Faculty and Staff
About Our Faculty and Staff
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Sterling Wright
Associate Professor of Neurophysiology
Chair of Biology Department
2112B Biology Building
Visit Wright Lab.
Alexey Arkov
Professor
Genetic Cell Biology
2112I Biology Building
Oliver Beckers
Associate Professor
Behavioral Ecology
1112B Biology Building
David Canning
Associate Professor
Developmental Biology
1112D Biology Building
Matthew Carroll
Assistant Professor
Wildlife Biology
2309D Engineering & Physics
Andrea Darracq
Associate Professor of Wildlife Biology
Program Coordinator
102A Biology Building
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Michael Flinn
Professor of Aquatic Community Ecology
Director of Hancock Biological Station
1112I Biology Building
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Claire Fuller
Professor of Parasitology
Dean of Jones College of Science, Engineering and Technology
201A I&T Building
Kate He
Professor
Plant Ecology
1112F Biology Building
MS, °ÄÃÅ¿ª½±½á¹û. I am interested in endocrinology, wildlife disease epidemiology, and ecology. Specifically how stress physiology affects disease susceptibility and behavioral ecology along with implications for conservation. I use a broad spectrum of techniques ranging from radio-telemetry to molecular and immuno-assays.
Ingrid Jordon-Thaden
Assistant Professor
Botany
1112L Biology Building
BS in Chemistry, BS in Horticulture, and MS in Biology - University of Nebraska Lincoln; PhD in Plant Biology - University of Heidelberg. My lab conducts research in plant systematics and genetics. My current interests are in speciation mechanisms of plants that double their genomes, called polyploidy, and have interesting modes of reproduction. I focus on genera of plants that have large distributions across North America, with a special focus in the mustard family (Brassicaceae) and other alpine plants. My lab uses phylogenetics with DNA sequences, population genetics, greenhouse studies, microscopy, field work collections and observations, and collections-based research in herbaria to explore the evolution of species. My lab also runs the Murray State Herbarium, which houses the largest collection of the Mississippi Embayment area.
Christopher Lennon
Associate Professor
Microbiology
2111 Biology Building
BA, MS, University of Montana; PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison. My lab is broadly interested in the biological importance and biotechnological application of inteins. Inteins, or internal proteins, are self-catalytic, mobile genetic elements removed from host genes through protein splicing. Abundant in the microbial world, inteins have recently emerged as adaptive regulatory elements, representing a novel and potentially widespread form of posttranslational regulation. Further, the power of inteins to make and break peptide bonds has been utilized extensively in biotechnology, and my lab seeks to develop new applications of this chemistry.
Jessica (J.B.) Moon
Assistant Professor
Wetland Ecology
2309C Engineering & Physics
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Ph.D., Biological Sciences, Jamia Millia Islamia University, New Delhi, India; M.Sc., Biotechnology, Dr B.R. Ambedkar University, Agra, India; My primary research interest is to understand the regulation of lung inflammatory processes, particularly those involved in development of Acute Lung Injury (ALI). The major mechanisms of ALI include breakdown of epithelial and endothelial fluid barriers, causing pulmonary edema. By using pre-clinical model of ALI (sepsis-induced ALI), he is studying signaling mechanisms regulating barrier properties of vascular endothelial cells and lung vascular injury. I am also investigating the anti-inflammatory and barrier protective property of different drugs including metformin, and angiopoietin. He aims to translate the pre-clinical research on inflammatory lung disease for the development of novel therapies for critically ill patients with ALI.
Timothy Spier
Associate Professor, Fish Ecology
Graduate Coordinator
2309F Engineering & Physics
Laura Sullivan Beckers
Associate Professor
Evolutionary Biology
2112E Biology Building
. .
Christopher Trzepacz
Assistant Professor
Cell and Molecular Biology
2112H Biology Building
BS, University of Massachusetts Amherst; PhD. University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Ohio. My research group explores the conserved pathways and mechanisms that regulate fertility in multicellular organisms, primarily through the cellular, molecular, and genetic dissection of the amazing model nematode Caenorhabditis elegans.
Dena Weinberger
Associate Professor
Neurobiology
1112H Biology Building
BA, Concordia College, Moorhead, Minnesota; PhD, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. I study nervous system development and function using the zebrafish as a model. I am investigating two related projects: 1. Is there neurotransmitter-receptor plasticity in the zebrafish neuromuscular junction? and 2. What is the role of Cabin1, a calcium-dependent repressor protein, in the development and function of the cerebellum, the site of motor learning and coordination.
Howard Whiteman
Professor, Evolutionary Biology
Director of Watershed Studies Institute
0105 Biology Building
Visit Watershed Studies Institute. .
Gary ZeRuth
Associate Professor, Cellular and Molecular Biology
Houston Endowed Chair of Pre-Medicine
2112F Biology Building
.
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Dana Vinson
Administrative Assistant
Biology
2112K Biology Building
Heather Kirks
Accounting Assistant
Biology
2112C Biology Building
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Joe Caudell
Adjunct Professor
Wildlife Biology
BS, University of Georgia, MS, Utah State University, PhD, Utah State University (wildlife biology) (2001). Indiana Department of Natural Resources, State Deer Research Biologist.
Dayle Saar
Associate Professor Emeritus,
Adjunct Professor, Botany
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Michelle Weaver
Graduate Teaching Assistant
B.S. Kentucky Wesleyan College, °ÄÃÅ¿ª½±½á¹û; pursuing MS at Murray State under advisor Dr. Darracq. My research will focus on the Eastern Box Turtle (Terrapene carolina) and assessing the health and behavioral effects of relocation. The aim of the study is to better understand the impacts relocation has on box turtles. Along with the turtle research I will also be developing a study involving the Nine Banded Armadillo (Dasypus novemcinctus).
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Terry Derting
Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences
Biology
BA, Mount Holyoke College; MS, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; PhD, Indiana University. My research interests are twofold. As a mammalogist, I study impacts of anthropogenic stressors, such as habitat fragmentation, on the health of small mammals. As an educator, my research focuses on effective approaches to faculty professional development and improved student learning in higher education.
Leon F. Duobinis-Gray
Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences
(parasite populations, dynamics of freshwater vertebrates and invertebrates, histology,
pathology)
BS, MS, East Tennessee State University; PhD, Louisiana State University. —We are sad to report that our good friend Leon passed in August 2019.—
Timothy C. Johnston
Professor
Biology
BA, Harding College; MS, °ÄÃÅ¿ª½±½á¹û; PhD, Southern Illinois University.
Robert A. Martin
Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences
(mammal evolution, paleoecology) (1993)
BA, Hofstra University; MS, Tulane University; PhD, University of Florida.
Tom J. Timmons
Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences
(fisheries biology) (1982)
BS, Iowa State University; MS, Tennessee Technological University; PhD, Auburn University.
David S. White
Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences AB
(1988)
Stephen B. White
Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences
(ornithology, wildlife biology and management, animal damage control) (1981)
BS, West Virginia University; MS, Colorado State University; PhD, Ohio State University.
Edmund J. Zimmerer
Professor Emeritus of Biological Sciences
Emeritus (behavioral genetics, molecular genetics, herpetology) (1989)
BS, Moravian College; MS, PhD, Rutgers University.
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