Megan Frederickson The Frederickson Lab at the University of Toronto

Mutualism ecology and evolution. Research in the Frederickson Lab focuses on the ecology and evolution of mutualism, or cooperation between species. Mutualisms are extremely common in nature so common, in fact, that every plant and animal on Earth may be involved in at least one mutualism. We are primarily interested in two fundamental and inter-related questions about mutualism ecology and evolution. Photos Myrmica rubra photo J. Sanders; all other photos G. Miller. Jason wins an NSERC CGS-D!

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LINKS TO DOMAIN

Department of Ecology Evolutionary Biology University of Toronto

EEB Seeds of Science Blog. Atwood Colloquium in Ecology and Evolution. Re-creation of a key step in the switch from C3 to C4 leaf anatomy. Roxana Khoshravesh, Tammy Sage, and colleagues take a step in the path towards engineering C4 rice.

Pierre-Jean G. MALÉ Genetic ecology of mutualisms

My research seeks to uncover the mechanisms leading to the establishment and maintenance of mutually beneficial relationships between species, and to elucidate the consequences of such relationships on genome evolution. It is well known that mutualisms are not as unstable as originally thought, but the mechanisms underlying their maintenance over evolutionary times are unknown. How does a species develop mutualistic traits? My CV in pdf.

the Seeds of Science Your source for the latest from the University of Torontos department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Motherhood, a heavy load to bear. By Kirstin Brink, EEB. Mothers make huge sacrifices for their kids. But some mothers, such as those among black-horned tree crickets, really go out on a limb for their young. Searching for monkeyflowers in California.

Sharon Y. Strauss Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of California Davis

Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of California Davis. Welcome to Strauss lab! September 27, 2012.

Exploitation and Cheating in Mutualism Syntheses, Challenges, New Directions Cheating in Paris

Thanks to everyone who made this a great meeting! Abstracts are available here.

The Prior Lab

Search by typing and pressing enter. Species interactions and invasion ecology. Thanks for your interest! Page for more information on what we do. We are looking for PhD students to join the lab in 2017! Check out all opportunities to join the lab.

Rebecca Batstone - Home

At the University of Toronto. As a member of the Frederickson Lab. 8203;An updated copy of my CV can be found here. My lab mate Shannon and I are co-organizing a symposium at the upcoming CSEE 2017. We have confirmed an awesome line-up of speakers, inclu.

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Megan Frederickson The Frederickson Lab at the University of Toronto

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Mutualism ecology and evolution. Research in the Frederickson Lab focuses on the ecology and evolution of mutualism, or cooperation between species. Mutualisms are extremely common in nature so common, in fact, that every plant and animal on Earth may be involved in at least one mutualism. We are primarily interested in two fundamental and inter-related questions about mutualism ecology and evolution. Photos Myrmica rubra photo J. Sanders; all other photos G. Miller. Jason wins an NSERC CGS-D!

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The domain mutualism.ca states the following, "Research in the Frederickson Lab focuses on the ecology and evolution of mutualism, or cooperation between species." We observed that the website said " Mutualisms are extremely common in nature so common, in fact, that every plant and animal on Earth may be involved in at least one mutualism." It also stated " We are primarily interested in two fundamental and inter-related questions about mutualism ecology and evolution. Photos Myrmica rubra photo J. Sanders; all other photos G. Jason wins an NSERC CGS-D!."

SEEK MORE WEBSITES

Welcome Near Lab

Research in my laboratory is focused broadly on the use of phylogenetic hypotheses for studying patterns of speciation and adaptive radiation in monophyletic groups of teleost fishes. Much of our primary work involves the testing and construction of phylogenetic hypotheses using DNA sequences. Molecular phylogenetic trees are used in studies of fossil-calibration of molecular clocks, geographic modes of speciation, the evolution of morphological and ecological disparity, and.

Pinter-Wollman Lab

Group composition of invasive species. Welcome to the Pinter-Wollman lab! We study how collective behavior emerges from variation among system components. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. University of California, Los Angeles.

rgermain Ecology research by Rachel Germain

Interested in the ecology and evolution of species coexistence and diversity. Life history strategies across taxa, including maternal effects. Dormancy, and dispersal, and their ecological consequences in variable environments. Metacommunity ecology and the scaling of ecological processes. N T Jones, and.

Rowshyra Castañeda

I am a biologist broadly interested in applied ecology and conservation of aquatic ecosystems. Specifically, I study ways in which we can conserve fishes at risk of extinction and predict the spread of invasive species. I am currently a PhD student in the Mandrak Lab at the University of Toronto and co-supervised by Dr. Dept Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. Toronto, ON M1C 1A4.

The Sanchez Lab

Our laboratory is part of the Microbial Sciences Institute. And the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. Our work lies at the interface between microbial ecology and the evolution of microbial behavior, with a focus on the molecules that microbes secrete to their environment and the interactions these molecules mediate. We close the year with two new publications.