Fisheries Biologist Awarded Grant to Study Crayfish

Dan Magoulick, center, collects fish and crayfish with three U of A students on Wildcat Creek in the Ozark National Forest.
Photo Submitted

Dan Magoulick, center, collects fish and crayfish with three U of A students on Wildcat Creek in the Ozark National Forest.

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Dan Magoulick, a research professor at the University of Arkansas, is an ecologist and fisheries biologist studying the factors affecting the population and community dynamics of freshwater fish and invertebrates.

“My main focus is population and community ecology but I really work within the whole spectrum, from individual physiological ecology and behavioral ecology up to ecosystems,” said Magoulick, research professor and assistant unit leader in the Arkansas Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, housed in the Department of Biological Sciences. “I’m interested in all of it, especially the role of disturbance in community dynamics, impacts of introduced species in aquatic ecosystems and aquatic ecosystem conservation.”

Magoulick’s recent research includes, among other things, studying the classification of Arkansas flow regimes and developing ecological-flow response relationships and environmental flows assessment for the Ozark region; effects of drought on stream fish and invertebrate population and community dynamics; and distribution, population genetics and factors affecting the imperiled coldwater crayfish.

In September, Magoulick was awarded an $80,208 grant from the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission to study the population status and genetics of the Mammoth Spring crayfish and the coldwater crayfish in the Ozark Highlands of Arkansas and Missouri. Both crayfish are candidates for being listed as endangered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Magoulick’s project is highlighted in the November 2014 issue of The Arkansas Catalyst, an online monthly newsletter from the Office of Research and Economic Development.

“We were doing work in the mid-1990s on crayfish related to conservation biology and we found some introduced species in the Ozark and Missouri Highlands,” Magoulick said. “The invader in this case is Orconectes neglectus, the ringed crayfish, which is native to the White River drainage but not native to the Spring River drainage. It has displaced two of the native species, the Hubbs’ crayfish and coldwater crayfish. It is a unique opportunity to study these populations. We don’t see a lot of these local invasions, mainly because we haven’t looked for them that much.”

The results of the study will provide information on crayfish population dynamics and invasion status for the state agencies and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which are all responsible for managing the freshwater resources in the Ozarks. It will also include a genetic study of the Mammoth Spring crayfish, which will determine whether it is a single species or multiple species.

“This will provide them information on what this invader is doing and whether it is displacing the native species and how fast it is reaching a certain area,” Magoulick said. “The agencies probably aren’t going to be able to eliminate introduced species but in many cases they can hold its population down, so it will be worthwhile information.”

Contacts

Dan Magoulick, research professor
Biological Sciences
479-575-5449, danmag@uark.edu

Chris Branam, research communications writer/editor
University Relations
479-575-4737, cwbranam@uark.edu

Headlines

Affairs of the Heart

Find out how biomedical engineering professor Morten Jensen is developing innovative devices to produce better outcomes in cardiovascular medicine.

Students, Faculty and Alumni Kick Off Centennial Year of School of Law

Founded April 14, 1924, the School of Law faculty, students and alumni started the celebration of its centennial year with a Founders Day event and will continue with more commemorative events this coming fall.

Yearly Academic Award Winners, Ambassadors Recognized by Bumpers College

Schyler Angell, Lexi Dilbeck, Cason Frisby, Tanner Austin King, Anna Brooke Mathis, Carrie Ortel, Lucy Scholma, Kadence Trosper and student ambassadors were honored at the college's annual reception.

World Premiere of 'Cries from the Cotton Field' Slated for May 8

Cries from the Cotton Field chronicles the journey of 19th century Italian immigrants from northern Italy to the Arkansas Delta and ultimately to Tontitown. It will premier at 6 p.m. May 8 in Springdale Har-Ber High School.

Fay Jones School's Earth Day Event Spotlights Sustainable Materials and Projects

"One day doesn't seem like a lot, but one day can empower individuals and groups, energize them to work for change and innovate for transformative solutions," professor Jennifer Webb said of the students' design work.

News Daily