Difference between revisions of "Seminar speaker sign-up"

From EEBedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 9: Line 9:
 
<!--TO BEGIN A BLANK SCHEDULE, PASTE TEMPLATE BELOW THIS POINT-->
 
<!--TO BEGIN A BLANK SCHEDULE, PASTE TEMPLATE BELOW THIS POINT-->
  
'''Seminar Speaker:''' Julie Lockwood [[http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~jlockwoo/ link]]<br>
+
'''Seminar Speaker:''' Stuart McDaniel<br>
'''Institution:''' Department of Ecology, Evolution and Natural Resources, Rutgers University <br>
+
'''Institution:''' Department of Biology, Washington University <br>
'''EEB Seminar Title:'''  Propagule madness: definitions and null hypotheses in invasion ecology<br>
+
'''EEB Seminar Title:'''  Mating system, hybrid incompatibility, and diversification in mosses<br>
'''NRME Seminar Title:'''  In it for the long haul: the conservation of the Cape Sable seaside sparrow in the Everglades, Florida<br>
+
'''Faculty or Student Contact:''' Bernard Goffinet<br>
'''Faculty or Student Contact:''' Chris Elphick<br>
+
  
  
Stuart McDaniel graduate from Oberlin college in 1994. In work as an intern at the New York State Museum before joining Dr. Jon Shaw's lab at Duke. This is were we met! Stuart's first paper from his Duke time was published in evolution. It is the reference study on genetic differentiation of disjunct populations in the moss <I>Pyrrhobryum mnioides</I>. Stuart's interest changed and soon he focused on the model moss (one of many!) <I>Ceratodon purpureus </I>, the fire moss, abundant on the roof of the TLS lobby (you can see it when you come done the stairs). He demonstrated on-going long-distance gene flow within this cosmopolitan moss McDaniel & Shaw 2005; Molecular Ecology). His work on correlations between genetic markers and life-history traits (McDaniel 2008  Evolution) and linkage maps in <I>Ceratodon</I> made him an ideal candidate to join Dr. Quatrano's lab http://www.biology.wustl.edu/faculty/quatrano/ and work on another - no longer emerging, and indeed well-established - model system, <I>Physcomitrella patens</I>.
+
Stuart McDaniel graduate from Oberlin college in 1994. In work as an intern at the New York State Museum before joining Dr. Jon Shaw's lab at Duke. This is were we met! Stuart's first paper from his Duke time was published in evolution. It is the reference study on genetic differentiation of disjunct populations in the moss <I>Pyrrhobryum mnioides</I>. Stuart's interest changed and soon he focused on the model moss (one of many!) <I>Ceratodon purpureus </I>, the fire moss, abundant on the roof of the TLS lobby (you can see it when you come done the stairs). He demonstrated on-going long-distance gene flow within this cosmopolitan moss McDaniel & Shaw 2005; Molecular Ecology). His work on correlations between genetic markers and life-history traits (McDaniel 2008  Evolution) and linkage maps in <I>Ceratodon</I> made him an ideal candidate to join Dr. Quatrano's lab http://www.biology.wustl.edu/faculty/quatrano/ (where he currently is a NIH-NRSA Fellow) and work on another - no longer emerging, and indeed well-established - model system, <I>Physcomitrella patens</I>.
 
<BR/>
 
<BR/>
 
You do not need to be interested in bryophytes to want to talk to him. He has a great personality, and graduate students will certainly enjoy meeting him.  
 
You do not need to be interested in bryophytes to want to talk to him. He has a great personality, and graduate students will certainly enjoy meeting him.  
Line 24: Line 23:
 
| '''Time''' || '''Name''' || '''Room'''
 
| '''Time''' || '''Name''' || '''Room'''
 
|-
 
|-
 +
| 8:00am || Breakfast at the Tolland Inn  ||
 +
-
 
| 9:30am ||  ||  
 
| 9:30am ||  ||  
 
|-
 
|-

Revision as of 02:05, 20 January 2009

To schedule a meeting: Click the 'edit' tab above. Enter your name to the right of the first pair of vertical lines (||) for the desired meeting time and the meeting location after the second pair of vertical lines.

For seminar hosts: This page should be updated in order to reflect the schedule of the current week's seminar speaker. For an empty template of the source text, click here. Customize the schedule to match the speaker's availability, and add events like meals and airport arrival/departure times as necessary.

Click here for the EEB Department Seminar page.


Seminar Speaker: Stuart McDaniel
Institution: Department of Biology, Washington University
EEB Seminar Title: Mating system, hybrid incompatibility, and diversification in mosses
Faculty or Student Contact: Bernard Goffinet


Stuart McDaniel graduate from Oberlin college in 1994. In work as an intern at the New York State Museum before joining Dr. Jon Shaw's lab at Duke. This is were we met! Stuart's first paper from his Duke time was published in evolution. It is the reference study on genetic differentiation of disjunct populations in the moss Pyrrhobryum mnioides. Stuart's interest changed and soon he focused on the model moss (one of many!) Ceratodon purpureus , the fire moss, abundant on the roof of the TLS lobby (you can see it when you come done the stairs). He demonstrated on-going long-distance gene flow within this cosmopolitan moss McDaniel & Shaw 2005; Molecular Ecology). His work on correlations between genetic markers and life-history traits (McDaniel 2008 Evolution) and linkage maps in Ceratodon made him an ideal candidate to join Dr. Quatrano's lab http://www.biology.wustl.edu/faculty/quatrano/ (where he currently is a NIH-NRSA Fellow) and work on another - no longer emerging, and indeed well-established - model system, Physcomitrella patens.
You do not need to be interested in bryophytes to want to talk to him. He has a great personality, and graduate students will certainly enjoy meeting him.

Thursday, January 22 2009

Time Name Room
8:00am Breakfast at the Tolland Inn

-

9:30am
10:00am
10:30am
11:00am
11:30am LUNCH
1:00pm
1:30pm
2:00pm
2:30pm A
3:00pm EEB 3894: Current Topics in EEB Bamford
3:30pm Seminar preparation
4:00pm EEB Department Seminar BPB 130
6:30pm Dinner: