

wgetz@berkeley.edu
Office: 5052 VLSB Berkeley, California
Phone: 510-642-8745 lab: 510-666-2352 fax: 510-643-1227
Mailing address: 140 Mulford Hall #3114 University of California
Berkeley, CA 94720-3114
B.Sc. 1971 (Mathematics and Applied Mathematics)
B.Sc. Hons 1972 (Applied Mathematics)
Ph.D.
1976 (Modeling and Control of Birth and Death Processes) (above degrees
from the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.)
D.Sc.
1995 (Kin recognition and Chemosensory Communication in the Honey Bee,
Apis melliferaŃSenior Doctorate from the University of Cape Town, South
Africa)
Complete listing of publications
Students and postdoctoral students in my laboratory work on a broad range of theoretical and applied questions in population and biology with application to epidemiology and conservation biology.
At this time projects in my laboratory include:
(i) Ecology of anthrax and parasitic co-infections in the plain’s herbivores of Etosha National Park, Namibia.
(ii) Bovine TB in wild animals, livestock, and humans in southern Africa.
(iii) Movement Ecology: exploring the causes, patterns, mechanisms and consequences of organism movements with particular application to buffalo and elephants.
Monograph:
Getz, W. M., and R. G. Haight. 1989. Population Harvesting: Demographic
Models of Fish, Forests and Animal Resources. Princeton Monographs in
Population Biology, Princeton University Press (pp. 391)
Some Recent Peer Reviewed Journal Articles:
Sánchez, M. S., Grant, R. M., Porco, T. C., Gross, K. L. and Getz, W.
M., 2005. Could a decrease in drug resistance levels of HIV be bad
news? Bulletin Math. Biol. 67:761-782.
Cross, P. C. J. O Lloyd-Smith, and W. M. Getz, 2005. Disentangling
association patters in fission-fusion societies using African buffalo
as an example. Animal Behavior, 69:499-506.
Wilmers, C. C., and W. M. Getz, 2005. Gray wolves as climate change buffers in Yellowstone. PLoS Biology 3(4):571-576.
Wittemyer, G., I. Douglas-Hamilton and W. M. Getz, 2005. The
socio-ecology of elephants: analysis of the processes creating
multi-tiered social structures. Animal Behavior 69:1357-1371.
Cross, P.C., Lloyd-Smith, J.O., Johnson, P.L., Getz, W.M. 2005. Dueling
time scales of host mixing and disease recovery determine invasion of
disease in structured populations. Ecology Letters 8:587-595.
Redfern J. V., C. C. Grant, A. Gaylard, and W. M. Getz, 2005. Surface
water availability and the management of herbivore distributions in an
African savanna ecosystem. J. Arid Environments. 63:406-424.
Lloyd-Smith, J.O., Cross, P.C., Briggs, C.J., Daugherty, M., Getz,
W.M., Latto, J., Sanchez, M., Smith, A., Swei, A. 2005. Population
thresholds for disease invasion and persistence in natural populations.
Trends Ecol. Evol., 20:511-519.
Redfern J. V., S. J. Ryan and W. M. Getz, 2006. Defining herbivore
assemblages in Kruger National Park: A correlative coherence approach.
Oecologia. 146:632-640
Sánchez, M. S., Grant, R. M., Porco, and Getz, W. M., 2006. HIV
drug-resistent strains as epidemiological sentinals. Emerging
Infectious Disease 12:191-197.
Lloyd-Smith, J. O., S, J. Schreiber, P. E. Kopp, and W. M. Getz, 2005.
Superpreading and the impact of individual variation on disease
emergence. Nature 438:355-359.
Karin M. Kettenring, Barbara T. Martinez, Anthony M. Starfield, and
Wayne M. Getz, 2006. The appropriate sharing of ecological models.
Bioscience 56:59-64.
Norrström, N, W. M. Getz. and N. M.A. Holmgren, 2006. Coevolution of
consumer specialization and host mimicry can be cyclic and saltational.
Evolutionary Bioinformatics Online, 2:1-9.
Bar-David, S., J. O. Lloyd-Smith, W. M. Getz, 2006. Dynamics and
management of infectious disease in colonizing populations. Ecology
87:1215–1224.
Getz. W. M., 2006. The “Theory of Evolution” is a misnomer. Bioscience
56:96-97 Getz, W. M. and J. O. Lloyd-Smith. 2006. Comment on: “On the
regulation of populations of mammals, birds, fish, and insects.”
Science 311:1100
Williams, B.G., Lloyd-Smith, J.O., Gouws, E., Hankins, C., Getz, W.M.,
Dye, C.,1, Hargrove, J., de Zoysa, I., Auvert, B, 2006. The potential
impact of male circumcision on HIV incidence, HIV prevalence and AIDS
deaths in Africa. PLoS Medicine 3(7):e262.
Salomon, J.A., J. O. Lloyd-Smith, W. M. Getz, S. Resch, M. S. Sánchez,
T. Porco, M. Borgdorff, 2006. Prospects for advancing tuberculosis
control efforts through novel therapies. PLoS Medicine. 3(8), e273.
Wittemyer, G. and W. M. Getz, 2006. A Likely Ranking Interpolation for
Resolving Dominance Orders in Systems with Unknown Relationships.
Behaviour 143: 909-930.
Cross, P.C., J. O. Lloyd-Smith, P. L. Johnson, W. M. Getz, 2007.
Utility of R0 as a predictor of disease invasion in wildlife
populations. J. Royal Soc. Interface. 4:315-324.
Holmgren N. M.A., N. Norrström, and W. M. Getz. 2007 Artificial neural
networks in models of specialization, guild evolution and sympatric
speciation. Phil. Trans. Royal Soc. B. (Lond.) 362:431-440.
Wittemyer, G. and W. M. Getz, 2007. Hierarchical dominance structure
and social organization in African elephants (Loxodonta africana).
Animal Behaviour 73:671-681.
Bidlack, A. L., S. E. Reed, P. J. Palsbřll, W. M. Getz, 2007.
Characterization of a western North American carnivore community using
PCR-RFLP of cytochrome b obtained from fecal samples. Conservation
Genetics, doi:10.1007/s10592-007-9285-3.
Getz, W.M, S. Fortmann-Roe, P. C. Cross, A. J. Lyons, S. J. Ryan, C.C.
Wilmers, 2007. LoCoH: nonparametric kernel methods for constructing
home ranges and utilization distributions. PLoS ONE 2(2): e207.
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0000207.
Ryan, S. J., C. Knechtel, W. M. Getz, 2007. Ecological cues, gestation
length, and birth timing in African Buffalo (Syncerus caffer).
Behavioral Ecology. 18: 635-644; doi:10.1093/beheco/arm028.
Baxter, P. W. J. and W. M. Getz, 2007. Development and parameterization
of a rain and fire-driven model for exploring elephant effects in
African savannas. Environmental Modeling and Assessment. DOI
10.1007/s10666-007-9091-9.
Wittemyer, G., W. M. Getz, F. Vollrath and I. Douglas-Hamilton, 2007.
Social dominance, seasonal movements, and spatial segregation in
African elephants: a contribution to conservation behavior. Behavioral
Ecology & Sociobiology 12:1919-1931. DOI:
10.1007/s00265-007-0432-0.
Eppley, J. M., G. W. Tyson, W. M. Getz, and J. F. Banfield, 2007.
Genetic exchange across a species boundary in the archaeal genus
Ferroplasma. Genetics 177: 407-416. doi:10.1534/genetics.107.072892