Entomological Society Announces Its
2005 Awardees
October 18,
2005, Lanham, Md. — The Entomological Society of America
(ESA) is pleased to announce the winners of its 2005 awards
program. The Society’s professional awards will be presented
during its 2005 Annual Meeting, December 15-18, in Fort
Lauderdale, Florida.
ESA Professional Awards
Distinguished
Achievement Award in Extension — Presented annually,
this award recognizes outstanding contributions in extension
entomology. This year’s winner, Dr. Michael E. Merchant, BCE,
has been a professor and extension urban entomologist at Texas
A&M University’s Research and Extension Center in Dallas since
1989. He is a popular trainer for the Texas structural pest
control and green industries, and provides pest control and
pesticide safety information to northern Texas consumers. He
co-developed the popular Texas Two-step Method of fire ant
control, which has been adopted by numerous states and cities
throughout the South. His leadership in helping develop school
integrated pest management (IPM) programs in Texas has received
national recognition. He has made more than 500 extension
presentations and authored dozens of extension fact sheets. His
Insects in
the City website receives more than 3,000 visitors
monthly, and he maintains an active research program on school
IPM and the control of termites, scorpions, and brown recluse
spiders.
Distinguished
Achievement Award in Regulatory Entomology (Sponsored by the
American Nursery & Landscape Association) — This
award honors regulatory entomologists for their valuable
contributions to American horticulture. Dr. Shashank S.
Nilakhe, this year’s awardee, has conducted applied research
on insects of field crops. He joined the Texas Department of
Agriculture 17 years ago and has held numerous positions in that
department. Currently, he is the state entomologist, advising
the department on pests and other agricultural issues. His
leadership, team-building ability, and relentless pursuit to
accomplish results-oriented goals are well known among
scientists, regulatory community, and commodity groups. His
efforts have prevented numerous exotic pests from taking a
foothold in Texas. Nilakhe serves on several committees of the
National Plant Board, Southern Plant Board, and USDA Animal and
Plant Health Inspection Service. Recently, the National
Association of State Departments of Agriculture awarded him the
James A. Graham Award for Outstanding Service to Agriculture.
Distinguished
Achievement Award in Teaching — This award is presented
annually to the ESA member deemed to be the Society’s
outstanding teacher of the year. The 2005 recipient, Dr.
Richard S. Zack, is an associate professor who employs
innovative approaches to teaching and learning, and turns
traditional lecture-style courses into hands-on, exciting
experiences for his students at Washington State University (WSU).
His most popular course, Insects and People, targets
non-science majors and has been labeled a “must-take course” by
WSU’s student-run newspaper. Zack is active in advising,
recruiting, and mentoring students. As curator of WSU’s M.T.
James Entomological Collection, he conducts outreach by
involving students with diverse backgrounds in curatorial duties
and research, as well as hosting hundreds of primary and
secondary students from throughout the Pacific Northwest. His
research integrates general principles of ecology and
biodiversity with an applied perspective. Zack earned a B.S.
from Ohio State University, M.S. from Kent State University, and
Ph.D. from WSU.
President’s
Prize for Outstanding Achievement in Secondary Education
— This award annually recognizes educators who have gone beyond
the traditional teaching methods by using insects as educational
tools. The 2005 recipient, Kathleen Ferguson, has a B.S.
and M.A. from Washington State University. She has taught in a
variety of the sciences, including biology, advanced biology,
chemistry, earth science, physical science, and environmental
science, as well as leadership in Washington State for 20 years.
Ferguson is active in state leadership programs and has been a
student activities advisor throughout her career. She has taught
and served as the science department chair and the alternative
spring break advisor at Okanogan High School for the last five
years. She is currently pursuing her National Board
Certification in adolescent/young adult biology instruction.
Designing relevant, interesting curriculum for her students is
her main focus in the classroom. When not in the classroom,
Ferguson enjoys endurance racing her Arabian horses,
cross-country skiing, jogging, reading, and spending time with
family.
Recognition
Award in Entomology (Sponsored by Syngenta Crop Protection)
— This award recognizes entomologists who have made or are
making significant contributions to agriculture. This year’s
recipient, Dr. Anthony M. Shelton, received his B.A. in
classics and philosophy from St. Mary’s College and his M.S. and
Ph.D. in entomology from the University of California-Riverside.
He began his professorial career in 1979 at Cornell University’s
Department of Entomology at the New York Agricultural Research
Station in Geneva. He currently is a professor of entomology and
international professor at Cornell. His research and extension
program focuses on developing sound insect pest management
strategies for vegetables, with spin-offs for other crops.
