Range management society honors Sosebee with lifetime achievement award
A well-known professor who's been involved in the growth and development of the range, wildlife and fisheries degree programs at Texas Tech for more than three decades was presented a "Sustained Lifetime Achievement Award" on Wednesday (Feb. 9) at the 64th Annual Meeting of the Society for Range Management in Billings, Montana.
The award is given to members for long-term contributions to the art and science of range management and to the Society for Range Management. Ron Sosebee joined the Texas Tech faculty in 1969 after completing his doctorate at Utah State University.
"In addition to his many professional achievements, Ron is a success in a much more fundamental and important way: he is a good person in the truest sense," said Ernest Fish, a professor with Tech's Department of Natural Resources Management. "In addition to what he offers students and faculty as a professional, they're better individuals because of what the gives of himself as a human being; and that's his most important achievement."
Awards for Sosebee include the W. R. Chapline Research Award from the Society for Range Management in recognition of his exceptional and sustained research accomplishments in range science and associated disciplines (2002); and he was designated as a Fellow of the Society in recognition of his service to the group and its programs in advancing the science and art of range-related resource management (1989).
Sosebee, along with his graduate students, have made significant contributions in research relating to brush management and mechanisms of herbicide actions in such noxious species as mesquite, silverleaf nightshade, and perennial broomweed, Fish said.
"He's one of the pioneers in the development of the field of ecophysiology of rangelands, helping develop the connection between plant physiology and ecology," Fish said. His research career was topped off with publication of the 700-page Society for Range Management treatise on physiological ecology and developmental morphology of wildland plants, for which he served as co-editor, he said.
In the past, Sosebee's expertise in range science has been recognized by his participation in international programs, including activities in Peru, Argentina, Morocco, Canada, Mexico and China. He has advised 14 graduate students from foreign countries pursuing degrees at Texas Tech.
Written by Norman Martin
CONTACT: Ron Sosebee, Professor emeritus, Department of Natural Resources Management, Texas Tech University at (806) 742-1983 or ron.sosebee@ttu.edu
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