• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Doctoral Program

  • Home
  • About
    • Get Involved
    • EEB Program Resources
    • EEB Bylaws
  • Ph.D. Program
    • Prospective Students
      • Ph.D. Program Application Procedure
    • Current Students
      • Program Guidelines
      • Documents
      • Research Grant Proposals
  • Courses
    • First Year Curriculum (Core Graduate Courses)
    • Eligible Elective Courses for the Ph.D. in Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
    • Relevant Graduate Courses
  • People
    • Faculty
    • Core Faculty by Research Theme
    • Graduate Program Coordinator
    • Students & Alumni
    • Affiliated Scholars
    • EEB Executive Committee and GRAC
    • EEBISO
      • EEBISO Leadership Roles
    • Spotlight
  • Events
    • EEB Seminar Series
      • EEB Seminar Series – Fall 2025
    • Ecological Integration Symposium (EIS)
      • 2025 Ecological Integration Symposium
    • Darwin Day
      • Darwin Day 2025
    • Open Source for Open Science Workshop
      • Open Source for Open Science Workshop 2025
  • News
  • Contact Us
You are here: Home / Spotlight / Spotlight: Ian Ausprey

Spotlight: Ian Ausprey

September 3, 2025

Ian Ausprey joined the EEB program in January 2025 and is an Assistant Professor at Texas A&M University in the Department of Ecology and Conservation Biology. His research spans community ecology, landscape ecology, functional ecology, population biology, and biodiversity conservation, with a focus on birds as model organisms. He investigates critical topics such as how agricultural and elevational gradients shape tropical bird communities, how urbanization, fragmentation, and wildfire impact avian populations, and how management strategies can promote avian biodiversity in agricultural landscapes. He regularly integrates functional traits and phylogenies to identify mechanistic explanations underlying the sensitivities of species to anthropogenic disturbance and the evolution of biotic communities across space and time.

Filed Under: Spotlight Tagged With: community ecology, conservation, ecology & conservation biology (ECCB), ian ausprey, landscape, tropical birds

Stay Connected

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Contact Us

Heather Baldi
Graduate Program Coordinator
Office: WFES 124
Phone: (979) 845-2114
Email Heather

Mailing Address

Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
2258 TAMU
College Station, TX 77843-2258

Location

534 John Kimbrough Blvd
Wildlife, Fisheries & Ecological Sciences (WFES)
Bldg. #1537
College Station, TX 77843

Campus Map

© Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

  • Compact with Texans
  • Privacy and Security
  • Accessibility Policy
  • State Link Policy
  • Statewide Search
  • Veterans Benefits
  • Military Families
  • Risk, Fraud & Misconduct Hotline
  • Texas Homeland Security
  • Texas Veterans Portal
  • Equal Opportunity
  • Open Records/Public Information
Texas A&M University System Member