The Department of Biological Sciences

R. Terry Bowyer, Ph.D.

Terry Bowyer Professor and Chair of Biological Sciences

E-mail address: bowyterr@isu.edu
Office Phone: (208) 282-4082
Laboratory Phone: (208) 282-2272
Fax: (208) 282-4570
Office: 230 Gale Life Science Building
Laboratory: 410 Gale Life Science Building
Curriculum Vitae

Vertebrate Population Dynamics, Sexual Segregation, Birth-Site Selection, Habitat Selection, Mammalian Life-History Characteristics, Scale

 

Education

Ph.D.   (1985)  Natural Resources, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
M.S.    (1976)  Wildlife Management, Humboldt State University, Arcata, CA.
B.S.     (1970)  Wildlife Management (Biology Minor), Humboldt State University, Arcata, CA.

Biographical Sketch

Dr. R. Terry Bowyer is Professor and Chair of The Department of Biological Sciences at Idaho State University.  He joined the faculty at ISU in 2004 following 18 years at the Institute of Arctic Biology, and Department of Biology and Wildlife at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.   He is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, The Arctic Institute of North America, and The Wildlife Society.  He has received the Arthur S. Einarsen Award from the Northwest Section of The Wildlife Society, The Distinguished Moose Biologists Award, and the C. Hart Merriam Award from the American Society of Mammalogists. His research also earned three Outstanding Publication Awards from The Wildlife Society, two for monographs and one for an article.  He has mentored 24 graduate students to the successful completion of their degrees, including 10 Ph.D.s.  His research interests include the ecology and behavior of large mammals, and he has published extensively on sexual segregation and birth-site selection in ungulates.  He continues to study the population ecology of ungulates and carnivores, and recently has become interested in effects of scale on life-history characteristics of mammals.  Dr. Bowyer has >155 scientific publications and is an active member in several professional societies, including The Wildlife Society and American Society of Mammalogists.  He and his wife Karolyn reside on a small farm in Blackfoot, ID.  He is an avid angler and hunter, and especially enjoys hunting upland birds and waterfowl with his Labrador retrievers, Pepper and Otis. 

Teaching

BIOL 599 Writing, Editing, and Reviewing Scientific Manuscripts
BIOL 691 Dynamics and Conservation of Exploited Populations (with Dr. Jack Connelly)
BIOL 691 Ethics and Philosophy of Hunting and Fishing

Selected Publications (* denotes student author)

Bowyer, R. T., V. C. Bleich, X. Manteca, J. C. Whiting*, and K. M. Stewart. 2007. Sociality, mate choice, and timing of mating in American bison (Bison bison): effects of large males. Ethology 113:1048-1060.

Stewart*, K. M., R. T. Bowyer, R. W. Ruess, B. L. Dick, and J. G. Kie. 2006. Herbivore optimization by North American elk: consequences for theory and management. Wildlife Monographs 167:1-24. (International)

Bowyer, R.T., and J.G. Kie.  2006.  Effects of scale on interpreting life-history characteristics of ungulates and carnivores.  Diversity and Distributions 12:244‑257.

Stewart*, K.M., R.T. Bowyer, B.L. Dick, B.K. Johnson, and J.G. Kie.  2005.  Density‑dependent effects on physical condition and reproduction in North American elk: an experimental test.  Oecologia 143:85‑93.

Bowyer, R.T.  2004.  Sexual segregation in ruminants: definitions, hypotheses, and implications for conservation and management.  Journal of Mammalogy 85:1039‑1052.  (Merriam Award Paper)

Pierce*, B.M., R.T. Bowyer, and V.C. Bleich.  2004.  Habitat selection by mule deer: forage benefits or risk of predation?  The Journal of Wildlife Management 68:533‑541.

Bowyer, R.T., G.M. Blundell*, M. Ben-David, S.C. Jewett, T.A. Dean, and L.K. Duffy.  2003.  Effects of the Exxon Valdez oil spill on river otters: injury and recovery of a sentinel species.  Wildlife Monographs 153:1-53. (Outstanding Publication Award from The Wildlife Society)

Hundertmark*, K.J., G.F. Shields, I.G. Udina, R.T. Bowyer, A.A. Danilkin, and C.C. Schwartz.  2002.  Mitochrondial phylogeography of moose (Alces alces): late Pleistocene divergence and population expansion.  Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 22:375-387.

Kie, J.G., R.T. Bowyer, M.C. Nicholson, B.B. Boroski, and E.R. Loft.  2002.  Landscape heterogeneity at differing scales: effects on spatial distribution of mule deer.  Ecology  83:530-544.  (Outstanding Publication Award from The Wildlife Society)

Pierce*, B.M., V.C. Bleich, and R.T. Bowyer.  2000.  Social organization of mountain lions: does a land‑tenure system regulate population size?  Ecology 81:1533-1543.

Barboza, P.S., and R.T. Bowyer.  2000.  Sexual segregation in dimorphic deer: a new gastrocentric hypothesis.  Journal of Mammalogy 81:473-489.

Bowyer, R.T., V. Van Ballenberghe, J.G. Kie, and J.A.K. Maier.  1999.  Birth-site selection by Alaskan moose: maternal strategies for coping with a risky environment.  Journal of Mammalogy 80:1070‑1083.

Kie, J.G., and R.T. Bowyer.  1999.  Sexual segregation in white-tailed deer: density‑dependent changes in use of space, habitat selection, and dietary niche.  Journal of Mammalogy 80:1004‑1020.

Bleich*, V.C., R.T. Bowyer, and J.D. Wehausen. 1997.  Sexual segregation in mountain sheep: resources or predation?  Wildlife Monographs 134:1-50. (Outstanding Publication Award from The Wildlife Society)

Bowyer, R.T., J.G. Kie, and V. Van Ballenberghe.  1996.  Sexual segregation in black‑tailed deer: effects of scale.  The Journal of Wildlife Management 60:10-17.