A conference of the - 150 Years of The American...

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Transcript of A conference of the - 150 Years of The American...

Page 1: A conference of the - 150 Years of The American Naturalistamnat150.org/images/ProgramASN150NoAbstracts.pdf · 2018-01-03 · invites graduate students, postdocs, faculty and other
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A conference of the

American Society of Naturalists

5-8 January 2018

Asilomar Conference Grounds Pacific Grove, California

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Copyright © 2018 American Society of Naturalists

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The American Society of Naturalists invites graduate students, postdocs, faculty and other professionals from ecology, evolution, behavior, genetics, physiology, and associated fields to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the founding of The American Naturalist at our stand alone meeting at the Asilomar Conference Grounds on 5-8 January 2018.

This meeting will celebrate the influence of The American Naturalist and demonstrate the ASN's unique ability to unify broad conceptual themes across biology by integrating theory with data and by using new technological tools to address long-standing questions. In short, this conference will showcase what it means to be a naturalist and researcher in the 21st century.

A diverse array of biologists who might not normally encounter one another at various discipline-specific meetings will gather to create a public forum where graduate students, postdocs, faculty and other professionals can define new research directions that work towards unifying the biological sciences. The meeting is not restricted to ASN members, but newcomers are encouraged to join the society. The conference will be kept small to encourage interaction and conversation in the naturally beautiful setting of the Monterey Peninsula at the Asilomar Conference Grounds.

In March, 1867, four graduate assistants in the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College published the first issue of The American Naturalist. You can read more about the history here. The introductory article in The American Naturalist described the mission of their new journal in the following terms.

If the reader, however slight his intercourse with nature may have been, shall find something in these pages to stimulate his zeal, and direct his mind to the right methods of investigation, and also teach him new facts concerning the haunts and habits of his favorites of the wood, the lake and the seashore, the great aim of this journal will be accomplished.

... Such, then, shall be the leading object of the journal—to amuse the reader, perhaps decoy him within the temple of nature; and, if he be a willing student, instruct him in some of its mysteries.

This conference of the American Society of Naturalists—itself founded 16 years later in 1883—celebrates the 150 years of rich history of The American Naturalist and hopefully in some small measure accomplishes the aspirations of the founders. The American Society of Naturalists emphasizes the value of interdisciplinary research and collaborations between diverse biologists to achieve conceptual unification across the biological sciences.

This conference will showcase what it means to be a naturalist and researcher in the 21st century. We hope you will instruct us in some the mysteries of nature that you have solved.

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Code of Conduct

The following is the Code of Conduct for meetings that was approved by the various councils of the American Society of Naturalists, the Society for the Study of Evolution, and the Society for the Study of Systematic Biology in February 2017. This Code of Conduct will apply to the participants of this meeting at the Asilomar Conference Grounds in January 2018. Participants will be expected to endorse this Code of Conduct when they register and adhere to its principles when they attend the meeting.

For this meeting, members of the Executive Committee of the ASN and others responsible for dealing with allegations of harassment will be identified with unique conference badges, so that those wishing to confidentially report an incident can do so immediately.

Code of Conduct for Evolution Meetings — approved February 2017

The Evolution Meetings are intended to foster the exchange of scientific ideas, providing participants with an opportunity to present research findings, establish/renew collaborations, recruit people to their laboratories, and learn, teach, and network with an international community of evolutionary biologists. The Society for the Study of Evolution (SSE), the American Society of Naturalists (ASN), and the Society of Systematic Biologists (SSB) are committed to creating an environment where everyone can participate without harassment, discrimination, or violence of any kind. All meeting participants must be treated with respect and consideration. Registration for the meeting is considered an agreement to abide by this code of conduct.

Harassment of any participant (attendee, speaker, volunteer, exhibitor, staff member, service provider, organizer, or meeting guest) will not be tolerated. Unacceptable behavior includes (but is not limited to) unwanted verbal attention, unwanted touching, intimidation, stalking, shaming, or bullying. Discrimination on the basis of gender or gender identity, sexual orientation, age, disability, physical appearance, race, religion, national origin, or ethnicity will not be tolerated. Harassment presented in a joking manner is still harassment and constitutes unacceptable behavior. Retaliation for reporting harassment is also unacceptable, as is reporting an incident in bad faith.

