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Ferenc A. de Szalay

Ferenc A. de Szalay

Associate Professor
Campus:
Kent
Office Location:
205 Cunningham Hall
Office Hours:
MW 11am-12pm; F 2:30pm-4:30pm
Contact Information
Email:
fdeszala@kent.edu
Phone:
330-672-7936
Fax:
330-672-3713

Biography

Research in my laboratory examines factors regulating invertebrate communities in aquatic habits (wetlands, streams, and ponds). Invertebrates are important in diets of waterfowl, shorebirds, and gamefish, and some projects have studied aquatic invertebrate responses to wetland management practices. I also study mosquito ecology to develop control methods that do not adversely affect aquatic ecosystems. Other research projects have examined invertebrate communities in restored aquatic habitats, and have determined how factors such as food resources, hydrology, and plant structure affect wetland insect communities.

Publications

de Szalay, F.A. and V.H. Resh. 2000. Factors influencing macroinvertebrate colonization of seasonal wetlands: responses to emergent plant cover.  Freshw. Biol. 45: 295-308

de Szalay, F.A., N.H. Euliss, and D.P. Batzer.  1999.  Seasonal and semipermanent wetlands of California; invertebrate community ecology and responses to management methods.  pp 829-855 in Invertebrates in Freshwater Wetlands of North America: Ecology and Management. (ed. by D.P. Batzer, R.B. Rader, S.A. Wissenger).  John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York, NY.

de Szalay, F.A., and V.H. Resh. 1997. Responses of wetland invertebrates and plants important in waterfowl diets to burning and mowing of emergent vegetation. Wetlands 17:149-156.

Batzer, D.P., F.A. de Szalay, and V.H. Resh. 1997. Opportunistic response of a benthic midge (Diptera: Chironomidae) to management of California seasonal wetlands. Environ. Entomol. 26:215-222.

de Szalay, F.A., and V.H. Resh. 1996. Spatial and temporal variability of trophic relationships among aquatic macroinvertebrates in a seasonal marsh. Wetlands 16:458-466.

de Szalay, F.A., D.P. Batzer, and V.H. Resh. 1996. Mesocosm and macrocosm experiments to examine effects of mowing emergent vegetation on wetland invertebrates. Environ. Entomol. 25:303-309.

de Szalay, F.A., D.P. Batzer, E.B. Schlossberg, and V.H. Resh. 1995. A comparison of small and large scale experiments examining the effects of wetland management practices an mosquito densities. Proc. Calif. Mosq. Vector Control Assoc. 63:86-90.

Courses Teaching

Spring 2015

  • BSCI 30560 - 001 Invertebrate Zoology
  • HONR 40096 - 025 Individual Honors Work
  • BSCI 40099 - 001 Senior Honors Thesis
  • BSCI 40375 - 001 Environmental Biology And Mgmt
  • BSCI 40600 - 005 Writing In Biological Sciences
  • BSCI 50375 - 001 Environmental Biology And Mgmt
  • BSCI 60299 - 013 Thesis II
  • BSCI 80198 - 004 Research
  • BSCI 80299 - 004 Dissertation II

Fall 2015

  • BSCI 30360 - 001 General Ecology
  • BSCI 40368 - 001 Wetland Ecology And Management
  • BSCI 40600 - 003 Writing In Biological Sciences

Courses Taught

  • Entomology
  • Invertebrate Zoology

Education

Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley
Biological Sciences

Street Address

256 Cunningham Hall, Kent State University, Kent OH 44242


Mailing Address

800 E. Summit St.
Kent, OH 44242

Contact Us

Undergraduate Phone: (330) 672-3613 Graduate Phone: (330) 672-2819Undergraduate:
kentbiology@kent.edu Graduate:
bscigrad@kent.edu
Contact Us
  • 330-672-3000
  • info@kent.edu

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