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COSAM Today
Auburn University College of Sciences and Mathematics Newsletter - November 23, 2015
COSAM Today Top Story

Bond named chair of the Department of Biological Sciences

Auburn Professor Jason Bond was named the new chair of the Department of Biological Sciences. His term begins January 1, 2016.

Bond received a bachelor of science in biology from Western Carolina University, and both his master of science in biology and his doctor of philosophy in evolutionary systematics and genetics from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. He was a postdoc at The Field Museum in Chicago and a professor at East Carolina University in Greenville, N.C., prior to coming to Auburn.

He joined COSAM’s Department of Biological Sciences in 2011 as a professor and director of the Auburn University Museum of Natural History. In this role, he contributed to the planning and construction of the Biodiversity Learning Center, a 15,000 square-foot facility dedicated to the Museum’s natural history collections. He coordinated and oversaw the transfer and organization of each of the university’s natural history collections from various locations around campus to the newly constructed Biodiversity Learning Center. In addition to a coordinated effort to house all of Auburn’s natural history collections in one, organized home, Bond also oversaw tremendous growth of the museum during his tenure as director. In the last four years, museum holdings have been increased from eight collections to nine with the addition of Marine Invertebrates. A new curator was added to museum staff, and, most recently, the Alabama Natural Heritage Program joined the Museum of Natural History, a merger that brought two new research assistant professors, a fulltime zoologist, botanist, database manager, and an outreach coordinator. With the addition of an outreach coordinator, Bond has supported increased public education and outreach, and staff now visit local schools, welcome community groups to tour the Biodiversity Learning Center, host an annual open house, and more. Additionally, Bond has been successful in securing both grant and private funding for museum operations.

Bond specializes in the evolution, systematics and taxonomy of arachnids and myriapods, and his work has been featured in numerous media outlets, including Nature News, MSNBC, BBC, NPR and the New York Times. He was even once featured on Comedy Channel’s “Colbert Report” for his discovery of two new spider species, a trapdoor spider Bond named after Neil Young, Myrmekiaphila neilyoungi, and another spider he named after television show host, Stephen Colbert, Aptostichus stephencolberti. Bond has discovered nearly 100 new spider and millipede species to date, including Myrmekiaphila tigris, which was found in Auburn and is referred to as the Auburn Tiger trapdoor spider. Programs at the National Science Foundation, National Geographic Society, U.S. Fish and Wildlife, and the U.S. Forest Service fund his work in ecology, evolution and systematics. While much of his work happens locally, Bond also travels extensively; he has conducted fieldwork throughout the world to include the American Southwest, Central America, Australia, South Africa, Namibia, Angola, Australia, Malaysia and Mexico. 

He has served as the associate editor for a number of journals to include Organisms, Diversity, and Evolution; the Journal of Arachnology; and The Biodiversity Data Journal. Bond also serves regularly as a National Science Foundation panel member.


Save the Date for Tiger Giving Day!

Join the College of Sciences and Mathematics’ alumni and friends on Dec. 1 for the first-ever Tiger Giving Day at Auburn University.

Tiger Giving Day is a 24-hour fundraising event that will highlight more than 20 projects from the schools and colleges around campus, including the purchase of a new telescope for the astronomy terrace, a new edition to the Leach Science Center.

We ask you to lend your continued support to COSAM on Dec. 1 as we raise at least $10,000 in one day to provide a telescope for the new astronomy terrace. A gift of any amount can help!

Currently, the astronomy course in the College of Sciences and Mathematics’ Department of Physics accommodates an average of 175 students each year through its astronomy laboratory based in Allison Laboratory, which is comprised of eight, eight-inch reflecting telescopes. Telescopes are stored there until needed for each evening’s class, at which time they are moved to and positioned on the sidewalk outside the building, then, after class, returned to storage. Plans to raze Allison Laboratory to make room for the new Academic Classrooms and Laboratory Complex will require the college to relocate the astronomy laboratory, as well as the department, to the Leach Science Center.

To make the Leach Science Center suitable to house both the department’s faculty and its astronomy course, the college proposes a 30,000-square-foot expansion, which will allow for increased enrollment in this popular course and other classes to be taught there as well. The expansion, part of COSAM’s continued efforts to enhance its facilities, will provide students and faculty with modern, cutting-edge spaces where they can learn and conduct research. It will allow the department to accommodate more students interested in astronomy to enroll in the course — a goal currently hampered by the Leach Science Center’s dated resources and lacking instructional space.

To read more, click here. For more information, view COSAM's Tiger Giving Day video

COSAM supporter inducted into the University of Cape Town's Chancellor's Circle

Longtime COSAM supporter, Dr. Lee Baumann, has been entered into the University of Cape Town's Chancellor's Circle. He was recognized at an event in New York City at the Ford Foundation earlier this year. Baumann recently established the "God at the Speed of Light" scholarship for African students studying at the University of Cape Town. He has established a total of 32 "God at the Speed of Light" scholarships at various institutions in America and now in South Africa. Baumann worked briefly in Rondebosch, Cape Town, where he fell in love with the South African people. He is the author of "God at the Speed of Light" and several other books on spirituality and quantum physics.

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