People wishing to report a violation of this code of conduct should immediately contact a member of the Joint Meeting Committee (JMC) or any member of the executive councils of SSE, ASN, or SSB. Incidents of harassment and discrimination are taken extremely seriously. Confidentiality will be maintained unless disclosure is legally required.

The meeting organizers, members of the JMC, and Society executive officers reserve the right to enforce this code of conduct in any manner deemed appropriate. Anyone violating the code of conduct may be: (a) asked to stop, (b) expelled from the meeting (without refund), and/or (c) prohibited from attending future meetings.

Establishing this code of conduct is intended to prevent incidents of harassment, discrimination, and violence, and to maintain the high quality of scientific discourse that our members have come to expect from the Evolution meetings.

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Asilomar Conference Grounds This map shows the locations of all buildings on the Asilomar Conference Grounds.

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This close up map shows the area in the vicinity of the Circle. The talk venues are five rooms in close proximity: the Chapel, Scripps, Curlew, Marlin, and Sanderling (circled in red on the map below). Crocker Dining Hall is also on the Circle opposite the Chapel. The BBQ Area & Fire Pit where the bonfires will be held is also on west edge of the Circle.

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Program Overview

Friday, 5 January 2018 3:00 PM Registration opens in the Chapel Chapel 6:00 – 7:30 PM Dinner in the Crocker Dining Hall Crocket Dining Hall

7:30 – 8:30 PM The Editors of The American Naturalist Celebrate 150 Years Chapel

8:30 PM Welcome Reception Bonfire Mixer BBQ Area & Fire Pit Saturday, 6 January 2018 7:30 – 8:30 AM Breakfast Crocket Dining Hall 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Concurrent Sessions 12:00 – 1:00 PM Lunch Crocket Dining Hall National Science Foundation Roundtable Chapel 1:00 – 5:30 PM Symposium I: Maladaptive Evolution Chapel 6:00 – 7:30 PM Dinner Crocket Dining Hall 7:30 – 8:30 PM Presidential Debate Chapel 8:30 PM Posters & Mixer Chapel Sunday, 7 January 2018 7:30 – 8:30 AM Breakfast Crocket Dining Hall 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Concurrent Sessions 12:00 – 1:00 PM Lunch Crocket Dining Hall

1:00 – 5:30 PM Symposium II:150 Years of The American Naturalist Chapel

6:00 – 7:30 PM Dinner Crocket Dining Hall

7:00 – 7:30 PM The American Naturalist Editorial Board Meeting Marlin

7:30 PM Natural History Trivia & Karaoke Talks Chapel Monday, 8 January 2018 7:30 – 8:30 AM Breakfast Crocket Dining Hall 8:30 AM - 12:00 PM Concurrent Sessions 12:00 – 1:00 PM Lunch Crocket Dining Hall

1:00 – 5:30 PM Symposium II:150 Years of The American Naturalist Chapel

6:00 – 7:30 PM Dinner Crocket Dining Hall 7:30 PM 150th Celebration Bonfire Mixer BBQ Area & Fire Pit Tuesday, 9 January 2018 7:30 – 8:30 AM Breakfast Crocket Dining Hall

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Full Schedule of Concurrent Contributed Paper Sessions, Symposia, and Activities

Abstracts are available at http://amnat150.org. They are ordered by ID.

