Media Training Workshop
WFES 236Jeff Pool (Communications Manager, COALS) will be running a Media Training Workshop for ABS and EEB. The workshop is intended for graduate students, but postdocs and faculty are welcome. Summary: This workshop is specifically designed to address the needs of scientists to communicate scientific or technical information in a variety of public and professional interactions, but […]
Using an historical perspective to plan for dynamic responses to environmental change
410 Rudder TowerEEB Seminar Presented by Jenny McGuire, Assistant Professor, School of Biological Sciences, School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology Refreshments served before start
Drilling in the History of Amazon Climate and Life: Integrating Geosciences and Phylogenetics to Study the Cenozoic Evolution of Tropical South America
Halbouty Geosciences Building, 101Dept. of Geology & Geophysics Seminar Presented by Dr. Paul Baker, Professor of Earth and Ocean Sciences, Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University For the past several years, Dr. Baker has been pursuing the goal of understanding climate change on time-scales from decades to millions of years. He is particularly interested in what forces natural […]
We’re not in Kansas anymore: Improving ecological niche models by filtering in environmental space
WFES 407WFSC Graduate Friday Noon Seminar Series Presented by Adrian Castellanos
Behind the eyes of a leech. How simple eyes encode complex image features that inform behavior
Biological Sciences Bldg East, Room 115Dept. of Biology Seminar Presented by Dr. John Jellies, Department of Biological Sciences, Western Michigan University Abstract: Using light to extract information about environments is widespread and beneficial for survival. Almost all animals have evolved specialized sensory capabilities to detect light and inform adaptive behaviors. Indeed, it has been estimated that eyes have evolved independently […]