Kimberly A. With | |
Education: | B.S., Biology, 1985, San Francisco State University M.S., Biology, 1988, Northern Arizona University PhD., Zoology, 1993, Colorado State University |
Thesis Title: | The translation of patterns across scales: analysis of movement patterns in a grassland mosaic |
Thesis Year: | 1993 |
Discipline: | Biology |
Workplaces: | Bowling Green State University Kansas State University |
Kimberly A. With is an American ecologist. She is a Full Professor in the Division of Biology at Kansas State University.
Between 1988 and 1992, With served as Associate Editor for the journal Proceedings of the Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology, published by the Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology.[1] She simultaneously earned her PhD in Biology from Colorado State University.
After receiving her PhD, With sat on the Executive Committee of the Theoretical Ecology Section as a Secretary Officer for the Ecological Society of America from 1995–1997.[2] During this time, her paper "Critical thresholds in species' responses to landscape structure" earned her the Award for Outstanding Paper published in the discipline of Landscape Ecology by the U. S. Regional Association of the International Association for Landscape Ecology.[3] She also led an investigation with fellow Bowling Green State University professor Daniel Pavuk to examine the effects of Habitat Fragmentation on Biodiversity and Trophic Linkages in Experimental Fractal Landscapes.[4]
In 2000, she left Bowling Green State University to become an Assistant Professor at Kansas State University.[1] She also joined the Konza Prairie LTER, a program designed to address long-term research questions relevant to tallgrass prairie ecosystems, and the science of ecology in general.[5] In 2002, With was again the recipient of the Award for Outstanding Paper, making her the only person to be awarded this distinction twice.[6]
In 2009, With led a study which found that birds were not breeding successfully in the Flint Hills and more than 80 percent of nests were destroyed by predators. The results of her study was published in the journal Biological Conservation.[7] She then took a sabbatical leave during the 2010-2011 academic year.[8] In 2013, With was promoted to Full Professor in the Department of Biology.[9]
In 2016, With was the recipient of the Distinguished Landscape Ecologist Award from the U.S.-International Association for Landscape Ecology.[10] Three years later, she received a Faculty Development Awards from Kansas State University to fund future research endeavorments.[11] On August 29, 2019, With published "Essentials of Landscape Ecology" through the Oxford University Press.[12]