Home | Gateways | Academics | Admission | Directories | Site Index SEARCH:

William M. Shieldsphoto of William M. Shields
Professor

116 Illick Hall
SUNY-ESF
1 Forestry Drive
Syracuse, NY 13210

Telephone: (315) 470-6771
Fax: (315) 470-6934
Email: wms1@syr.edu

Teaching

EFB 480 Principles of Animal Behavior (4 credit hours). Three hours of lecture, one hour of recitation per week. A study of the basic principles of scientific discovery using animal behavior examples. The course stresses both proximate and ultimate control of behavior with an emphasis on the evolution of behaviorand understanding why animals behave the way they do.

EFB 500 Behavior & Ecology in the Rainforests & Reefs of Australia. One evening class per week during fall semester leading to a four week field trip to tropical and subtropical Queensland, Australia to engage in field research on a variety of habitats and organisms.

Research Interests

Animal behavior; evolution and genetics; evolution of animal communication and dispersal systems; effects of genetic constraints on the evolution of social behavior; sociobiology and behavioral ecology; population genetics, the use of DNA in identity testing and conservation biology; the interface between science and the law.

Graduate Students

  • Vlietstra, Lucy. M.S. Group related foraging behavior and molt phenology in wintering Common Loons., Gavia immer.
  • Velasquez, Iris, Ph.D. Ontogeny of foraging behavior, prey detection, and social influences on habitat selection in the European Starling.
  • Balko, Elizabeth, Ph.D. A behaviorally plastic response to forest composition and logging disturbance by Varecia variegata variegata in Ranomafana National Park, Madagascar.
  • Caister, Lauren, M.S. Feeding ecology & genetics of the West African Giraffe of Niger.
  • Farmer, Christopher, Ph.D. Mortality and habitat use of disturbed forest by Sitka Black-Tailed Deer in the Tongass National Forest.
  • Lopes, Lucia, Ph.D. Avian conservation ecology in Matto Grosso Brazil.
  • Hazell. C.J., Ph. D. Keystone predators in Kyrgistan.
  • Tellier, Beth M.S. The behavior of captive tanagers in a zoo setting.
  • Cskaney, Jolene, M.S. The relationship between a frog and spider in the Peruvian amazon.
  • Hall, Gail, M.S. Avian communities structure in uneven aged clear-cuts in SE Alaska.

Selected Publications

Shields, W. M. 1982. Philopatry, Inbreeding, and the Evolution of Sex. State University of New York .Press, Albany, New York, 245 pp

Shields, W. M. 1983. Genetic considerations in the management of the wolf and other large vertebrates: an alternative view. In, Wolves in Canada and Alaska: their status, biology, and management. (L. N. Carbyn, ed.), Canadian Wildl. Serv. Series 45:90-92.

Shields, W. M. 1984. Barn swallow mobbing: self defense, collateral kin defense, group defense, or parental care? Animal Behaviour 32:132-148.

Templeton, A.R., H. Hemmer, G. Mace, U.S. Seal, W.M. Shields, and D.S. Woodruff. 1986. Local adaptation, coadaptation, and population boundaries. Zoo Biol. 5:115-125.

Shields, W. M. 1987. Dispersal and mating systems: investigating their causal connections. In, Mammalian Dispersal Patterns: The Effects of Social Structure on Population Genetics. (B.D. Chepko-Sade and Z. T. Halpin, eds.), Univ. of Chicago Press, Chicago, Ill., pp 3-24.

Yoshimura, J. and W. M. Shields. 1987. Probabilistic optimization of phenotype distributions: a general solution for the effects of uncertainty on natural selection? Evolutionary Ecology 1:125-138

Shields, W.M., J.R. Crook, M.L. Hebblethwaite, and S.S. Wiles-Ehmann. 1988. Ideal free coloniality in the swallows. In, Ecology of Social Behavior, C. N. Slobodchikoff, ed., Academic Press, NY, pp 189-228.

Shields, W. M. 1992. Problems & Solutions Associated with Matching and Generating Inclusion Probabilities. pp 1-50, In, Proc. from the Third International Symposium on Human Identification 1992, Promega, Scottsdale, AZ.

Shields, W. M. 1993. The natural and unnatural history of inbreeding and outbreeding. pp 143-169, In, The Natural History of Inbreeding and Outbreeding: theoretical and empirical perspectives on population structure. (N. W. Thornhill, ed.) University of Chicago Press.


State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry
SUNY-ESF | 1 Forestry Drive | Syracuse, NY 13210 | 315-470-6500
Copyright © 2008 | Information | Webmaster