Appendix G
Public Seminars Presented at Archbold
Biological Station, 1997-1998
[Biennial Contents]
1997
Thomas Eisner, Cornell University, 16 January, The Hidden Value of Nature
James Thomas Callahan, National Science Foundation, 30 January, Funding
Opportunities for Research and Infrastructure at NSF
Roger A. Morse, Cornell University, 13 February, The Selection of a New Home by
Swarming Honey Bees
Elena R. Alvarez-Buylla, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, 20 February, Demographic
Genetics and Conservation of Tropical Rain Forest Tree Species: What Have We Learned From Cecropia
obtusifolia (Moraceae)?
Arnold Grobman, (formerly of) Florida Museum of Natural History, 13 March, The
Lizards of Virgin Gorda, British Virgin Islands
Michael P. Hamilton, James San Jacinto Mountains Reserve, University of California, 3
April, Virtual Reserves and Cyberspace Ecosystems: A New Role for Biological Field
Stations in Community Based Biological Resource Planning and Management
Carlos de la Rosa, Riverwoods Field Laboratory, Lorida, Florida, 24 April, Conservation
and Sustainable Use of Streams and Rivers in Central America: Experiences, Trends, and
Prospects
Jack P. Hailman, University of Wisconsin, 15 May, Behavior of the Florida Scrub-Jay:
A Progress Report on Compiling a Modern Ethogram with Comparative Emphasis
Carl E. Bock, University of Colorado, 22 May, Factors Controlling the Structure of
Desert Grasslands: A Case Study from Southeastern Arizona
Ronald L. Myers, The Nature Conservancy, 12 June, Applying Fire Regime Concepts to
Nature Preserves: What We Have Learned from Red Hill
Arnold van der Valk, Iowa Lakeside Laboratory, Ames, 25 September, Long-term
Experimental Studies of the Vegetation Dynamics of Prairie Wetlands
Frank W. Davis, National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis, Santa Barbara,
16 October, GIS Analyses of 20th Century Wildfires in Central Coastal California
Daniel Gagnon, University of Quebec at Montreal, 20 November, Dynamics, Monitoring
and Restoration of Threatened Wild Ginseng Populations in Canada
David S. Maehr, University of Kentucky, 11 December, Comparative Ecology and
Conservation Strategies for the Bobcat, Black Bear, and Panther in South Florida
1998
Alan R. Berkowitz, Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Millbrook, N.Y., 15 January, Ecologists
and Educators: Essential Partners in Helping Others to Inquire
Randall W. Parkinson, Florida Institute of Technology, 12 February, A 100,000 Year
History of Floridas East Coast Beaches and Barrier Islands
Ian Newton, Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, United Kingdom, 25 & 26 February, Effects
of Modern Agricultural Practice on European Bird Populations & Lifetime
Reproduction in Sparrowhawks
Shijin Hu, University of California, Berkley, 3 March, Effects of Elevated CO2
on Plant-Microbial Nitrogen Partitioning: Facilitation of Ecosystem Carbon Storage
Patrick J. Bohlen, Institute of Ecosystems Studies, Millbrook, N.Y., 5 March, Nutrient
Inputs and Soil Biota as Regulators of Nutrient Retention and Loss in Corn Agroecosystems
Michel A. Cavigelli, W.K. Kellogg Biological Station, Michigan State University, 11
March, Spatial Variability and Ecosystem Consequences of Soil Microbial Community
Structure
David W. Winkler, Cornell University, 12 March, Causes and Consequences of Variation
in the Timing of Breeding in Tree Swallows
Karl V. Krombein and Beth B. Norden, National Museum of Natural History, 14 April, A
Diversity of Organisms Associated With an Ant Plant in Sri Lanka
Carol L. Lippincott, University of Florida, 16 April, Ecological Resilience,
Functional Equivalence, and Invasive Species: A Grass Example
Jared Verner, US Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research Station, Forestry Sciences
Laboratory, Fresno, 17 April, Managing for Spotted Owls: Fitting Conservation
Strategies to Existing Forest Landscapes
John M. Sivinski, Center for Medical, Agricultural & Veterinary Entomology,
Gainesville, Florida, 7 May, Phoretic Flies: Papparazzi of the Bug World, Who Wait for
Their Hosts to do Something Interesting
Jack A. Stanford, Flathead Lake Biological Station, The University of Montana, 17
September, Endangered Species, Biodiversity and Environmental Change: Conserving
Natural Resources in the Crown of the Continent Ecosystem
Russell P. Balda, Northern Arizona University, 1 October, Predicting Cognitive
Traits from Natural History Data
Michael W. Binford, University of Florida, 19 November, Human-environment
Interactions in the Bolivian Altiplano: Climate, Limnology and Tiwanaku Ecosystems
Archbold Biological Station, 10 December, Current Research at Archbold Biological
Station 1998 Fall Symposium
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