<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<faculty>
   <name/>
   <firstname>Tim</firstname>
   <lastname>Walsworth</lastname>
   <suffix/>
   <pronouns/>
   <department>S.J. &amp;amp; Jessie E. Quinney College of Agriculture &amp;amp; Natural Resources; Watershed Sciences/Ecology Center</department>
   <position>Assistant Professor</position>
   <background/>
   <location/>
   <campusMapURL/>
   <phone/>
   <email>timothy.walsworth@usu.edu</email>
   <hours/>
   <image/>
   <personalURL/>
   <cvURL/>
   <emphasis/>
   <expertise/>
   <bio>&lt;p&gt;Timothy Walsworth received his doctorate from the University of Washington in the School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, where he examined the impact of predation and commercial fishery structure on the productivity and profitability of a sockeye salmon fishery in Alaska. Tim received his MS from Utah State University and my BS from the University of Wisconsin &amp;ndash; Madison. Prior to joining the faculty at USU, he was a postdoc at USU where he examined the effects of interannual hydrologic variation on the productivity of endangered desert fishes, as well as the effectiveness of large-scale invasive species removal efforts. Tim previously completed a postdoc at the University of Washington where he explored how accounting for evolution changes the prioritization of management actions.&lt;/p&gt;</bio>
   <priority/>
   <anumber/>
   <altURL/>
   <altURLMask/>
   <apptManagerURL/>
   <prefix/>
</faculty>
