Simberloff Article Featured in TN Today
Dan Simberloff’s critique of the ‘novel ecosystem’ concept, recently published as an opinion piece in TREE, has been featured in Tennessee Today. Congratulations, Dan!
by armsworth
Dan Simberloff’s critique of the ‘novel ecosystem’ concept, recently published as an opinion piece in TREE, has been featured in Tennessee Today. Congratulations, Dan!
by armsworth
Gordon Burghardt was recently honored and his career celebrated at a symposium during the 2014 meeting of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists.
“Bridging the gaps: the remarkable career of Gordon M. Burghardt in the study of herpetofaunal behavior.”
by armsworth
Sergey Gavrilets and collaborators have a new paper out in Molecular Ecology that made the cover of the journal. Congratulations!
“The genomic signature of parallel adaptation from shared genetic variation” Mol Ecol 23(16):3944-3956.
The abstract can be viewed at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mec.12720/abstract.
by armsworth
Sergey Gavrilets and two colleagues published a study in the Quarterly Review of Biology on the biology of same-sex attraction, that has sparked considerable coverage in both scientific and popular media. Publications and websites as diverse as Time, US News & World Report, Popular Science, Cosmos, and the New York Daily News have reported the findings.
Read the UT Quest story that summarizes the study, or read the full article (citation below).
by armsworth
The International Biogeographic Society Board has announced that Prof. Daniel Simberloff will receive the Alfred Russel Wallace Award at the IBS biennial meeting in Bayreuth, Germany (January 8th to 12th, 2015). The award was established in 2004 to recognize a lifetime of outstanding contributions by an eminent scholar in any subdiscipline of biogeography.
For more information, please visit the IBS blog.
by armsworth
Leigh Moorhead, a graduate student in the Classen Lab, was recently awarded a Graduate Research Opportunities Worldwide (GROW) grant from the NSF for her project: Exploring how mammal herbivore – plant community interactions shape ecosystem response to global change.
GROW grants are available to recipients of NSF GRFPs and provide students opportunities for international research.
Congratulations Leigh!
by armsworth
Alix Pfenningwerth (EEB grad student) and Su’ad Yoon (EEB undergrad) both got NSF GRFP awards. Brian Looney and Katie Massana (EEB grad students) got honorable mentions. Across UT, only 5 students received NSF GRFP awards, and only 3 students received honorable mentions, so EEB had an excellent showing!
UPDATE: For information about all 5 UT awardees, please read the Tennessee Today press release.
by armsworth
EEB faculty Joe Williams and Brian O’Meara, together with former grad student Mackenzie Taylor, have a new article out in the American Journal of Botany that has been getting attention in the press. Read the EurekAlert press release, “Which came first, bi- or tricellular pollen? New research updates a classic debate.” Or, read the original, open-access article:
by armsworth
Joseph Bailey was named UT Quest Scholar of the Week on May 2, in recognition of his forthcoming visiting professorship at the Center for Ecological Research at the University of Kyoto, Japan.
by armsworth
Jiang Jiang (NIMBioS fellow and Classen Lab postdoc) and Don DeAngelis (adjunct) have received the Ecological Society of America’s 2014 Outstanding Ecological Theory Paper Award. Their winning paper, “Strong species-environment feedback shapes plant community assembly along environmental gradients,” was published in the journal Ecology and Evolution in 2013 (3: 4119–4128).
“In their clearly-written paper, the authors make direct linkages to problems in plant ecology, while building a general theoretical model that addresses a key issue, not just in plant ecology, of feedbacks between organisms and their environment. Through well-designed analyses of an elegant model, they found that “ecological engineers” (species that modify the environment to their own benefit) can affect the diversity of the competitive community they inhabit, and that the direction of this effect depends critically on the extent to which the community is closed to immigration and on the spatial heterogeneity of the environment. These novel results should are likely to foster further theoretical research and generate some fine hypotheses that will motivate experimental and field studies.”
“The Theoretical Ecology Section of the Ecological Society of America sponsors an annual award for an outstanding published paper in ecological theory. Papers with a print or electronic publication date in either of the two years preceding the year of the award are eligible.”