of natural ecosystems

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R. Robberecht

R Robberecht
Professor

Specialty area of Interest: Physiological plant ecology (Ecophysiology); guided independent learning (use of information technology in science education); scientific visualization and modeling (integration of ecological processes, molecule to globe)

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David Tank

David Tank
Assistant Professor & Director, Stillinger Herbarium

I am a plant systematist and am broadly interested in the investigation of the patterns and processes that shape plant biodiversity. In general, my research is focused on the use of molecular methods to reconstruct phylogenetic relationships in plants and the application of phylogenetic methods to understand plant evolution. The evolutionary causes and consequences of processes such as hybridization, polyploidy, pollination biology, biogeography, rapid diversification, and niche evolution can only be understood in light of a robust phylogenetic hypothesis, and these hypotheses are a necessary component of modern taxonomic treatments and classification systems. Research in my lab is directed at multiple levels of plant phylogeny and current projects range from comparative phylogeography of the Pacific Northwest inland rainforest communities, to the study of species boundaries and diversification among very closely related species, to patterns of diversification among some of the major lineages comprising the plant tree of life.

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Lee Vierling

Lee Vierling
Executive Director, UI McCall Field Campus and McCall Outdoor Science School (MOSS)
Associate Professor, Department of Forest, Rangeland and Fire Sciences

Specialty area of Interest: Remote Sensing; Spatial Ecology; Biogeochemistry; Global Change; Interdisciplinary Science Education

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