Landscape Genetics Distributed Graduate Seminar

Landscape Genetics - Distributed Graduate Seminar 

The Landscape Genetics Distributed Graduate Seminar (DGS) is an international collaboration that provides a unique opportunity for interdisciplinary graduate training. The course draws on experts from around the world to deliver an in-depth introduction and overview of the field of landscape genetics. The course caters to students in both basic and applied ecology, conservation/population genetics, landscape ecology and conservation biology. Every other year, several hundred students, post-docs and faculty from around the world participate in this course. This article provides more information about this innovative graduate education initiative.


How and when does the course take place?


The course will be offered next in 2024 (January 10 - May 1). 

The 2024 course schedule has now been finalized.

Registration will be US$500 for individuals and US$1000 for groups (groups will have a primary contact person, single zoom log-on, and their own discussion group). Registration includes a full year of access to materials on the course website for all participants.

Please stay tuned for further details and registration information.

If you'd like to receive announcements and be notified when course registration is open, please complete this short survey

         

The course will have a dedicated website, restricted to course participants, on which on content will be posted and archived.  Because the website is a Google site, you will need a Google account to access it. If you do not already have a Google account (either personal or professional), you will need to create one. You can, if you prefer, associate your new Google account with an existing email address (e.g., your institution email) and you do not necessarily have to create a new gmail address. 

Participants are from all over the world (e.g., from 2020):

Why a distributed graduate seminar?

A key objective of landscape genetics is to study how landscape modification and habitat fragmentation affect organism dispersal and gene flow across the landscape. Landscape genetics requires highly interdisciplinary specialized skills making intensive use of technical population genetic skills and spatial analysis tools (spatial statistics, GIS tools and remote sensing). Even when students receive disciplinary training in these areas, educational programs often lack the necessary linkage and synthesis among disciplines. This linkage can only be accomplished after experts from each discipline work together to develop guiding principles for this growing research area. 

Group projects

Group projects provide the opportunity for students from different institutions to work as a group, under the guidance of one or more faculty leaders, on addressing a significant research question in landscape genetics. The ultimate aim is to produce a manuscript that can be published in a peer-reviewed journal.  Here is a list of publications from previous group projects.