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Graduate Program

A major role of the Department of Natural Resource Ecology and Management is providing graduate instruction.  It is a critical component of the department's research, instruction, and extension missions.  The overall goals of the Department are to provide high quality, advanced training and instruction in the application of the scientific method to problems in natural resource ecology and management. This includes problem analysis and identification, research methods, synthesis of results, and communication of findings.  The Department strives to develop the capability for original and creative work under the guidance of established professionals and scientists.

RECENT THESES:

“Plants, Grazing, and Fire in Tallgrass Prairie" (Brady Allred)

“Contributions to the Life History of Alligator Gar, Atractosteus spatula (Lacepede), in Oklahoma” (Eric L. Brinkman)

“Status and Habitat Affinity for Cerulean Warbler and Other Birds in Oklahoma” (Vince Cavalieri)

“The Effects of Disturbance in Grassland Plant Communities” (Ryan Limb)

“The Role of Fluvial Geomorphology in the Distribution of Freshwater Mussels (Bivalvia: Unionidae) in the Kiamichi River, Oklahoma”(Sabrina (Rust) Negus)