James C. Munger

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Professor and Assoc. Vice President for
Academic Planning, Dept. of the Provost

 

Munger pictured with Snake

 

 

 
Year arrived at BSU: 1988 Munger pictured with Kangaroo Rat
Mailing Address:
Department of Biology
Boise State University 
1910 University Dr.
Boise, ID 83725-1515
Office Location: Science Nursing Building 101
Office phone: 208-426-3560
FAX: 208-426-1040
e-mail address:
jmunger@boisestate.edu

 

Academic Degrees and Postdoctoral Positions

B.A., University of California, Davis, 1972. Psychology (biology minor).
B.A., University of California, Berkeley, 1976. Zoology.
Ph.D., University of Arizona, Tucson. Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
(under James H. Brown; Genetics minor), 1982.
NATO Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Zoology (with John Holmes), 
          University of Alberta (1983-1984)
Postdoctoral Research Associate, Departments of Zoology (with Warren Porter) 
       and Wildlife Ecology (with William Karasov), University of Wisconsin (1984-1988)

 

Recent Teaching:

Cartoon by Ed Reagan
B 191 General Biology I laboratory
B198 Perspectives in Biology
Z 230 General Zoology
Z 355 Vertebrate Natural History
Z 421  Mammalogy
B 323  General Ecology
B 501  Biometry I

 

Current Research Interests

I am interested in the physiological, population, and community ecology of vertebrates and (occasionally) invertebrates. My present foci are:

I'm always glad to include hard working, independent, and highly motivated undergraduates in my research.  Students interested in participating in a research project (such as one of those listed above should contact me or one of my graduate students.

Selected Publications

Anderson, K. and J. Munger.  2003.  Effect of temperature on brood relocation in Pogonomyrmex salinus (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Western North American Naturalist 63:122-128

M. D. Oleyar, C. D. Marti, M. Bechard, and J. C. Munger. 2001. Flammulated owl reproduction in relation to human activities in aspen forests of northern Utah. Wilson Bulletin.

Bars, D. R., F. Heyrend, C. Simpson, and J. C. Munger. 2000. Use of Visual Evoked-Potential Studies and EEG Data to classify aggressive explosive behavior of youths. Psychiatric Services 51:81-86

Sutter, J., J. Munger, and D. Hengel. 1999. Sorex monticolus in shrub steppe habitat in the northern Great Basin.  Great Basin Naturalist 59:102-104.

Heyrend, F. L., D. Bars, C. Simpson, J. Munger, Z. Nelson, and J. Burns. 1998. Pattern reversal, visual evoked potentials, and explosive behaviors. In I. Hashimoto & R. Kakigi (Eds.), Recent Advances in Human Neurophysiology (pp. 533-539). Amsterdam: Elsevier Science BV.

Kaltenecker, G., K. Steenhof, M. Bechard, and J. Munger. 1998.  Winter foraging ecology of bald eagles on a regulated river in southwest Idaho.  J. Raptor Research 32:215-220

Munger, J., M. Gerber, K. Madrid, M. Carroll, W. Petersen, and L. Heberger. 1998.  Using National Wetland Inventory Classifications to Predict Amphibian Occurrence: Spotted Frogs (Rana pretiosa) and Pacific Treefrogs (Pseudacris regilla). Conservation Biology 12:320-330

Munger, J. and T. Slichter. 1995. Whipworm (Trichuris dipodomys) infection in kangaroo rats (Dipodomys spp.): effects on digestive efficiency. Great Basin Naturalist 55:74-7

Porter, W., J. Munger, and J. Jaeger. 1994. A biophysical model of endotherm metabolic expenditure: the model and tests. Australian Journal of Zoology 42:125-162

Munger, J. and W. Karasov. 1994. Costs of bot fly infection in white-footed mice: energy and mass flow. Canadian Journal of Zoology. 72: 166-173

Munger, J. 1992. Colony fitness of the harvester ant Pogonomyrmex desertorum: effect of predation and food limitation. Oecologia 90: 276-282.

Munger, J. and W. Karasov. 1991. Sublethal parasites of white-footed mice: effects on survival and reproduction. Canadian Journal of Zoology 69: 398-404.

Munger, J. and W. Karasov. 1989. Sublethal parasites and host energy budgets: tapeworm infection in white-footed mice. Ecology 70: 904-921.

Brown, J. and J. Munger. 1985. Experimental manipulation of desert rodent communities: food addition and species removal. Ecology 66: 1545-1563.

Munger, J. 1984. Optimal foraging?: patch use by horned lizards (Iguanidae:Phrynosoma). American Naturalist 123: 654-680.

Munger, J. 1984. Long-term yield from harvester ant colonies: implications for horned lizard foraging strategy. Ecology 65:1077-1086.

Munger, J. 1984. Home ranges of horned lizards: circumscribed and exclusive? Oecologia (Berlin) 62: 351-360.

Munger, J. and J. Brown. 1981. Competition in desert rodents: an experiment using semipermeable exclosures. Science 211: 510-512.