Components of the program stress insect population ecology,
insecticide resistance, biocontrol, plant resistance,
agricultural biotechnology, insect movement, trap cropping, and
plant productivity and marketability as a function of insect
infestations. Shelton won the Entomological Foundation’s Award
for Excellence in IPM in 1995. For both awards, he thanks the
wonderful people with whom he has worked in his laboratory and
beyond.
Recognition
Award in Insect Physiology, Biochemistry, and Toxicology (Sponsored
by Bayer CropScience) — This award recognizes and
encourages innovative research in insect physiology,
biochemistry, and toxicology. The 2005 awardee, Dr. Richard
W. Beeman, is a research entomologist at the USDA
Agricultural Research Service, Grain Marketing and Production
Research Center in Manhattan, Kansas, and an adjunct entomology
professor at Kansas State University. He has made fundamental
research contributions in diverse areas, including insect
genetics and genomics, insect development, and insecticide
toxicology and resistance. He was the first to describe a
unified homeotic gene complex in any animal, establishing a
paradigm that has been extensively corroborated in many species.
He discovered the existence and widespread occurrence in nature
of a previously unknown class of maternally-acting selfish
genes. He also contributed to the development of efficient tools
for transposon-mediated germline transformation in Tribolium
and produced the first high-resolution molecular recombination
maps in this insect. In 2003, he co-authored the “white paper”
that led to the complete genome sequencing of Tribolium
castaneum, the first beetle and first significant agronomic
pest insect to join the “genome club.”
ESA Student Awards
Student
Certification Award (Sponsored by Springer Pest Solutions)
— Instituted this year, this award recognizes and encourages
outstanding entomology graduate students with interest in the
mission of the ESA certification program. Neil A. Spomer,
the first winner of this award, is a Ph.D. student in urban
entomology under the supervision of Dr. Shripat T. Kamble at the
University of Nebraska-Lincoln. He received his B.S. in business
administration and marketing in 1999 and his M.S. in urban
entomology in 2005. His M.S. research focused on Temperature
mediated kinetics and biological activity of Noviflumuron in the
Eastern subterranean termite, Reticulitermes flavipes (Kollar).
His Ph.D. research will address biochemical and toxicological
studies utilizing novel chemistry of termiticides in
subterranean termites. Spomer has been a member of ESA since
2002, and is currently serving on the student advisory and
national awards committees of the North Central Branch. He
passed the Board Certified Entomologist (BCE) qualifying and
specialty exams and became a BCE intern earlier this year.
John Henry
Comstock Graduate Student Awards — These awards promote
interest in entomology at the graduate level and stimulate
interest in attending the ESA Annual Meeting. The following 2005
winners were selected by each of the five ESA Branches:
Dr.
Jaime Piñero (Eastern Branch) earned his B.S. in
agronomy in Xalapa, México (1995) and his Ph.D. from the
University of Massachusetts (2005). He also worked with
tephritid flies with Dr. Martín Aluja at the Instituto de
Ecología, A.C. until 1999. Through his research, the
identification of a synergistic odor combination that is very
attractive to plum curculios has, for the first time, provided
Northeastern apple growers with an effective means of monitoring
the seasonal course of immigration. Piñero received a
competitive UMass graduate fellowship and the Harry A. Rosenfeld
Research Award in Economic Entomology. He also has published six
senior-authored, 11 co-authored refereed, and 11 senior-authored
grower-oriented articles. Currently a postdoctoral fellow at the
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Piñero is working with
ESA Fellow Silvia Dorn on tortricid moths. He has dedicated this
award to the memory of Ron Prokopy (d. May 2004).
Dr.
Lucasz Stelinski (North Central Branch) is a new
postdoctoral researcher in the entomology department at Michigan
State University, where he received his Master’s and Ph.D. He
works with Drs. Larry Gut and Jim Miller. Stellinski’s research
focuses on insect chemical ecology and behavior and the
mechanisms underlying pheromone-based mating disruption.
Currently, he is interested in understanding how mating
disruption of moths by pheromones “works” so that practical
applications of semiochemicals can be further improved.
Stellinski is also interested in the behavior and ecology of
parasitic wasps attacking flies in the genus Rhagoletis.
Specifically, he hopes to tackle the question of whether
populations of D. alloeum are forming distinct host races
tracking the sympatric speciation of their Rhagoletis
prey. Stellinski has published more than 20 peer-reviewed
journal articles, several non-reviewed and extension articles,
and one book chapter.
Dr.
