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Ecology
UW Graduate School Profile: Biology graduate student Donavan Jackson
Frugivory and seed dispersal: insights from Madagascar’s biodiverse ecosystems
Many plant species rely on animal frugivores to disperse their seeds. Understanding the value of frugivore-mediated seed dispersal depends upon comprehending the interaction between animals’ foraging behaviors and the patterns of seed dispersal services they provide.
Melinda Denton Endowed Lecture: Rediscovering the organism in phylogenetic biology
Phylogenetics has found its way into many different subdisciplines of biology, and has made lasting impacts in fields as disparate as community ecology and medicine. In evolutionary biology, the recent trend of phylogeny-oriented studies has been toward “scaling up”, and looking for very broad patterns in character evolution and diversification in attempts to make generalizations about the tempo and mode of evolution. This scaling up does come with a cost, in that we spend less time trying to understand how evolutionary processes work at the whole-organism level.
A Thirsty future: will tropical forests survive with more droughts and fires?
Tropical woody plants store ∼230 petagrams of carbon in their above-ground living biomass. These stocks are currently growing in primary forests at rates that have decreased in recent decades. Droughts are an important mechanism in reducing forest carbon uptake and stocks by elevating tree mortality, increasing autotrophic respiration, and promoting wildfires. With continued climate change, the intensity and frequency of droughts will likely increase, with land-use change intensifying their effects.
Environmental Change: Science and Art
Art is an important tool for science outreach. Productive partnerships between artists and scientists can be a highly effective way to reach a wider audience. The visual arts, including drawing, painting, sculpture and photography can tell stories that spark interest in aspects of science and the environment and reinforce the written and spoken word.
This talk introduces some of the areas in which art is used to enhance science and the environment, especially climate change and conservation.
Gregory Wilson Mantilla in UW News on earliest primate fossils
Active learning research article honored in Altmetric's 2020 Top 100
Estimation of fitness from energetics and life-history data: An example using mussels
Submitted by Kenneth-Sebens on
Biology Grad Student Seminar: Hayden Davis & Melissa Delgado
Population variation within Western Fence Lizards in the Puget Sound
By: Hayden Davis (Leaché Lab)
The role physical asymmetry plays in Drosophila neural stem cells
By: Melissa Delgado (Cabernard Lab)
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