Friday afternoon and evening, 5 January 2018 3:00 PM Registration Opens Chapel

7:30 PM The Editors of The American Naturalist Celebrate 150 Years Chapel

8:30 PM Welcome Reception Bonfire Mixer BBQ Area & Fire Pit

Saturday morning, 6 January 2018

Adaptation | Chapel Moderator: Aaron Comeault

ID Time Presenter Title C1 8:30 Jesse Czekanski-Moir Modeling adaptive and nonadaptive radiations

C2 8:50 James Peniston The role of pulsed migration events in the adaptation to harsh sink environments

C3 9:10 Matthew Schrader Adaptation to a novel family environment involves both apparent and cryptic phenotypic changes

C4 9:30 Samuel Scheiner The role of multiple traits and trait interactions in the evolution of plasticity: a simulation

C5 9:50 Stephen Proulx Experimental evolution of transgenerational plasticity in fluctuating environments

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

C6 10:40 Ryan Greenway Transcriptomic analyses of convergent evolution in sulfide spring fishes

C7 11:00 Courtney Van Den Elzen

Dispersal trait evolution correlates with microhabitat adaptation in wind-dispersed vernal pool congeners

C8 11:20 Aaron Comeault Evolution of the thermal niche in three species of Drosophila from equatorial Africa

C9 11:40 Jannice Friedman Loss of colour pigmentation is maintained at high frequency in a monkey flower population

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Macroecology & Macroevolution | Sanderling Moderator: Hannah Frank

ID Time Presenter Title

C10 8:30 Holly Kindsvater Linking individual behavior to macroevolutionary life history variation in tunas

C11 8:50 David Hembry Mutualism breakdown and ecological opportunity in leafflower-moth interactions

C12 9:10 Eliot Miller Macroevolutionary drivers of plumage convergence: quantitative tests and new insights

C13 9:30 Joseph Tobias Convergent evolution connects form to function in the world’s birds

C14 9:50 David Reznick Mode of maternal provisioning builds a bridge between microevolution and macroevolution

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

C15 10:40 Hannah Frank Signatures of ecology and biogeography on pathogen-interacting genes in bats

C16 11:00 Rui P B Diogo Evolution driven by organismal behavior: a new, unifying view of life, function, form, mismatches and trends

C17 11:20 Molly Hetherington-Rauth

Island biogeography and the evolution of floral traits

C18 11:40

Niches | Marlin Moderator: Ari Martinez

ID Time Presenter Title C19 8:30 Ari Martinez Fear-Based Niche Shifts In Neotropical Birds

C20 8:50 Luke Frishkoff Past Niche Evolution And Its Manifestations In An Anthropogenic Biosphere

C21 9:10 Kelly Carscadden Niche Breadth Measures Yield Different Estimates: Classifying And Comparing Measures From Across Ecology And Evolutionary Biology

C22 9:30 Parris Humphrey Sex Increases The Rate And Predictability Of Adaptation While Decreasing Its Pleiotropic Costs

C23 9:50 Kinsey Brock Beyond Sexual Selection: A Role For Ecological Niche Breadth In The Evolution Of Sexual Dichromatism

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel C24 10:40 Travis Ingram The dimensionality of individual niche variation

C25 11:00 Nicholas Kortessis Character displacement in a temporally varying environment: evolution of differential use of a fluctuating environment

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C26 11:20 Robert Holt Spatial scale and ecological niche concepts

C27 11:40 Kaitlyn Brown Pollinator-mediated facilitation explains asymmetric neighborhood effects in experimental plant communities

Host-Parasite Dynamics | Scripps Moderator: Jessica Hite

ID Time Presenter Title C28 8:30

C29 8:50 Patrick Clay The impact of within-host priority effects on multi-pathogen epidemics

C30 9:10 Yun Tao The Art of Outbreak Control: transient models of movement and disease management

C31 9:30 Ryosuke Iritani Horizontal transmission of parasites can favour conditional host dispersal

C32 9:50 Jessica Hite Parasite-induced anorexia: consequences for the evolution of parasite and host traits

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

C33 10:40 Amanda Hund Divergent sexual traits evolve independently with local parasites to signal relevant information to females

C34 11:00 Ben Wasserman The effect of intraspecific variation in predator defense traits on parasite infection within and across generations

C35 11:20 Emlyn Resetarits How interspecific competition influences eusociality across a guild of body-snatching trematodes

