Difference between revisions of "Current Topics in Ecology and Evolution"
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==<span style="color:#008000">'''Spring 2009 Seminars'''</span>== | ==<span style="color:#008000">'''Spring 2009 Seminars'''</span>== | ||
''(Thursday @ 4:00PM in [http://admissions.uconn.edu/virtualtour/search/ BPB 130] unless otherwise noted)'' | ''(Thursday @ 4:00PM in [http://admissions.uconn.edu/virtualtour/search/ BPB 130] unless otherwise noted)'' | ||
− | + | <br> | |
'''January 22, 2009''' | '''January 22, 2009''' | ||
[http://www.colorado.edu/eeb/MORPH/labs/interests/mcdaniel_ri.html Stuart McDaniel] (Washington University) | [http://www.colorado.edu/eeb/MORPH/labs/interests/mcdaniel_ri.html Stuart McDaniel] (Washington University) | ||
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'''March 26, 2009''' | '''March 26, 2009''' | ||
[http://pages.usherbrooke.ca/jshipley/recherche/ Bill Shipley] (Université de Sherbrooke, Quebec) | [http://pages.usherbrooke.ca/jshipley/recherche/ Bill Shipley] (Université de Sherbrooke, Quebec) | ||
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'''April 2, 2009''' | '''April 2, 2009''' | ||
[http://zoology.ou.edu/Mares.htm Michael Mares] (University of Oklahoma) | [http://zoology.ou.edu/Mares.htm Michael Mares] (University of Oklahoma) | ||
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+ | http://www.bry-backmanor.org/gardenfun/frogiconjoel.gif | ||
'''April 30, 2009''' | '''April 30, 2009''' | ||
− | [http:// | + | [http://hydrodictyon.eeb.uconn.edu/people/turchin/ Peter Turchin] (University of Connecticut) |
− | + | Warfare and the Evolution of Social Complexity: a Multilevel Selection Approach <br> | |
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<br> | <br> | ||
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|26 March || Bill Shipley || Laura || [http://pages.usherbrooke.ca/jshipley/recherche/downloads%20of%20files/Oikos%20V118%202009.pdf Shipley, B. 2009. Limitations of entropy maximization in ecology:a reply to Haegeman and Loreau. Okios 118: 152-159.] | |26 March || Bill Shipley || Laura || [http://pages.usherbrooke.ca/jshipley/recherche/downloads%20of%20files/Oikos%20V118%202009.pdf Shipley, B. 2009. Limitations of entropy maximization in ecology:a reply to Haegeman and Loreau. Okios 118: 152-159.] | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | |2 April November <br> '''(Teale Lecture Series*)''' || Michael Mares || Sadie || | + | |2 April November <br> '''(Teale Lecture Series*)''' || Michael Mares || Sadie || [http://www.jstor.org/stable/pdfplus/1312045.pdf Mares, M. 1993. Desert Rodents, Seed Consumption, and Convergence. BioScience 43(6): 372-379.] |
|- | |- | ||
− | |9 April || Casey Dunn || Elijah || | + | |9 April || Casey Dunn || Elijah || [http://www.brown.edu/Faculty/Dunn_Lab/assets/Dunn_Wagner2006.pdf Dunn, C.W. and Wagner, G. P. 2006. The evolution of colony-level development in the Siphonophora (Cnidaria:Hydrozoa). Dev. Genes Ecol. 216: 743-754.] |
|- | |- | ||
− | |15 April <br> '''(Darwin Lecture Series*)''' <br> '''(Wednesday Seminar**)''' || Paul Ewald || Colin || | + | |15 April <br> '''(Darwin Lecture Series*)''' <br> '''(Wednesday Seminar**)''' || Paul Ewald || Colin || [http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=MImg&_imagekey=B6WPG-4575RVM-1-1&_cdi=6990&_user=669286&_orig=search&_coverDate=02%2F28%2F2002&_sk=999659997&view=c&wchp=dGLzVtb-zSkWz&md5=522a587a135e1544eff5ed6ebe9a3d25&ie=/sdarticle.pdf Eaton, S.B. et al. 2002. Evolutionary Health Promotion. Preventive Medicine 34: 109-118] |
|- | |- | ||
− | |23 April || Osvaldo Sala || Gurchetan|| | + | |23 April || Osvaldo Sala || Gurchetan||[http://www.brown.edu/Research/ECI/people/sala/pdfs/Yahdjian_Sala_Vegetation.pdf Yahdjian, L. and Sala, O.E. 2006. Vegetation structure constrains primary production response to increased water availability in the Patagonian steppe of Argentina. Ecology 87:952-962] |
|- | |- | ||
− | |30 April || | + | |30 April || Peter Turchin || Krystle || [http://poincare.unile.it/deborah/Turchin.pdf Turchin, P. 2001. Does population ecology have general laws? – Oikos 94: 17–26.] |
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 21:39, 27 April 2009
EEB 3894 Overview
Undergraduate Seminar at the University of Connecticut, Storrs, Spring, 2009
1 credit
Thursday 2:30-5pm
Bamford conference room (Torrey Life Sciences 171b)
Instructors: Tobias Landberg & Katherine Shaw
We will meet all the distinguished scientists on this semester's list of speakers. Student will be responsible for participating in each meeting. We will read at least one research article written by a different visiting scholar every week. After a half hour of discussion, we will meet the person behind the science and then hear them give an hour-long research seminar. This course is for undergraduate students interested in broadening their understanding of modern ecology and evolutionary biology by engaging in active discussion. Read this guideto writing response papers and preparing for discussion.
