Seminars
Seminars will be held Fridays, 12-1:00 p.m. in Spaulding G70 (unless otherwise noted)
Light refreshments provided
For more information, please contact the hosting lab
- February 8 (Scheduled in SLS G26)
- Joint seminar with Larry Harris (The role of invasive species in changing community states: shooting at a moving target) and Subhash Minocha (From the polyaminome to decaffeinated tea and sticky tomatoes)
- February 15 (Scheduled in SLS G26)
- Joint seminar with Chris Neefus (From the casebook of the seaweed detectives: untangling the Porphyra leucosticta complex) and Win Watson (Five things I bet you don't know)
- February 29
- "Invasive sea squirts of Long Island Sound: commeth the blob." Stephan Bullard, University of Hartford [Host: Larry Harris]
- March 7 (Scheduled in SLS G26)
- Joint seminar with Don Chandler (Biodiversity of New England aquatic insects, with a bonus of beetle "meanderings") and Chuck Schwab (Feeding cows for high milk protein yields: from science to application)
- March 14 (Scheduled in SLS G26)
- Joint seminar with Hunt Howell (Residency of cod in the western Gulf of Maine) and Al Baker (Lakes and climate)
- March 28
- "Dogfish: fishermen's best pest." Shelly Tallack, Gulf of Maine Research Institute [Host: Hunt Howell]
- April 4
- "The evolutionary origins of mind reading." Justin Wood, Harvard University [Host: Michelle Scott]
- April 11 (Scheduled in SLS G26)
- Joint seminar with Becky Grube (Specialty vegetable crop research for northern New England growers) and Anita Klein (Population genetics applied to phycology: a fruitful collaboration)
- April 18 (Scheduled in SLS G26)
- Joint seminar with Brent Loy (What plant breeders do in their spare time) and Bill Berndston (Improving male reproductive risk assessments)
- April 25 (Scheduled in SLS G26)
- Joint seminar with Cathy Neal (Landscaping at the water's edge) and Jeff Schloss (Weeds, worms and watersheds: adventures in participatory research)
- May 2 (Scheduled in SLS G26)
- Joint seminar with Gregg Moore (Rare habitats, rare soils, rare plants -- observations n the tidal rivers of the Great Bay Estuary) and Michelle Scott (When is a beetle more like a bird?)
- May 12 (Monday)
- "Early life history characteristics of fishes as indicators of fitness and habitat quality." Christopher Chambers, Northeast Fisheries Science Center [Hosts: Hunt Howell and Michelle Walsh]
