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EEB Thursday Seminar Series - Trait data resources for mammalogy and conservation in the temperate zone

Bryan McLean, UNC-Greensboro
Thursday, September 19, 2024
3:00-4:00 PM
1010 Biological Sciences Building Map
This event is part of our ongoing Thursday Seminar Series.

About the seminar: Successful biodiversity monitoring relies on understanding how organisms apportion energy towards growth, maintenance, and reproduction. Phenotypic proxies can be useful for inferring these processes, but open and freely available trait data remain sparse for most clades, including mammals. This talk will discuss research on energetically expensive traits that are also seasonally plastic in some mammals, including body size, brain size, and gastrointestinal size and form. I will discuss my lab’s work to leverage these exciting proxies for energetic insights in small mammals in the Southern Appalachian Mountains. I will also discuss the global landscape of available phenotypic trait data for mammals, and highlight new collaborative efforts to digitize specimen-level traits by a consortium of North American mammal collections. Assembling both standard and non-standard traits from specimens holds amazing promise for advancing mammalogy, monitoring mammal populations globally, and introducing a new generation of STEM students to ecological and evolutionary concepts using digital specimen data.
Building: Biological Sciences Building
Website:
Event Type: Lecture / Discussion
Tags: Biology, department of ecology and evolutionary biology, Discussion, Ecology & Biology, Ecology And Evolutionary Biology, eeb, evolutionary biology, Free, Museum - Herbarium, Museum - Zoology, Museum Of Zoology, Talk, zoology
Source: Happening @ Michigan from Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, EEB Thursday Seminars