Fall 2021 Seminar Schedule

September 17, 2021

Sharks are snowbirds too! Seasonal migration of blacktip sharks in southeast Florida

Dr. Stephen Kajiura

Professor, Florida Atlantic University

September 24, 2021

Advanced Remote Sensing Methods for Water Quality Monitoring and Spatial/Temporal Trend Analysis in 10,000+ Minnesota Lakes

Dr. Leif Olmanson

Researcher, University of Minnesota

october 1, 2021

The ecology of environmental DNA: how natural history and habitat influence molecular surveillance for rare and invasive organisms

Dr. Eric Larson

Associate Professor, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

october 8, 2021

Citizen Science in the "New Normal": Climate Change, COVID and Inclusivity

Dr. Julia Parrish

Professor and Associate Dean, University of Washington

october 15, 2021

Fish Must Breathe - Outline of the Gill-Oxygen Limitation Theory (GOLT)

Dr. Daniel Pauly

Professor, University of British Columbia

october 22, 2021

Conservation of a culturally relevant fish at landscape scales: A case study of Pacific lamprey

Dr. Kellie Carim

Research Ecologist, Aldo Leopold Wilderness Research Institute

october 29, 2021

Conserving the endangered Greater Adjutant Stork through people's movement in Assam

Dr. Purnima Devi Barman

Wildlife Biologist, Aaranyak and Founder of Hargila Army

November 5, 2021

Life finds a way: How can humans and wildlife coexist in an increasingly developed world?

Dr. Christine Wilkinson

Postdoctoral scholar, University of California-Berkeley

November 12, 2021

Negotiating the Gaze: People, Power and Conservation Surveillance in the Corbett Tiger Reserve, India

Trishant Simlai

PhD Candidate, University of Cambridge

November 19, 2021

Ecology and Conservation of Ungulate Migration

Dr. Jerod Merkle

Professor, University of Wyoming

November 26, 2021

THANKSGIVING BREAK - NO SEMINAR

DECEMBER 3, 2021

The impact of road salt on our freshwaters

Dr. Hilary Dugan

Assistant Professor, University of Wisconsin-Madison

DECEMBER 10, 2021

Carnivore Cultures: what are they and why might they matter for conservation?

Dr. Joseph Bump

Associate Professor, University of Minnesota