Lara Horstmann
Chair, Department of Marine Biology
Associate Professor
Fisheries Ecology
Marine Biology
Marine Mammals
College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences
232 Irving II
ÌÇÐÄvlog¹ÙÍø, AK 99775-7220
907-474-7724
907-474-7204 (fax)
lara.horstmann@alaska.edu
Office Hours
Tuesday and Thursday
10:00 - 11:30 am
232 Irving II
* = student author
Book chapter
Horstmann, L. 2020. Anatomy and physiology of the gastrointestinal system. In: J.C. George and J.G.M. Thewissen (eds.). The bowhead whale Balaena mysticetus: Biology and human interactions. Academic Press. ISBN: 9780128189696
Journal publications
Charapata,* P., L. Horstmann, and N. Misarti. In revision. Pacific walrus bones reveal changes in stress-related and reproductive steroid hormones over the last 3 millennia. Conservation Physiology.
Clark,* C.T., L. Horstmann, and N. Misarti. 2020. Evaluating tooth strontium and barium as indicators of weaning age in Pacific walruses. Methods in Ecology and Evolution.
Clark,* C.T., L. Horstmann, and N. Misarti. 2020. Zinc concentrations in teeth of female walruses reflect the onset of reproductive maturity. Conservation Physiology 8(1): coaa029.
Karpovich, S., L.A. Horstmann, and L.K. Polasek. 2020. Validation of a novel method to create temporal records of hormone concentrations from the claws of ringed and bearded seals. Conservation Physiology 8(1): coaa073.
Ohlberger, J., D.E. Schindler, R.J. Brown, J.M.S. Harding, M.D. Adkison, A.R. Munro, L. Horstmann, and J. Spaeder. 2020. The reproductive value of large females: consequences of shifts in demographic structure for population reproductive potential in Chinook salmon. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science 77(8): 1292–1301.
Taylor,* N., C.T. Clark,* N. Misarti, and L. Horstmann. 2020. Determining sex of adult Pacific walruses from mandible measurements. Journal of Mammalogy 101(4): 941–950.
- Fisheries Ecology
- Marine Biology
- Marine Mammals
I am interested in broad-scale marine mammal ecology. Feeding ecology in particular
is a keystone piece of information to understand adaptation potential of marine mammals
and challenges that may arise. Dietary limitations can affect reproductive success,
compromise immune function, change exposure to new pathogens (i.e., parasites, contaminants),
and can therefore not only limit marine mammal population growth, but also potentially
introduce new threats to humans depending on them as a subsistence resource.
I focus my research on Arctic marine mammals, because (1) they are of cultural and
nutritional importance to subsistence users, (2) the Arctic is undergoing noticeable
change, and (3) planned oil and gas development in this habitat.
I am also working on a fish parasite, Ichthyophonus hoferi, in Chinook salmon, and its potential impact on pre-spawning mortality and fecundity.
- Evaluation of Chinook Salmon Mortality Factors in Alaska
- WALRUS–Walrus Adaptability and Long-term Responses
- Using multi-proxy data to project Sustainability
- Freshwater growth and survival in AYK Chinook salmon: maternal influences, predation mortality, and the ultimate effects on stock productivity
- Bowhead whale feeding in the western Beaufort Sea (BOWFEST)