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Arts & Sciences Magazine CAS News April 25, 2016

Professor in the Department of Biology receives the 2016 Charles W. and Caroline P. Ireland Prize for Scholarly Distinction.


Dr. Charles Amsler says his love for marine ecosystems started at an early age. He grew up along the shore of Lake Erie and traveled with his family to the Carolina coast every year. As a child, he knew he wanted to be a marine biologist. As a college student, he narrowed his focus to marine macroalgae, which is a concentration that has continued today.

Dr. Charles AmslerAmsler joined the UAB Department of Biology as an Assistant Professor in 1994. He received his B.A. from Duke University in 1980 and his M.S. from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington in 1983. He completed his Ph.D. at the University of California at Santa Barbara in 1989, where he also served as an assistant research biologist. Immediately prior to joining the faculty at UAB, he worked as a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Illinois at Chicago from 1990-1994.

Since coming to UAB, Amsler has focused much of his research on the chemical ecology of organisms in the Antarctic marine communities, an emphasis he began as a graduate student at UC Santa Barbara. While his research is centered in several areas, most of his work involves chemical interactions between organisms or ways in which organisms perceive, respond to, or otherwise interact with their chemical environments. Amsler has recently expanded this work into understanding the impacts of ocean acidification and other climate change factors on marine organisms.

Amsler and his wife Margaret, along with colleagues and graduate students from the Department of Biology, regularly travel to Palmer Station, one of three U.S. permanent research facilities in Antarctica that are maintained by the National Science Foundation. There, Amsler is able to examine the ecological changes to macroalgae and other marine species in the warming waters of the polar region. As a leader of the UAB in Antarctica program, Dr. Amsler has helped elevate the profile of marine biology here at UAB, and make important advancements in the field that have had broad impact throughout the scientific community.

Amsler’s impact is also evident in teaching and service. His students consistently review his courses as some of the best and most informative they’ve taken at UAB. He has mentored a number of undergraduates whose work has been ultimately published in peer-reviewed publications. He’s also invested heavily in his graduate students as they produce their own research and scholarship; many of these students have been recognized with awards and honors and all have gone on to successful careers in their fields.

He has spent countless hours establishing a platform for the UAB Antarctica program, including award-winning web sites, videos and other tools. Through these mechanisms, UAB has been able to reach a broad national and global audience, as well as important local audiences such as Alabama high school students and educators.

Amsler is widely published in peer-reviewed journals and has been honored with the Tyge Christensen Prize in Phycology (International Phycological Society), 2002. He was the President of the Phycological Society of America, 2009; and the Overseas Vice President of the British Phycological Society, 2013-2015; He currently serves as a United States Representative to Standing Scientific Committee on Life Sciences, Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR), 2016-2022.

In 2007, the U.S. Board of Geographic Names designated “Amsler Island” in Antarctica. In early 2015, the journal “Phycologia” announced that the algae species from Antarctica previously known as Delesseria lancifolia will now be called Paraglossum amsleri in Amsler’s honor.

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