Investigating the nexus of development, physiology and environment

LAB MEMBERS

Current Individual's Profiles

Lab Photos - Previous Years

Where are they now?

 

Our Lab - 2022-2023 Academic Year


Current Individual Profiles


Lab Principal Investigator

Warren Burggren
  • Warren W. Burggren (B.Sc. University of Calgary; Ph.D., University of East Anglia, UK)
  • Dept. of Biological Sciences, University of North Texas P.O. Box 305220, Denton, TX, 76203-5220,U.S.A.
    phone: 940) 565-7705  fax: (940) 565-3821

Visitors


  • Dao Ho   (Ph.D., Tripler Army Medical Center, Honolulu, HI )
  • Dao’s current research focuses on advancing military health readiness. Her expertis behavior, neurobiology, and cardiovascular physiology, with a strong focus in the a of psychosocial stress on renal and vascular disease risk, and epigenetic processes.

Research Scientists



  • Gil Martinez Bautista  (Ph.D., Universidad Juárez Autnoma de Tabasco, Villahermosa, Mexico)       
  • Gil’s research is related to the morphological, physiological, and molecular responses of developing vertebrates to changes in the environment, focusing on heterokairy, developmental critical windows and transgenerational epigenetic inheritance.
             

Graduate Students


  •  Wenasa Frifer (B.Sc. Triopoli University; M.Sc., University of North Texas)
  • Ph.D. graduate student.
  • Wenasa's research interests are focused on the combined effect of oil crude (HEWAF) with other natural stressors (temperature and oxygen concentration) on planarian behavior, regeneration, and oxygen consumption.

 

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  • Karem Vazquez Roman (B.Sc., Biology Major, Instituto Tecnológicode Ciudad Victoria, Mexico, M.Sc., University of North Texas, Denton, TX, USA)          
  • Ph.D. graduate student.
  • Karem is investigating the effects of severe acute hypoxia on the heart during early development in fish, testing of pharmacological compounds, and their effect on regeneration in cardiac muscle after a cardiac arrest, as well as in the behavioral traits exhibited later in development after organisms presented cardiac injury.

 

Katie Fosha-Bourne
  • Chris Melendez (B.Sc. and M.Sc., California State University San Marcos)
  • Ph.D. graduate student.
  • Chris is interested in concepts of developmental phenotypic plasticity. Currently, he is examining the immediate and long-term modifications to morphological and physiological phenotypes in response temperature and salinity throughout development from nauplius stages to adult stages in the water flea, Artemia.
Lindsey
  • Lindsey Daniel (B.Sc., Biology Major, Chemistry and Spanish Minor, University of North Texas)
  • Ph.D. graduate student.
  • Lindsey is interested in cellular and physiological variations that occur within the first 4 hours of embryonic development. She is currently researching developmental variation in embryos from two different populations of Killifish (Fundulus grandis). How stressors affect initial variation between the two populations is her primary focus. Additional experiments are underway to determine the mechanisms behind these differences.
Steven
  • Steven Williams  (B.Sc., University of North Texas, Denton, Texas)  
  • Ph.D. graduate student.
  •  Steven is investigating in the zebrafish model whether the recovery of cardiac form and function following hypoxic damage occurs by hyperplasia (increased cell numbers) or hypertrophy (increased cell size).

Katherine
  • Katherine Burbules  (B.Sc., University of North Texas  
  • M.Sc. graduate student.
  • Katherine's research project involves the metabolic physiology of the weather loach (Misgurnus anguillicaudatus), an air-breathing fish that uses its gut as a respiratory organ.

Lauren
  • Lauren Kowalski   (B.Sc., Arizona State University, M.Sc. University of Texas at Tyler )  
  • Ph.D. graduate student.
  • Lauren's research focuses on epigenetic inheritance of hypoxia tolerance

 


Lauren
  • Haley Huse   (B.Sc., University of North Texas)  
  • M.Sc. graduate student.
  • Haley is currently designing her project

 


Jack
  • Jack Eudy  (B.Sc., University of North Texas)  
  • M.Sc. graduate student.
  • Jack's research focuses on how temperature alters physiological processes, especially at the extremes of an animal's temperature range. 

Undergraduate Students

  •   Moira Cartee
  •   Rosine George
  •   Hollie Greer
  •   Om Kulkarni
  •   Dyuksha Kunder
  •   Sadie Ostrowicki
  •   Prasanna Padmanathan
  •   Harini Rajmohan
  •   Sanjana Ramineni
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    Lab Photos - Previous Years

     

    2022-2023 Academic Year

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    2021-2022 Academic Year

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    2019-2020Academic Year

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    2018-2019 Academic Year

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    2017-2018 Academic Year

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    2016-2017 Academic Year

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    2015-2016 Academic Year

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    2014-2015 Academic Year

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    2013-2014 Academic Year

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    2012-2013 Academic Year

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    2011-2012 Academic Year

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    2010-2011 Academic Year

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    2009-2010 Academic Year

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    2008-2009 Academic Year

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    2007-2008 Academic Year

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    2006-2007 Academic Year

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    2005-2006 Academic Year

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    2004-2005 Academic Year

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    2003-2004 Academic Year

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    2002-2003 Academic Year

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    2001-2002 Academic Year

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    Past Lab Members - Where Are They Now?


     

    Former Postdoctoral Fellows

    Former Ph.D Students

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