C36 11:40 Camille Wendlandt Host and symbiont contributions to nodule occupancy in the legume-rhizobium symbiosis

Mutualisms | Curlew Moderator: Jeremy Yoder

ID Time Presenter Title C37 8:30 Kane Keller Rhizobium mutualists alter competitive interactions

C38 8:50 Katherine Eisen

The effects of community context and wet-year vs. dry-year dynamics on pollinator-mediated selection in Clarkia (Onagraceae) in the southern Sierra foothills (Kern County, CA)

C39 9:10 Gordon Smith Intraspecific variation in nectar use by foraging hawkmoths

C40 9:30 Judith Bronstein The behavioral ecology of nectar-robbing: how alluring is "the temptation to cheat"?

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C41 9:50 Jeremy Yoder Sanctions, partner recognition, and variation in mutualism

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

C42 10:40 Jacob Heiling Balancing costs and benefits when a gamete is also a pollinator reward

C43 11:00 Sarah Richman Evidence for asymmetric competition between mutualists of varying quality

C44 11:20 Kenji Quides Optimizing fitness benefits in the legume-rhizobium symbiosis

C45 11:40 Emily Hudson Does early heterospecific song exposure affect species recognition in wild nestling birds?

Saturday noontime, 6 January 2018 12:00 PM National Science Foundation Roundtable Chapel NSF program officers will be on hand to present a brief overview of NSF and the Biological Sciences Directorate, and to answer your questions about your proposals and the review process. Anyone may attend. However, if you would like to have a box lunch for the discussion, please register in advance for a box lunch by e-mailing the organizer before 15 December 2018.

Saturday afternoon, 6 January 2018

Symposium: Maladaptive Evolution Organizers: Steven Brady, Andrew P. Hendry, and Andrew Gonzalez

ID Time Presenter Title 1:00 Steven Brady Welcome Remarks

S17 1:05 Andrew Hendry The ubiquity and power of adaptation

S18 1:25 Andrew Gonzalez The case for maladaptation in nature

S19 1:45 Ophélie Ronce Adaptation lags in structured populations

S20 2:05 Michael Singer Butterflies increase fitness by host-shifting to plants to which they are maladapted

S21 2:25 Kyoko Gotanda

Human influences on the (mal)adaptation of Darwin’s finches

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S23 2:45 Megan Bontrager

What causes maladaptation? A quantitative meta-analysis of reciprocal transplants

3:05 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

S24 3:35 Mark Urban Eating misfits: Prey maladaptation and its implications for predator range dynamics

S25 3:55 Sarah Fitzpatrick

Can gene flow prevent extinction of small maladapted populations?

S26 4:15 Mary Rogalski Maladaptation to metal exposure in resurrected Daphnia populations following decades of contamination

S27 4:35 Steven Brady Conservation through the lens of maladaptation S22 4:50 Daniel Bolnick The Anna Karenina Principle of (mal)adaptation 5:05 Discussion

Saturday evening, 6 January 2018 7:30 PM Presidential Debate Chapel Resolved: Evolutionary history can tell us little about the functioning of

ecological communities today.

Arguing For: Margaret Mayfield & Anthony Ives Arguing Against: Jennifer Lau & Joseph Tobias

8:30 PM Posters & Mixer | Chapel

ID Presenter Title

P1 Sarah Sanderson Phenotypic variation of native and exotic fish species along an ion gradient in the Upper St. Lawrence River

P2 Laura Vander Meiden Using network analysis to determine species’ roles in mixed-species flocks

P3 Arthur Weis Adding the temporal dimension to isolation by distance

P4 Justin Bain The effects of floral resource removal on plant-pollinator interactions: evidence for a diversity of responses

P5 Ellen Simms Do rare or introduced rhizobia escape their enemies?

