Campus News

John Gittleman named UGA Foundation Professor in Ecology

Gittleman
John L. Gittleman

Athens, Ga. – John L. Gittleman, founding dean of the Odum School of Ecology, has been named the University of Georgia Foundation Professor in Ecology.

Gittleman came to UGA in 2006 as director of the Institute of Ecology. He was appointed dean in 2007 when the institute became the Odum School of Ecology, the first standalone college in the world devoted to the study of ecology.

Gittleman’s research explores global problems of ecology and evolution. He works with large-scale databases and uses statistical comparative methods to answer broad questions related to the origins, patterns and causes of species biodiversity, primarily in mammals. Recently, his work has extended to questions on the economics of conservation, causes of global extinction and ecological influences of emerging human diseases.

He is the author or co-author of more than 100 journal articles and book chapters, including many papers in Nature, Science and the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

He and his coauthors received an inaugural Conservation Science Award from the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds for a paper on the link between global conservation funding and biodiversity protection. The study appeared in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in 2013.

He is the author of the book “Carnivore Behavior, Ecology, and Evolution” (volumes one and two) and the co-author of “Phylogeny and Conservation”; “Genetics, Demography and Viability of Fragmented Populations”; and “Carnivore Conservation.” He is co-editor of a forthcoming volume, “Foundations of Macroecology,” to be published by the University of Chicago Press this year.

Gittleman came to UGA from the University of Virginia, where he held an endowed professorship in biology. He earned a D. Phil. degree in biology—equivalent to a Ph.D.—at the University of Sussex in England in 1984. He is a Smithsonian Fellow and an elected Scientific Fellow of the Zoological Society of London. His other professional affiliations include the American Society of Mammalogists, the Society for the Study of Evolution, the Society of Systematic Zoology, the American Society of Naturalists and the Paleontological Society. He served on the board of scientific counselors of the Office of Infectious Diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from 2008 to 2012.

The UGA Foundation endows more than 150 chairs and professorships in a wide range of disciplines in support of the research, teaching and public service mission of the university.

For more information about the Odum School of Ecology, see www.ecology.uga.edu.