Jim Kenagy Explained

George Jame Kenagy
Birth Date:1945
Birth Place:Los Angeles, California
Education:High School (1963)Degree(1963)Ph.D(1972)
Known For:Research in Ecophysiology

George James Kenagy (born 1945, in Los Angeles, California) is known for his research in ecophysiology and behavior of small mammals.

Education

Jim Kenagy graduated from Crescenta Valley High School in 1963, and he graduated with a degree in Zoology in 1967 at Pomona College in Claremont, California. Then he achieved his Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of California in Los Angeles in 1972. He held postdocs in Germany (at the Max Planck Institute for Behavioral Physiology), at UCLA, and at UC San Diego. In 1976, he joined the Department of Zoology at the University of Washington in Seattle, which became the Department of Biology in 2002. In 1995, he also became Curator of Mammals at the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture.[5]

Career

As a postdoc at Max Planck, Kenagy investigated daily rhythms and seasonal reproductive patterns in desert rodents. Kenagy has conducted research in Australia, South America, and the University of California-Berkeley's Museum of Vertebrate Zoology. His research has encompassed ecophysiology and behavior, and more recently has included population biology, biogeography, and evolution of mammals. His occupation revolves around the continual research of biogeography and evolution of mammalian populations, and training graduate students at the University of Washington and associate with the Burke Museum.[5]

Present

As the curator of the Burke Museum in Seattle, Washington, Kenagy oversaw the research of graduate students including projects in:

Titles of selected publications

References

[1](2011). Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, retrieved October 2011 from http://www.burkemuseum.org/.

[2]Kenagy, Jim. (2010). Meanderings in the Bush. Natural History Explorations in Outback Australia. Journal of Mammalogy 91: 1528-1529.

[3]Kenagy, Jim; Yang, Dou-Shuan. (2006). Biogeography and Population Genetics of Peromyscus maniculatus in the American West. Peromyscus Newsletter 41: 20

[4]Kenagy, Jim; Yang, Dou-Shuan. (2009). Detecting Natural Selection in Pacific Northwest Deer Mice: An Integrative Approach. Peromyscus Newsletter 44: 29.

[5](2010–2011). University of Washington: Department of Biology. Retrieved October, 2011 from https://www.biology.washington.edu/people/profile/jim-kenagy.