P6 Carrie Barker The effects of forest type and microclimate on growth traits of dominant tree species at La Selva Biological Station, Costa Rica

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P7 Luana Maroja Reproductive and genomic isolation between inter-fertile behavioral semi-species of Drosophila athabasca complex

P8 Joseph Braasch Effective populations sizes across the range expansion of an invasive plant

P9 Christopher Klausmeier Trait-based eco-evolutionary modeling with Mathematica

P10 Marion Donald Effects of forest fragmentation and keystone species loss on nectar microbial community composition

P11 Hannah Justen Characterization of Clock gene polymorphism across Saxicola populations and migratory phenotypes

P12 Aubrie James Specialist bee pollinators phenologically matched with Clarkia blooming at the community level

P13 Gaku Takimoto Flower constancy by pollinators drives ecological speciation of flowering plants

P14 Marta Shocket Food resources as ecological and evolutionary drivers of seasonal disease in a Daphnia-fungus system

P15 David Smith Plasticity, population structure and tadpoles on a habitat gradient

P16 Joan Edwards Near-complete records of flower visitors support a neighborhood model of pollination

P17 Manuel Morales Plant-herbivore dynamics in an herbivore protection mutualism

P18 Jennifer Ison Taking genetic structure to a new dimension: Quantifying temporal and spatial pollen movement in field populations of Brassica rapa

P19 Daniel Smith Towards a mechanistic masis of the thermal plasticity of ectotherm fecundity

Sunday morning, 7 January 2018

Rapid Evolution & Environmental Effects | Chapel Moderator: Ron Bassar

ID Time Presenter Title

C46 8:30 Ron Bassar The evolution of coexistence: theoretical and empirical studies in a simple community

C47 8:50 Anne Panetta Selection in a warmer world: insights from a climate warming experiment

C48 9:10 Kiyoko Gotanda You are what you eat: urbanization erodes niche segregation in Darwin’s Finches

C49 9:30 Eben Gering Two tickets to paradise: rapid evolution of feral fowl from Kauai and Bermuda

C50 9:50 Michelle Tseng Rapid evolution of resources and consumers to temperature change

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

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C51 10:40 Susan Magnoli Rapid evolution in ecological restorations

C52 11:00 Axel Meyer Genomics of parallel adaptations and speciation in repeated species flocks of cichlid fishes

C53 11:20 Carol Boggs Temporal scale and timing of environmental variation: effects on insect life history and populations

C54 11:40 Elena Litchman Rapid evolution of thermal reaction norms in marine phytoplankton reveals constraints and trade-off

Consumer-Resource Dynamics | Sanderling Moderator: Benjamin Toscano

ID Time Presenter Title

C55 8:30 Benjamin Toscano Long-term dynamics of life-history intraguild predation

C56 8:50 Benjamin Van Allen Thrift, gluttony and death: Population responses to resource availability in a tide pool copepod

C57 9:10 André de Roos When life history matters: Somatic maintenance costs and juvenile-adult stage-structure jointly overturn ecological rules-of-thumb

C58 9:30 Shannon Beston The evolution of vertebrate eye size across an environmental gradient in Trinidadian killifish

C59 9:50 Candace Low Optimal control and cold war dynamics between plant and herbivore

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel C60 10:40 Michael McCoy Pulsed dynamics: A top down perspective

C61 11:00 Priyanga Amarasekare A mechanistic explanation of latitudinal directionality in ectotherm invasion success

C62 11:20 Grant Haines Integration of swimming kinematics and ram suspension feeding in American paddlefish

C63 11:40 Carina Baskett Traits contributing to stronger anti-herbivore defense at lower latitudes in a temperate herb

Method Development & Application | Marlin Moderator: Carl Boettiger

ID Time Presenter Title

C64 8:30 Carl Boettiger Resolving an uncertainty paradox in ecological management

C65 8:50 Kevin Gross Funding science in an era of scarce funds: Would a modified lottery help?

C66 9:10 Silas Tittes A novel Bayesian inference method to model tolerance curves

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C67 9:30 Erica Newman Revealing biases in the sampling of species interaction networks

C68 9:50 Shane DuBay Bird specimens track 135 years of atmospheric soot and environmental policy

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

C69 10:40 Jonathan Davies Reconciling phenological observations with flowering records in herbaria

C70 11:00 Kyle Coblentz The neglected numerical response of consumers

C71 11:20 Charles Goodnight The phenotypic perspective: A post-modern synthesis

C72 11:40 Donald Waller Phantom species: Can we estimate pseudo-turnover?

