Governing Board of Entomological Society Elects 2005
Fellows
October
19, 2005,
Lanham, Md. — The Governing Board of the Entomological
Society of America (ESA) has elected nine new Fellows of the
Society. The title of Fellow will be bestowed upon the following
entomologists during the ESA Annual Meeting, December 15-18, 2005,
in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
Dr.
George E. Ball
has served the entomological community with distinction since
graduating from Cornell University in 1954. In that year, he
joined the University of Alberta, becoming a full professor in
1965. He later served as the entomology department’s chair
(1974-84) before retiring in 1992. Ball has been the Ph.D.
advisor to 38 graduates during his career and two more after his
retirement. He also has published 134 research papers and edited
or co-edited five books.
A world
expert on Mexican Carabidae, Ball has amassed the most important
collection representing Mexican species from more than 40 years
of field work. He has discovered important morphological
characters that have led to stable classification of many tribes
within the Carabidae. An Entomological Society of Canada (ESC)
Gold Medal recipient (1980), he is an Honorary Member of ESC
(1994) and the Entomological Society of Alberta (2000).
Ball
received his M.S. in biology from the University of Alabama
(1950) and his Ph.D. in entomology from Cornell (1954). In 1944
and 1945, Ball took a break from collegiate studies and served
in the U.S. Marines in the Asiatic-Pacific Theatre, receiving
the Purple Heart, a Presidential Unit Citation-Okinawan
Campaign, and the Victory Medal.
Dr.
Frank M. Davis
is internationally recognized for his expertise in lepidopterous
insects attacking crop plants, plant resistance to these
insects, and insect rearing. During his 42 years with USDA’s
Agricultural Research Service—34 of them as a research
entomologist with the Corn Host Plant Resistance Research Unit
at Mississippi State—he jointly released 12 germplasm lines and
one maize population, received one patent, and published 163
scientific papers (124 of them in refereed journals).
Davis and
colleagues identified the female southwestern corn borer
pheromone and developed technology that uses the synthetic
pheromone in monitoring adult populations throughout the pest’s
range. He developed a highly reliable and efficient rearing
system that is used throughout the Unites States and abroad for
the southwestern corn borer, fall armyworm, and other
lepidopteran species.
Before
retiring in 1999, Davis was an adjunct professor with
Mississippi State University since the late 1960s, where he also
received his three degrees in entomology. In 2000, the
Mississippi Senate passed a resolution recognizing Davis’
contributions to agriculture. Also, Davis is the vice mayor and
a member of the Board of Aldermen for the City of Starkville,
Mississippi.
Dr.
Randy Gaugler
is a pioneer in insect nematology. His work has led to the
commercial development and practical application of engineered
nematodes for insect control in the field. He was among the
first to apply recombinant DNA methods for the improvement of
entomopathogenic nematodes and his creative research has led to
six patents and seven licenses.
Gaugler
received his B.S. from North Dakota State University (1972), his
M.S. from North Carolina State University (1974), and his Ph.D.
in entomology from the University of Wisconsin (1978). His
career began as a senior scientist with the New York State
Museum (1979-82), before joining Rutgers University in 1982,
where he has remained a professor for more than 20 years. He now
holds the title Professor II (Distinguished Professor).
Gaugler has
published more than 180 referred papers and three edited books.
He is a Fellow of the Japanese Society for the Promotion of
Science (1994), the Society of Nematologists (1997), and the
American Association for the Advancement of Science (1999). In
addition, he was named a Fulbright Fellow earlier this year.
Considered
the world’s preeminent expert on scarab beetle systematics,
Dr. Henry F. Howden’s research on the taxonomy, systematics,
evolution, biogeography, faunistic surveys, and natural history
of Coleoptera has culminated in more than 170 scientific papers
and book chapters, as well as collaborations with 43 coauthors.
A Fellow of the Entomological Society of Canada (1985) and
Honorary Member of the Instituto de Ecologia in Xalapa, Mexico
(1998) and the Coleopterists Society (2003), Howden earned his
M.S. (1949) from the University of Maryland, and in 1953, was
the first student to earn a Ph.D. in entomology from North
Carolina State University.
During his
42-year career, he spent nearly 30 years at Carleton University
in Ontario, Canada, before retiring in 1995. Today he is a
professor emeritus at Carleton and an honorary research
associate at the Canadian Museum of Nature, also in Ontario. As
a professor, Howden was the major supervisor for nine M.S., 10
Ph.D., and hundreds of undergraduate students whom he taught
evolution, biogeography, and insect systematics. He also helped
stimulate a generation of scientists by organizing and leading
field courses to the Amazon in the 1970s, inspiring future
entomologists and others such as wildlife artist Robert Bateman
and natural history writer Adrian Forsyth.
Dr.
Loke-Tuck Kok
is an internationally acknowledged leader in the biocontrol of
musk and plumeless thistle, noxious pasture weeds in the United
States. He was the first to establish Trichosirocalus
horridus (Panzer) and Rhinocyllus conicus Froelich
weevils to combat these thistles in U.S. fields. He also was the
first to demonstrate the importance of combining herbivory and
plant competition for success. In addition, Kok has applied his
expertise to control purple loosestrife using the root weevil
Hylobius transversovittatus Goeze, spotted knapweed using
the fly Urophora affinis Frfld, and the hemlock woody
adelgid using the Canadian predaceous beetle Laricobius
nigrinus.
