Difference between revisions of "Graduate Student Symposium 2017"

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| 3:10-3:25  || Samantha Apgar  || Florida Scrub-Jay social coordination in overgrown habitats: managing safe and selfish needs
 
| 3:10-3:25  || Samantha Apgar  || Florida Scrub-Jay social coordination in overgrown habitats: managing safe and selfish needs
 
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| 3:25-3:40  || Lauren Stanley  ||  
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| 3:25-3:40  || Lauren Stanley  || The wanted, wonderful, and weird: A sensitized mutant screen in monkeyflowers
 
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!style="background:#efefef;" | 3:40-4:00  || || '''Speed Talks and Photo Contest'''
 
!style="background:#efefef;" | 3:40-4:00  || || '''Speed Talks and Photo Contest'''

Revision as of 21:59, 8 February 2017

Saturday, February 11, 2017

Biology/Physics Building Room 130, 9:00am to ~ 4:00pm



The EEB Graduate Student Symposium is an all day event where graduate students present their research to other graduate students and faculty. Any EEB graduate student can present: BS/MS, masters, PhD, old and new students. New graduate students usually present research ideas or preliminary data, while those more ‘seasoned’ students present their most recent results, often in preparation for upcoming spring and summer meetings.

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Schedule

Time Speaker Title
8:30-9:00 Coffee and potluck breakfast.
9:00-9:15 Dr. Rob Klee: DEEP Comissioner Welcome Address
9:15-9:30 Austin Spence Hummingbird sleep, poop, and other interests
9:30-9:45 Jaleigh Pier Temporally observed Temperature-Size Rule in a benthic marine mollusk fauna from Seymour Island, Antarctica
9:45-10:00 Annette Evans Have red-backed salamanders evolved in response to 40 years of climate change?
10:00-10:15 Sarah McAnulty Catch and Release: differential hemocyte binding in the squid-vibrio symbiosis
10:15-10:30 Andrew Stillman Fledgling ecology: hot topics in a post-fire specialist
10:30-11:00 Morning Break
11:00-11:15 Katie Taylor Faking death: an adaptive strategy?
11:15-11:30 Shihong Jia Soil pathogens and snow drive the plant diversity in a temperate forest
11:30-12:00 Dr. Manuel Morales, Willaims College Keynote Address: Mutualism: too much of a good thing?
12:00-1:20 Lunch
1:20-1:30 Announcements
1:30-1:45 Kristen Nolting Species persistence and coexistence in a 'Biodiversity Hotspot'
1:45-2:00 Eliza Grames An integrative model of mechanisms underlying area sensitivity
2:00-2:15 Cora McGehee Integrated Control of Pythium Root Rot in Hydroponic Solutions
2:15-2:30 Nasim Rahmatpour The genome of Funaria hygrometrica insights of transcriptome on structure and evolution
2:30-2:45 Madelynn von Baeyer, Anthropology In the Weeds: How Weed Ecology Helps Clarify Ancient Plant Use
2:45-3:00 Rebecca Colby The presence and evolution of Na+, K+ - ATPase paralogs in a euryhaline fish, the Alewife
3:00-3:10 Afternoon Break
3:10-3:25 Samantha Apgar Florida Scrub-Jay social coordination in overgrown habitats: managing safe and selfish needs
3:25-3:40 Lauren Stanley The wanted, wonderful, and weird: A sensitized mutant screen in monkeyflowers
3:40-4:00 Speed Talks and Photo Contest
3:40-3:45 Amy LaFountain Mechanisms of pigmentation patterning: From birds to monkeyflowers
3:45-3:50 Alex Hart EnTAP: delivering fast and friendly functional annotation to non-model transcriptomes
3:50-3:55 Tanner Matson Unraveling Chronic Confusion: A Revision of North American Lacturidae (Lepidoptera: Zygaenoidea)
3:55-4:00 Photo Contest Results


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