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PARENT SESSIONContributed Oral Session 150: Evolutionary Ecology: Landscapes and Habitat Friday, August 12, 8:00 AM - 11:30 AM, Meeting Room 513 A, Level 5, Palais des congrès de Montréal 8:00 AM: pichancourt, jean-baptiste*,1, Burel, Françoise1, Auger, Pierre2, 1 UMR CNRS Université de Rennes 1, Rennes, France2 IRD, Bondy, France, Landscape fragmentation, habitat boundaries and the population dynamics of a corridor forest insect (Abax parallelepipedus): Hierarchical modelling approach and megamatrix analysis. 8:20 AM: Pillai, Pradeep*,1, Guichard, Frédéric 1, 1 McGill University, Montreal, Québec, Canada, Mechanisms of species extinction in dynamic landscapes. 8:40 AM: Higgins, Kevin1, 1 University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA, Extinction in fragmented habitat. 9:00 AM: Strobbe, Francis *,1, Stoks, Robby1, McPeek, Mark A.2, 1 Laboratory of Aquatic Ecology, B-3000 LEUVEN, Vlaams-Brabant, BELGIUM2 Department of Biological Sciences, Lebanon, New Hampshire, USA, The selection gradient before and after a habitat shift. 9:20 AM: Gerrish, Gretchen*,1, 1 Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, Using small scale patchiness to predict large scale habitat patterns in marine grassbeds. 9:40 AM: , BREAK. 9:50 AM: O'Dea, Niall*,1, Araújo, Miguel1, Whittaker, Robert1, 1 Biodiversity Research Group, Oxford, UK, Conserving at-risk birds in the tropical Andes: comparing approaches to representing species and minimising conservation conflicts. 10:10 AM: Barrett, Rowan*,1, Bell, Graham1, 1 McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, Experimental evolution of ecological diversification in complex environments. 10:30 AM: Lee, Charlotte*,1, Tuljapurkar, Shripad1, 1 Stanford University, Stanford, CA, Climate fluctuations, risk, and population growth in preindustrial dryland agriculture: Consequences of spatial and temporal heterogeneity. 10:50 AM: Schrott, Gregory*,1, With, Kimberly 2, King, Anthony3, 1 Western State College of Colorado, Gunnison, CO, USA2 Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, USA3 Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA, Microevolutionary rates of brood parasite host defense behavior can affect extinction risk in dynamic landscapes. |
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