Matthew Barnes
Texas Tech University, TX, United States
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
As a child, Dr. Barnes enjoyed flipping over rocks to catch bugs in the creeks of his hometown in Plano, Texas. He later discovered a more scholarly approach to aquatic ecology and studying human interactions with their environment as an undergraduate at Southwestern University, earning a B.A. in biology with a minor in sociology. Barnes earned his PhD from The University of Notre Dame, then he returned to Texas in 2014 to begin a position within The Department of Natural Resources Management at Texas Tech University. Now an Associate Professor at Texas Tech, Barnes’ research program focuses on the ecology of environmental DNA (eDNA) and eDNA applications to improve fundamental ecological understanding about the distribution and dispersal of species, primarily in freshwater ecosystems.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
Investigating the Impact of Behavioral Ecology on eDNA Particle Size Distribution for Two Gambusia Species (134470)
2:15 PM
Sarah Baggett
Molecular Ecology 1.0
Back to the future with environmental DNA: repurposing previously collected samples to study the history of a Texas freshwater jellyfish invasion (135804)
2:15 PM
Matthew A Barnes
Special Session: The past, present, and future of freshwater invasion ecology and management: A career retrospective for David M. Lodge 2.0
Aquatic breeding in a dry land: determining drivers of amphibian water site use and reproductive success in the Sonoran Desert (136140)
11:15 AM
Sadie Roth
Communities & Populations 1.0
SFS 2026