Home » Seminars » EcoMunch » Ecomunch Fall 2007

ECOMUNCH SEMINAR SERIES
DEPARTMENT OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
SPRING 2007
Mondays 12:30 - 1:20, SCEN Room 606

Ecomunch provides an opportunity for students and faculty to present their research and engage in lively discussion. Bring your lunch and join us.

Contact information: A.J. Radwell - aradwell@uark.edu.

Date Speaker Title Affiliation
Jan. 29 Andrea Radwell Can DNA barcoding and other molecular techniques advance aquatic invertebrate taxonomy and improve bioassessment protocols? Biological Sciences
Feb. 5 John Shadwick The morphological and genetic diversity of Protostelium mycophaga Biological Sciences
Feb. 12 Simon A. Queenborough Spatial analyses of sex ratios and seedlings of Myristicaceae trees in the Ecuadorian Amazon University of Sheffield, UK

Feb. 19 Eric Larson Exploring potential mechanisms of native crayfish displacement by an introduced crayfish Coop Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, U of A
Feb. 26 Fred Spiegel The minicontinent of Hawai'i Biological Sciences
March 5 Katie Winsett Slime molds in South Africa Biological Sciences
March 12 Robin Verble An evaluation of the effects of prescribed fire on carpenter ant abundance in the Ozark mountains of Arkansas
Entomology
March 26 Paola Barriga Germination of six Cecropia species in Yasuni National Park, Ecuador Biological Sciences
April 2
Kate Hertweck Identifying species, defining genera, pinpointing hybridization: Phylogenetics in New World Commelinaceae Biological Sciences, U of Missouri
April 9 Garrett Clark Floating in your future? Adding a floatation step to the swirl and decant method

Biological Sciences
April 16
Scott Longing Establishing rehabilitation trajectories of benthic macroinvertebrate assemblages in a heavily degraded aquatic system
Crop, Soil, and Environmental Sciences, U of A
April 23 Robert McElderry and Carey Minteer
Costa Rica, Organization for Tropical Studies: A Course in Tropical Biology Biological Sciences
April 30 Matt Brown Phylogenetic position of Sappinia pedata

Biological Sciences