Kok received
his M.S. (1965) from the University of Malaya, Malaysia, and his
Ph.D. in entomology (1971) from the University of Wisconsin. He
joined Virginia Tech in 1972, and now serves as professor and
head of the entomology department.
A member of
Sigma Xi and Gamma Sigma Delta, Kok has graduated 14 M.S. and 12
Ph.D. students, and is currently advising or co-advising two
M.S. and six Ph.D. students. He also has taught graduate
courses—Biological Control of Arthropod Pests and Weeds,
Arthropod Pest Management, Insect Ecology—and an
upper-level undergraduate course, Insect Pest Management.
An
honorary research fellow with CSIRO Entomology and the
Queensland Museum, Dr. John F. Lawrence earned his Ph.D.
in entomology (1965) from the University of California-Berkeley.
He was a collections coordinator and assistant curator at
Harvard University’s Museum of Comparative Zoology (1964-77), a
research scientist with CSIRO’s Division of Entomology (1977-99,
and curator of coleopteran at the Australian National Insect
Collection (1977-99). He retired in 1999.
Lawrence’s
earliest research—in the 1960s—focused on Ciidae, “little brown
beetles” that appeared deficient in the systematic characters
normally used in beetle classification. He tackled this group
using an array of innovated character systems, including
internal structures and larvae, morphometrics, host specificity,
and a new technique at the time, cladistics. He quickly expanded
his interest to tackle higher-level systematic problems, and by
1970, was considered a leading world authority on beetle
systematics. He later cemented this position through massive
cooperative projects to produce a manual of beetle larvae and a
synopsis of beetle higher classification, although the main
results were not published until later (1981, 1991, 1995). In
1999, he produced CD-ROM guides to beetle adults and larvae,
which summarized his life’s work on this group of organisms.
Dr.
Lubomir Masner
has made significant contributions to Hymenopteran systematics,
particularly parasitic Hymenoptera. His specialization is the
superfamilies Proctotrupoidea, Platygastroidea, and
Ceraphronoidea, a complex of nearly 10,000 described species of
important biocontrol agents and vectors of human and animal
disease. He is considered the world’s preeminent expert on these
groups, with more than 90 peer-reviewed publications to his
name.
Masner
received his M.S. (1957) from Charles University,
Czechoslovakia, and his Ph.D. (1962) in entomology from the
Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences. In 1964, he accepted a
postdoctoral position with Agriculture Canada, and more than 30
years later, he retired to serve as honorary research associate
with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. In addition to his
research, he also was curator in the Hymenoptera section of the
Canadian National Collection of Insects, and built that
collection into a world-class resource on hymenoptera
biodiversity.
Recipient of
the Entomological Society of Canada’s Gold Medal (1999), Masner
has been named an external research associate for the American
Museum of Natural History, Florida State Collection of
Arthropods, and Carnegie Museum of Natural History. He has been
an external collaborator with the Instituto Nacional de
Biodiversidad, Costa Rica, and a research fellow with CSIRO, New
Zealand’s Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, and
the Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science.
For
30 years, Dr. Larry P. Pedigo has been a national leader
in integrated pest management. He has led the development and
use of economic injury levels (EILs). His approach to
establishing them has been the primary method used in the United
States and abroad. Many major books and web sites on pest
management use his equation, EIL=C/VDIK.
In addition
to his IPM expertise, Pedigo was an early leader in sampling
methodologies for agricultural pests. A major reference is the
Handbook of Sampling Methods for Arthropods in Agriculture
(1994), which he and a former student edited. He has published
more than 160 refereed papers.
Pedigo
earned his M.S. (1965) and Ph.D. (1967) in entomology from
Purdue University. In 1967, he became an assistant professor at
Iowa State University, where he retired in 2001 as a university
professor. At the university, Pedigo founded and directed a
secondary major in pest management, and designed and taught six
new courses in entomology, pest management, and zoology. He has
taught more than 2,000 undergraduates in Fundamentals of
Entomology and Pest Management, and wrote the textbook and
coauthored the laboratory manual for the course.
Dr.
Sonny B. Ramaswamy
received his M.S. in entomology from the University of
Agricultural Sciences in Bangalore, India (1976) and his Ph.D.
in entomology from Rutgers University (1980). He was a
postdoctoral researcher at Michigan State University (1979-82);
an assistant, associate, and full professor at Mississippi State
University (1982-97); and professor, university distinguished
professor and head of the Kansas State University (KSU),
Department of Entomology (1997-2004). At KSU, he administers a
department of approximately 20 regular, 15 adjunct, and 10
ancillary faculty.
Ramaswamy
directs an active personal research program in the integrative
reproductive biology of insects, encompassing endocrine and
ovarian physiology, chemical ecology, pheromones and sexual
behavior and their regulation by hormones, structure and
function of sensory receptors as related to host finding and
mating in insects, and modification of insect behavior using
natural products. He has published more than 100 journal papers,
and in recent years, has published on average more than five
refereed papers annually.
A Fellow of
the American Association for the Advancement of Science,
Ramaswamy has taught courses in general entomology, insect
physiology, and even public speaking. He also initiated and
manages the Insect Physiology Listserve. In education and
outreach, he was instrumental in the creation of and
fund-raising for the KSU Butterfly Conservatory and Insect Zoo.
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.
Contact: Lisa Spurlock, ESA Society Relations Officer, phone
301-731-4535, ext. 3009,
lspurlock@entsoc.org.