Behavior & Mating Systems | Scripps Moderator: Helen McCreery

ID Time Presenter Title

C73 8:30 Helen McCreery Does individual persistence promote group coordination? A comparative approach to cooperative transport in ants

C74 8:50 Ryan Germain The consequences of polyandry for sibship structures, distributions of relatedness, and potential for inbreeding in a wild population

C75 9:10 Denon Start Causes and consequences of animal personality in larval dragonflies: individuals to ecosystems

C76 9:30 Sonya Auer Nutrients from salmon parents relax selection pressures on their offspring

C77 9:50 Jeremy Van Cleve Stags, hawks, and doves: Individual variation in helping in social evolution theory

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

C78 10:40 William Fagan Intruder alert! How communication behaviors influence territory maintenance, expansion, and the persistence of local populations

C79 11:00 Michael Moore Thermoregulatory effects and the geographic diversification of sexual coloration in a North American dragonfly

C80 11:20 Heather Briggs Variation in context dependent foraging behavior across pollinators

C81 11:40 Gina Calabrese Diversity in mate preferences and signals in Spadefoot toads: causes and consequences

Environmental Change | Curlew Moderator: Susana Wadgymar

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ID Time Presenter Title

C82 8:30 Susana Wadgymar Maternal effect mitigate maladaptation to climate change

C83 8:50 Christopher Johnson How climate warming affects plant phenology and reproduction

C84 9:10 Molly Albecker Adaptation to environmental change in species with complex life cycles: The influence of stage specific selection and density dependence

C85 9:30 Volker Rudolf Linking phenological shifts to species interactions in a changing world

C86 9:50 Hilary Rollins How do climate-change induced phenological shifts alter terrestrial competition between two amphibians?

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

C87 10:40 Na Wei Functional traits and plasticity confer polyploid advantage in changing environments

C88 11:00 Johanna Schmitt Mechanisms of life history variation and climate adaptation in a native wildflower

C89 11:20 Melis Akman Species persistence under climate change: interplay between adaptation, plasticity and migration in common sugarbush (Protea repens) of South Africa

C90 11:40 Shannon Carter Linking phenological synchrony to species interactions

Sunday afternoon, 7 January 2018

Symposium: 150 Years of The American Naturalist Organizers: Daniel I. Bolnick & Judith L. Bronstein

ID Time Presenter Title S1 1:00 Joel Kingsolver Levene and polymorphism

S2 1:30 Maria Rebolleda-Gomez

A relational view of life: moving past biological individuality

S3 2:00 Lukas Keller Inbreeding: origins, tools, and tasks

S4 2:30 Arvid Ågren The origin of the gene’s-eye view of evolution

3:00 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

S5 3:30 Aleeza Gerstein Experimental evolution and test tube naturalism as key innovations to study repeatability and the genetic basis of adaptation

S6 4:00 Julia Saltz How to love and hate your neighbors: why animals seek out competitors

S7 4:30 Ambika Kamath A broader legacy of Orians 1969

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S7 5:00 Alex Jordan Whither the Naturalist, in the age of computational ethology?

Sunday evening, 7 January 2018 7:00 PM American Naturalist Editorial Board Meeting Marlin 7:30 PM Natural History Trivia Night & Karaoke Talks Chapel Think you know natural history? Come compete for the gold at Natural History Trivia Night! This will be a pub-style trivia night with teams of 4-5 people testing their knowledge! Topics will range from famous scientists to biogeography to bird calls and strange animals behaviors! We are looking for 5 teams to sign up ahead of time, and we are also soliciting trivia questions! Additionally, in between rounds of trivia, we will have karaoke talks! To sign up a trivia team, give a karaoke talk, or give a trivia question suggestion, send an email to [email protected].

