Dr. Gary Garrett awarded Distinguished Texas Scientist honor by the Texas Academy of Science

This past weekend, members of our team attended the 119th Annual Texas Academy of Science Meeting in Junction, where our own Dr. Gary Garrett was selected for the Distinguished Texas Scientist Award. Recipients are chosen by the Academy’s Board of Directors for work that demonstrates “distinguished contributions to science through research and publication that has garnered recognition at the national and international level.” Gary began his career at the University of Texas, earning his Ph.D under Dr. Clark Hubbs, studying reproductive strategies of the endangered Pecos Pupfish.  From there he continued his research, centered on the conservation of natural resources in the state, as a Conservation Biologist for the Research Division at Texas Parks and Wildlife’s Heart of the Hills Fisheries Science Center for over 25 years. He then served as Director for the Department’s Watershed Conservation Program, before returning to UT as part of our Fishes of Texas team in 2014. Gary’s numerous accomplishments include over 85 publications and he has served as:  President of the Texas Organization for Endangered Species, Chairman of the Desert Fishes Council, President of the Texas Chapter of American Fisheries, Editor of the Proceedings of the Desert Fishes Council, Editor of the Proceedings of the Texas Chapter of the American Fisheries Society, and Associate Editor for the Southwestern Association of Naturalists. He is a member of various conservation organizations such as, USFWS Rio Grande Silvery Minnow Recovery Team, Southern Edwards Aquifer Species Recovery Team, Team Leader of the Rio Grande Fishes Recovery Team, as well as, a Fellow of the Texas Academy of Science, a Research Fellow at The University of Texas, Visiting Professor at Texas A&M University, Adjunct Professor at Texas State University and on the Board of Scientists of the Chihuahuan Desert Research Institute. All of that experience with TPWD and the state's fishes and conservation of them and their habitats, made Gary an invaluable addition to our Fishes of Texas Project team. He's been a huge asset in helping assure coordination between our research and applied science with the diverse programs at TPWD (the project's primary sponsor), translating the science we do to on-the-ground natural resource management. Our Native Fish Conservation Areas project, for example, originated with use of our database in Species Distribution Models. We then fed that into systematic Conservation Planning analyses and the resulting recommendations now are the basis for meetings organized by TPWD with regional stakeholders in TX and northward into the Great Plains to coordinate all of their programs across agency and other political boundaries via a series of watershed-based conservation workshops.

More on his latest accomplishments can be found here:

Biologist Gary Garrett Named Distinguished Texas Scientist by Texas Academy of Science

Photo courtesy of: Lynn McCutchen

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