Deirdre Prischmann (Pacific Branch) completed her
B.A. in biology from Alfred University in New York in 1997,
after receiving a National Merit Scholarship. In 2000, she
completed her M.S. in entomology from Oregon State University,
where she worked with Dr. Brian A. Croft on the effects of
surrounding vegetation on mite densities within vineyards. In
2005, she received her Ph.D. in entomology from Washington State
University (WSU), where she worked with Dr. David G. James on
the biocontrol of spider mites on wine grapes, focusing on the
impacts of pesticides and generalist-feeding phytoseiid mites.
Prischmann has written six nonfiction books for grade-school
children, and has been honored with awards from the WSU
Association of Faculty Women, the WSU Department of Entomology,
and the American Society for Enology and Viticulture.
Dr.
James W. Austin (Southeastern Branch) recently
received his Ph.D. in entomology from University of Arkansas-Fayetteville,
where he worked on the molecular identification, biogeography,
and phylogenetics of subterranean termites. He received his M.S.
and B.S. in entomology from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Texas
A&M University (TAMU), respectively. He is currently a
postdoctoral research associate working under the supervision of
Dr. Roger Gold at TAMU’s Center for Urban and Structural
Entomology. Austin has won several awards, including a 2000 J.
William Fulbright Fellowship where he conducted research on
Middle Eastern termites in Turkey, the 1998 Jefferey P. La Fage
Memorial Award, the 2003 Larry Larson Leadership Dale Bumpers
College of Agriculture Distinguished Ph.D. Scholar. An ESA
member since 1991 and a BCE since 1994, he has 16 refereed
publications.
Matthew
Yoder (Southwestern Branch) is originally from
Rosthern Saskatchewan, Canada. He completed his undergraduate
degree at the University of Waterloo in Ontario and his Master’s
at Texas A&M University (TAMU). His dissertation research, also
being conducted at TAMU, focuses primarily on the systematics of
diapriid wasps (Hymenoptera: Diapriidae), though he is also
interested in the evolution of the order Hymenoptera as a whole.
Yoder has been involved with the development of a range of
informatics-based utilities that are used by the TAMU insect
collection, the systematics group at TAMU, and colleagues from a
number of laboratories throughout North America. In addition to
his extensive web-based contributions, he has published papers
on both the morphological and molecular aspects of his
systematics research and presented his work at national and
international meetings.
Normand
R. DuBois Memorial Scholarship (Sponsored by Valent
BioSciences Corporation) — This award encourages
research by graduate students directed toward biologically based
technologies to protect and preserve forests in an
environmentally acceptable manner. This year’s recipient,
Andrew D. Graves is a Ph.D. student in the Department of
Entomology at the University of Minnesota (UMN) under the
advisement of Dr. Mark E. Ascerno (UMN) and Dr. Steven J.
Seybold (U.S. Forest Service, Davis, California). Graves’
research interests in forest entomology focus on the chemical
ecology of bark beetles (Scolytidae). He is currently studying
the effects of bark beetle pheromones, semiochemicals from
competing insects, non-host volatiles, and most recently, plant
hormones on the flight response of bark beetles and subcortical
associates in Alaska. Ultimately, he is interested in the
application of naturally produced compounds as management tools
to reduce tree mortality. In addition to his education and
research, Graves is serving as the president of the Department
of Entomology’s student organization, Frenatae, and as the
teaching assistant for the forest and shade tree entomology
course.
Student
Activity Award (Sponsored by Monsanto Company) —
This award recognizes an ESA student member for outstanding
contributions to the Society, his/her academic department, and
the community, all while achieving academic excellence.
Thomas Eickhoff, the 2005 awardee, is pursuing a Ph.D. at
the University of Nebraska-Lincoln investigating potential
sources of genetic resistance to sap feeding insects on
warm-season grasses under the direction of Drs. Frederick
Baxendale and Tiffany Heng-Moss. In addition to his Ph.D.
research, he is a full-time research technician in the
Department of Entomology, overseeing his laboratory’s
insecticide evaluation program which has generated more than
$280,000 in grant support. Eickhoff also has volunteered twice
as a graduate teaching assistant, presented invited lectures at
14 extension programs, and published 31 research and extension
publications. In ESA, he has served as chair of the Committee on
Student Affairs and was an active member on the Program
Committee and Committee on Strategic Planning. In 2004, Eickhoff
organized and moderated two student symposia at the ESA Annual
Meeting in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Founded in 1889, ESA is a non-profit
organization committed to serving the scientific and
professional needs of more than 5,700 entomologists and
individuals in related disciplines. ESA's membership includes
representatives from educational institutions, government,
health agencies, and private industry. For more information on
ESA, please visit
http://www.entsoc.org.
Contact: Lisa Spurlock, ESA Society
Relations Officer, phone 301-731-4535, ext. 3009,
lspurlock@entsoc.org.