Purdue University PURDUE AGRICULTURE
FORESTRY &
NATURAL RESOURCES
 
 

Rod N Williams

Assistant Professor

Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Phone: 765.494.3568
Fax: 765.496.2422
Office: FORS 202
E-mail: rodw@purdue.edu
Personal Web Page

Area of Expertise: Wildlife Science

 

Research Group Facilities Areas of Excellence Related Centers
Rod Williams is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Forestry and Natural Resources at Purdue University.  He received his B.S. in Wildlife Science in 1996, his M.S. in Conservation Genetics in 1998, and his Ph.D. in Evolutionary Genetics in 2007 from Purdue University.  Before joining the faculty in 2008, he served as the vertebrate curator and coordinator of laboratory instruction for eight years.  During that time he managed the vertebrate teaching collection, taught five courses related to ecology and systematics of vertebrates, and co-authored two field guides: the Salamanders of Indiana and the Turtles of Indiana. 

Rod is broadly interested in the ecology and conservation of amphibians and reptiles.  His research interests focus on using a combination of field and laboratory methods to: 1) investigate habitat selection and use in both aquatic and terrestrial systems, 2) characterize amphibian and reptile mating systems, 3) examine the factors influencing amphibian malformations, and 4) measure population structure and inbreeding in threatened or endangered herpetofaunal species.  At present, his lab is involved with projects that include an investigation of population size, movement, and habitat use of endangered hellbenders in Indiana; examining the food habits, genetic diversity and population structure of eastern hellbenders; developing baseline hematological and blood chemistry panels for aquatic salamanders; and studying the effects of timber harvests on terrestrial salamanders.

 

- Recent Publications

Williams, R. N., D. H. Bos, D. Gopurenko, & J. A. DeWoody (2008). Inbreeding and amphibian malformations. Biology Letters 4:549-552. Biology Letters, 4.

Bos, D. H., D. Gopurenko, R. N. Williams, & J. A. DeWoody (2008). Inferring population history and demography using microsatellites, mitochondrial DNA, and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes. Evolution, 62.

Bulut, Z., C. R. McCormick, D. Gopurenko, R. N. Williams, D. H. Bos, & J. A. DeWoody (2008). Microsatellite mutation rates in the eastern tiger salamander (Ambystoma tigrinum tigrinum) differ 10-fold across loci. Genetica, ?.

Williams, R. N., D. Gopurenko, K. R. Kemp, B. C. Williams, & J. A. DeWoody (2008). Breeding chronology, sexual dimorphism, and genetic diversity of congeneric Ambystomatid salamanders under different sexual selection regimes. Journal of Herpetology, ?.

Williams, R. N. Breeding chronology, sexual dimorphism, and genetic diversity of congeneric Ambystomatid salamanders under different sexual selection regimes. Copeia.

 

+ Patents

 
 

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