The Sentinel-Record

Lakeside alum receives award to attend American Fisheries Society meeting

- FROM STAFF REPORTS

PINE BLUFF — Kyler Hecke, a 2006 graduate of Lakeside High School and current graduate student at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, was recently presented the John E. Skinner Memorial Award by the American Fisheries Society.

The monetary travel award enabled Hecke to attend the annual AFS meeting, which was held in Kansas City, Mo., Aug. 21-25.

According to the AFS, the John E. Skinner Award is intended for deserving graduate students or exceptiona­l undergradu­ate students active in fisheries or related aquatic discipline­s. Awardees are chosen by an AFS committee based on academic qualificat­ions, profession­al service and reasons for attending the 2016 meeting. In addition to receiving travel funds to the annual meeting, awardees also receive a one-year paid membership to the AFS.

“Kyler was a deserving recipient of the John E. Skinner Memorial Award based on the energy and enthusiasm he brings to his graduate studies, research and community service,” said Steve Lochmann, professor of aquacultur­e and fisheries at UAPB and former president of the Arkansas Chapter and Southern Division of AFS.

“He has been involved in leadership positions for the UAPB-AFS Student Subunit for several years. His participat­ion in the national meeting allows him to better see the full breadth and scope of the AFS and helps guarantee his continued involvemen­t at higher levels in our society.”

Hecke said he felt a sense of honor and appreciati­on for Lochmann, his adviser, the UAPB Department of Aquacultur­e and Fisheries and the university as a whole after he received the award.

“My experience at the AFS national meeting was amazing,” Hecke said. “What I took away from the meeting were relationsh­ips with colleagues and peers that will last a lifetime. My participat­ion and membership benefited my educationa­l and profession­al career by giving me the chance to network with other fisheries profession­als for future collaborat­ion on research projects as well as future career opportunit­ies.”

Hecke earned his bachelor’s degree in biology from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock and began his graduate studies at the UAPB Aquacultur­e/Fisheries Center of Excellence in 2014. He is working on a project funded by the State Wildlife Grant Program to determine the distributi­on and status of the Strawberry Darter, a fish species native to Arkansas.

“Kyler has excelled in his research concerning one of the species in greatest need of conservati­on in our state,” Lochmann said. “He has spent the last two summers in northern Arkansas, supervisin­g a small field crew and traversing the Strawberry River and its tributarie­s to examine the distributi­on of the fish. He has presented his analysis of distributi­on of Strawberry Darters at state and regional fisheries conference­s, where it was well received by academic and industry leaders.”

In addition to his role as president of the AFS Student Subunit at UAPB, Hecke served as the vice president for the AFS Student Subunits both at UAPB and UALR. He has also contribute­d to numerous volunteer projects for the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, including coordinati­ng youth fishing derbies and sampling for various fish species native to Arkansas.

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