Latest Events

Topic: 
Sampling, Statisticians, and the Growth of Ecological Knowledge
Speaker: 
Dr. James D. Nichols, USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center
Date & Time: 
10 Oct 2014 - 4:00pm
Event Type: 
Talk
Venue: 
MALGOVA (Southern Laboratories Complex), NCBS
Coffee/Tea: 
After the talk
Abstract:

In this talk, I will focus on how growth rate of ecological knowledge has been limited by statistical issues that we did not deal with well, at least initially. But of course there are recommendations for how we can do better, and, I share some of these ideas with students and practitioners as they embark on answering new questions and/or meeting new challenges.

Speaker Bio: 
Dr. James D.Nichols is a Senior Scientist at the U. S. Geological Survey’s Patuxent Wildlife Research Center. He received his Bachelors degree in biology from Wake Forest University, a Masters degree in Wildlife Management from Louisiana State University and a PhD in Wildlife Ecology from Michigan State University. Nichols’ broad interests involve the dynamics and management of ecological populations and communities. Much of his research focuses on methods for obtaining inferences about ecological populations and communities. He is also interested in the application of decision-theoretic ideas to ecological management and conservation. He has worked closely with WCS on analytic methods for obtaining inferences at multiple spatial scales about tiger and prey populations in India with Dr. K. Ullas Karanth.
Topic: 
Understanding patterns of bird species distribution in the Western Ghats
Speaker: 
Sneha Vijayakumar, Dr. Kartik Shanker's Lab, CES, IISc Bangalore
Date & Time: 
7 Oct 2014 - 10:30am
Event Type: 
Thesis Colloquium
Venue: 
CES Seminar Hall, 3rd Floor, Biological Sciences Building
Coffee/Tea: 
High tea, after the talk
Abstract:

Understanding species distribution and richness can contribute significantly to our knowledge of community assembly and macroecological patterns, as well as to the effective conservation of threatened species and habitats. Although there have been a plethora of studies on birds in India over the years, there is a critical need to accurately delineate species distributions and understand patterns of richness. The focus of this study was to understand the factors that influence the distribution of bird species in the Western Ghats, as well as to explore patterns in their geographic range sizes. These questions were addressed at the scale of the entire Western Ghats using a combination of primary field data comprising 78 one km transects across habitat types and a published secondary dataset comprising 57 transects. Random forest analysis and species distribution modeling were used to examine the influence of environmental factors, and the relationship of floristics and vegetation structure on bird species distribution were explored using Mantel’s tests. Species distribution models also produced fine scale maps which were used to investigate patterns in range sizes in terms of species-specific traits and compared with currently available information on range. The specific approaches used to address these questions and the findings will be presented at the colloquium.

Topic: 
Elusive traces: Baobabs and the African diaspora in South Asia
Speaker: 
Haripriya Rangan, Centre for Geography and Environmental Science, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia
Date & Time: 
23 Sep 2014 - 3:45pm
Event Type: 
Talk
Venue: 
ATREE auditorium, ATREE, Jakkur
Coffee/Tea: 
Before the talk
Abstract:

The history of botanical exchanges between Africa and the Indian
subcontinent reaches back in time over 5000 years. Recent advances in
archaeobotany have revealed these connections through evidence of food
crops of African origin found at various archaeological sites in the
subcontinent. However, little is known about the people that brought the
crops to these places and other parts of the Indian Ocean world. This is
also the case with other plants from Africa such as the charismatic
baobab tree (Adansonia digitata L.) that appears to have had a
longstanding presence in South Asia. Most scholarly accounts assume that
'Arab traders' were responsible for introducing baobabs to this region
but do not offer any reasons for their doing so. Few scholars, if any,
have sought to relate the dispersal of baobabs with the history of
African migrations to the region. This presentation reveals the elusive
traces of their entwined environmental histories by linking baobab
genetics with historical accounts and cultural evidence of the presence
of African diasporic communities in South Asia.

Speaker Bio: 
Haripriya Rangan is Associate Professor of Geography at Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. Her research has focused on the political ecology and environmental history of forestry in the Indian Himalayas; the traditional medicinal plant trade in southern Africa; the environmental histories of plant transfers around the Indian Ocean (in collaboration with Christian Kull (Monash) Karen Bell (Monash and Emory University) and Daniel Murphy (Royal Botanic Gardens); and the perceptions of unwanted plants among indigenous communities around the Indian Ocean (in collaboration with Christian Kull, Charlie Shackleton (Rhodes University), Nitin Rai (ATREE), and the Mirima Language and Culture Centre (Kimberley)).

Pages