Grades will be calculated out of 140 points (10 points/week)
Attendance= 4 points/week Attend discussion and seminar every week.
Participation= 4 points/week Ask questions, volunteer comments and engage in constructive discussion with peers and speaker.
1 page response paper= 2 points/week Typed, double-spaced response to the research article.
Leading 1 discussion= 10 points Pick research article for the discussion, summarize and focus discussion with peers.
- Email Kat (katherine.shaw@uconn.edu) with article choice @ least 1 week before you lead seminar discussion.
Read this guideto writing response papers and preparing for discussion.
Spring 2009 Seminars
(Thursday @ 4:00PM in BPB 130 unless otherwise noted)
January 22, 2009
Stuart McDaniel (Washington University)
Mating system, hybrid incompatibility, and diversification in mosses
January 29, 2009
Rick Blob (Clemson University)
Functional diversity: insights from studies of weird animals doing strange things
February 2, 2009
Frank Moore (The University of Southern Mississippi)
TBA
MONDAY SEMINAR @ 4:00PM in BPB 130
February 5, 2009
Bud Ward (The Yale Forum on Climate Change and the Media)
Bridging the Science/Journalism Gap in a Time of Epochal Change
4:00PM in Dodd Center: Teale Lecture Series
February 12, 2009
David Fastovsky (University of Rhode Island) Catastrophic Extinction of the Dinosaurs at the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary
February 19, 2009
Maria Uriarte (Columbia University) Human effects on forested landscapes at several spatial and temporal scales
*CANCELLED* February 25, 2009
John Haught (Georgetown University)
Evolution and Faith: What Is at Stake?
WEDNESDAY SEMINAR @ 4:00PM in Dodd Center: Darwin Lecture Series
March 5, 2009
Catherine Potvin (McGIll University)
Forest carbon stocks and land-use: Reconciling the international agenda with the needs of indigenous populations 4:00PM in Dodd Center: Teale Lecture Series
March 19, 2009
Mark Hauser (Harvard University)
The Evolution of a Moral Grammar
4:00PM in Dodd Center: Darwin Lecture Series
March 25, 2009
John Beatty (University of British Columbia)
Karl Popper, Darwinianism, and Totalitarianism: Evolutionary Theory and Political Ideology
WEDNESDAY SEMINAR @ 4:00PM in Dodd Center: Darwin Lecture Series
March 26, 2009
Bill Shipley (Université de Sherbrooke, Quebec)
Modelling trait-based community assembly through entropy maximization
April 2, 2009
Michael Mares (University of Oklahoma)
Sun Tzu and the Art of War: How the Battle of Museums to Survive has a Negative Impact on Nature and the Environment
4:00PM in Dodd Center: Teale Lecture Series
April 9, 2009
Casey Dunn (Brown University)
Scalable and portable phylogenetic strategies in the era of high throughput sequencing
April 15, 2009
Paul Ewald (University of Louisville)
Darwinian Medicine
WEDNESDAY SEMINAR @ 4:00PM in Dodd Center: Darwin Lecture Series
April 23, 2009
Osvaldo Sala (Brown University)
Spatial and temporal controls of carbon cycling in arid and semiarid ecosystems
http://www.bry-backmanor.org/gardenfun/frogiconjoel.gif
April 30, 2009
Peter Turchin (University of Connecticut)
Warfare and the Evolution of Social Complexity: a Multilevel Selection Approach
EEB 3894 Semester Schedule
Trouble accessing the discussion article when off campus? First sign into the UConn VPN and then try the link.
* Seminars in the Darwin Lecture Series and Teale Lecture Series are held in the Konover Auditorium of the Dodd Center (near the Homer Babbidge Library).
** The department seminar will be held on Wednesday of this week. We will discuss a paper on Thursday, and students are encouraged to attend the seminar on Wednesday.