Peter Westley

Peter Westley

Lowell A. Wakefield Chair in Fisheries and Ocean Sciences

Associate Professor

Fisheries Conservation
Fisheries Ecology


College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences
2150 Koyukuk Drive
AHRB 204
Fairbanks, AK 99775
907-474-7458
907-474-7204 (fax)
pwestley@alaska.edu

Office Hours

Open door policy.
Feel free to come by.

Education

University of Washington
Postdoc. Fisheries
2012

Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada
Ph.D. Biology
2012

University of Washington
M.S. Fisheries
2007

University of Washington
B.S. Fisheries
2004

 

 

Publications

M. Vignon, M. Zhou, A.R. McIntosh, C. Correa, P.A.H. Westley, L. Jacquin, J. Labonne, A.P. Hendry. 2023. Trait variation in a successful global invader: a large-scale analysis of morphological variance and integration in the brown trout. Biological Invasions. DOI:

Walther, E.J., D.E. Arthur, A. Cyr, K.M. Fraley, T. Cubbage, E. Hinkle, J. McMahon, P.A.H. Westley. 2022. Ecotoxicology of mercury in burbot (Lota lota) from interior ֱֻ and insights towards human health. Chemosphere. DOI:

Walther, E.J., M.S. Zimmerman, J.A. Falke, P.A.H. Westley. 2022. Species distributions and the recognition of risk in restoration planning: A case study of salmonid fishes. Ecological Applications. DOI:

Von Biela, V.R. , C.J. Sergeant, M.P. Carey, Z. Liller, C. Russell, S. Quinn‐Davidson, P.S. Rand, P.A.H. Westley, C.E. Zimmerman. 2022. Premature mortality observations among ֱֻ’s Pacific Salmon during record heat and drought in 2019. Fisheries. DOI:

Ulaski, M.E., H. Finkle, A.H. Beaudreau, P.A.H. Westley. 2022. Climate and conspecific density inform phenotypic forecasting of juvenile Pacific salmon body size.
Freshwater Biology. DOI:


Specialties

  • Phenotypic plasticity
  • Life history evolution
  • Dispersal and philopatry
  • Contemporary evolution
  • Aquatic invasions and colonization
  • Eco-evolutionary dynamics

 

Research Overview

We live in the Anthropocene, where global ecology is dominated by human activity. My research seeks to understand how fishes respond and adapt to abrupt environmental change across levels of biological organization. Work in my lab addresses this overarching question through the combination of field, laboratory, meta-analysis, and modeling approaches.

Additionally, I have pending proposals to explore aspects of the pike invasion to Southcentral ֱֻ and to apply stage-specific salmon life cycle models to Western ֱֻ Chinook populations.

 

Lab Centers