Wargo Home Page

Andrew Wargo

Associate Professor; Postdoctoral Program Coordinator

Email: [[arwargo]]
Phone: (804) 684-7311
Office: Chesapeake Bay Hall N212
Section: Ecosystem Health
Research Interests: Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Diseases, Pathogen Emergence, Disease Management Aquaculture, Vaccination, Selective Breeding, Virulence

Biography

Andrew Wargo's Curriculum Vitae

My lab group studies the ecology and evolution of infectious diseases. Some of the topics we explore are virulence, pathogen emergence, transmission, co-infection, host-pathogen interactions, vaccination, selective breeding, farming practices, and drug resistance.

Our goal is to understand the ecological and evolutionary processes that drive disease severity and harness this information to improve long-term disease management. To do so we employ an integrative approach that combines laboratory experiments, field studies, statistical analyses, and mathematical modeling. We utilize cutting-edge and classic techniques from molecular biology, microbiology, genetics, parasitology, virology, immunology, and mathematics.

Our work is primarily focused on the pathogen system Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus of salmonid fishes. However, we are also exploring systems such as bacterial cold water disease, viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus, and bacterial kidney disease of fishes; Hematodinium perezi of crabs; and Perkinsus marinus of bivalves. Our roots are in malaria parasites, and we still dabble in that system as well.

Although our work is inherently focused the fascinating questions specific to each of these study systems, we also use them as models to address foundational questions relevant to general infectious disease biology in wildlife, domesticated animals, and humans.

For more information on current projects in the lab visit: wmpeople.wm.edu/arwargo