Publications

Kirk Winemiller with a Chitala

Courses

Kirk Winemiller with a little fish

New Species

Kirk Winemiller collecting specimens

Links

2011 Conference of the Sociedade Brasileira de Ictiologia in Manaus with collaborators who have done professional exchanges with the Lab at Texas A&M University

2011 Conference of the Sociedade Brasileira de Ictiologia in Manaus with collaborators who have done professional exchanges with the Lab at Texas A&M University (left to right:  Erico Takahashi, Mônica Ceneviva Bastos, Fabio Cop Ferreira, KW, Ursulla Souza, Alexandre Garcia, Miriam Pilz Albrecht)

Featured Research

Click on photos to view research summaries

Community & Food Web Ecology

Community & Food Web Ecology

 

Evolutionary Ecology

Evolutionary Ecology

 

Texas Surface Water & Environmental Flows

Texas Surface Water & Environmental Flows

 

Contact Info

Email: k-winemiller@tamu.edu
Office phone: (979) 862-4020
Lab phone: (979) 862-1279
Office location: Heep 110D
Lab location: Heep 101
Fax: (979) 845-4096

Kirk O. Winemiller
Section of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences
Texas A&M University
2258 TAMU
College Station, TX  77843-2358  U.S.A.

Specialty

Aquatic, Fish and Community Ecology

Education

B.A., Miami University (Ohio), 1978; M.S., 1981
Ph.D., University of Texas, 1987

Other Professional Experience

Research Associate, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Lecturer, University of Texas

Fulbright Research Scholar, Zambia

Ichthyology Curator, Texas Natural History Collection, Texas Memorial Museum

Research Direction

Fish population and community ecology;  Evolution, ecology, and management of fishes and aquatic ecosystems in temperate and tropical settings;  Specific research interests include:  patterns and mechanisms of resource partitioning in fish communities; life history strategies and population regulation; predator-prey interactions; relationships between form and ecological function in fishes; management of biodiversity and multi-species fisheries; food web structure and function; responses of fluvial ecological systems to variation in flow regimes.