Dr. Andrew K. Rasmussen is a Research Assistant Professor of aquatic entomology in
the Center for Water Resources. His research interests include aquatic insect taxonomy,
biological assessment and monitoring of water quality, and conservation of aquatic
insect biodiversity. Dr. Rasmussen’s work on the diversity of Trichoptera (caddisflies)
has documented many species new to science. The aquatic insect specimens collected
through his research projects in Florida and neighboring states are housed within
the aquatic insect collection at FAMU. On a larger scale, Dr. Rasmussen documents
caddisfly biodiversity across North America on a web-based informational resource
Trichoptera Nearctica (www.trichoptera.org), which includes a distributional checklist
of all caddisfly species known to occur in Canada and the United States. His research
has been funded through contracts and grants procured from the Florida Department
of Environmental Protection, Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission, US Department
of Agriculture, and the US Fish & Wildlife Service. Dr. Rasmussen has taught courses
in aquatic entomology, general entomology, insect ecology, and conservation biology.
Within his areas of expertise, he enjoys training undergraduate students and graduate
students at the Masters and Ph.D. level.
EDUCATION:
Ph.D. Entomology, University of Florida / Florida A&M University, 2004
M.Ed. Science Education, University of Florida, 1988
B.S. Water Resources/Biology, University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, 1987
FIELDS OF SPECIALIZATION:
Aquatic Entomology, Systematics of Trichoptera (Caddisflies), Bioassessment of Aquatic
Ecosystem Health
GOOGLE SCHOLAR:
https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=tgnQDCIAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&authuser=1&sortby=pubdate
GRANTS:
2020-2023. Watershed Modeling Using Aquatic Indicator Species to Evaluate Ecological
Impacts of Land Use and Climate Change. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture,
1890s Institution Capacity Building Grant Project 1021805. $299,131.