Monday, October 16, 2017
Organisms, communities, and environments: What actually matters in a microbiome?
Terrance Bell , Department of Plant Pathology and Environmental Microbiology, Penn State
107 Forest Resources Building
Monday, October 09, 2017
Pollinator health: Lessons from their evolutionary and life history traits
Margarita L_pez-Uribe , Department of Entomology, Penn State
107 Forest Resources Building
Monday, October 09, 2017
Pollinator health: Lessons from their evolutionary and life history traits
Margarita L_pez-Uribe , Department of Entomology, Penn State
107 Forest Resources Building
Monday, October 02, 2017
When To Kill Your Neighbor: Bacterial Antagonism In the Phyllosphere
Kevin L. Hockett , Department of Plant Pathology and Environmental Microbiology, Penn State
107 Forest Resources Building
Monday, September 25, 2017
Adaptive responses to environmental change: Living with fire ants, road noise, and loud croaks
Tracy Langkilde , Biology Department, Penn State
107 Forest Resources Building
Monday, September 18, 2017
Does pyrodiversity beget biodiversity? Using ethnoecological methods in Australia
Rebecca Bliege Bird , Department of Anthropology, Penn State
107 Forest Resources Building
Monday, September 11, 2017
Quantifying ecological processes from observational data: using hierarchical models to separate observation-, state-, heterogeneity-, and dynamic-processes
David Miller , Department of Ecosystem Science and Management, Penn State
107 Forest Resources Building
Monday, September 11, 2017
Quantifying ecological processes from observational data: using hierarchical models to separate observation-, state-, heterogeneity-, and dynamic-processes
David Miller , Department of Ecosystem Science and Management, Penn State
107 Forest Resources Building
Wednesday, April 26, 2017
Ecology Colloquium Series - The Fate of Phosphates in Agricultural Ecosystems: Using 18O to trace phosphorus turnover in soil
Curt McConnell , Penn State
104 Forest Resources Building
Monday, April 24, 2017
Thermal sensitivity of ectotherms in a warming world
Dr. Ray Huey , University of Washington
106 Forest Resources Building