Organized by the Graduate Student Council

Monday morning, 8 January 2018

Lightning Talks | Chapel Moderator: Becky Fuller

ID Time Presenter Title

L1 8:30 Holly Moeller Acquired metabolism as an evolutionary path to mixotrophy

L2 8:40 Simone Des Roches Ecological effects of variation within species

L3 8:50 Becky Fuller Using human vision to detect variation in avian coloration: How bad is it?

L4 9:00 Thomas Miller Quantifying resource niches in microbial communities

L5 9:10 Sharon Strauss Stature drought & rarity L6 9:20 Andrius Jonas Dagilis Gene interactions and the location of genes

L7 9:30 Abigail Pastore Higher order interactions regulated by drought result in selection in semi-arid annual plants

L8 9:40 Raffica La Rosa Plasticity, specialization, and species distributions across environmental gradients

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L9 9:50 Kelly Thomasson Long-term evolution of S. cerevisiae subjected to frequent dispersal by insect gut-vectoring.

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel L10 10:40 Maren Friesen Why fix nitrogen?

L11 10:50 Mauro Toshiro Caiuby Sugawara

Subspecies richness and diversity gradients: a case study with birds

L12 11:00 Lesley Kim Stages of diversification for Neotropical electric fish Apteronotidae

L13 11:10 Léa Blondel Evidence for contemporary and historical gene flow between guppies in different watersheds

L14 11:20 Lotte Skovmand Keystone genes: how can single genes have large ecological effects?

L15 11:30 Jennifer Lau Restoration in a changing world: Can genetic diversity buffer restorations from climate change?

L16 11:40 Harshad Mayekar Pupal colour plasticity in a tropical butterfly, Mycalesis mineus

Phylogenetics & Genomics | Sanderling Moderator: Kira Delmore

ID Time Presenter Title

C91 8:30 Kira Delmore Comparative genomic analysis reveals repeatability in patterns of genomic divergence across birds

C92 8:50 David Rasmussen Recoupling adaptive molecular evolution to phylogenetics using a fitness-dependent birth-death model

C93 9:10 Rachael Bay Genomic signals of selection predict climate-driven population declines in a migratory bird

C94 9:30 Kathleen Donohue Pleiotropy across the life cycle: environmental regulation of germination and flowering

C95 9:50 Elizabeth Scordato A continent-spanning migratory divide reduces interbreeding across multiple barn swallow contact zones

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

C96 10:40 Lawrence Uricchio Modulation of adaptation rate by background selection in the human genome

C97 11:00 Nathan Muchhala Genomic signature of asymmetric pollen transfer among Burmeistera

C98 11:20 Orlando Schwery Unveiling the factors behind the diversification of dung beetles (Scarabaeinae)

C99 11:40 Rachel Steward Genomic signatures of divergent host plant use in the context of an evolutionary trap

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Demography & Dispersal | Marlin Moderator: Charlotte Lee

ID Time Presenter Title

C100 8:30 Charlotte Lee Elasticity of population growth with respect to the intensity of biotic or abiotic driving factors

C101 8:50 Gideon Bradburd Isolation by distance as a null hypothesis of population structure

C102 9:10 Elizabeth A. McHuron Blue whales in variable and disturbed environments: working in Pasteur's quadrant

C103 9:30 Mario Pesendorfer Declining seed production before death in a long-lived tree: senescence, not terminal investment?

C104 9:50 Bo Zhang Carrying capacity in a heterogeneous environment with habitat connectivity

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

C105 10:40 Allison Shaw The evolution of marine larval dispersal kernels in spatially structured habitats

C106 11:00 Adrian Stier Environment, harvest, and the erosion of a population portfolio

C107 11:20 Joseph Travis Thinking realistically about density dependence

C108 11:40 Katrina Catalano Annually variable connectivity in yellowtail clownfish

Community Patterns & Coexistence | Scripps Moderator: Chad Brassil

ID Time Presenter Title

C109 8:30 Jeremy Draghi Red Queen dynamics oppose host-range generalists in an eco-evolutionary model of parasites and hosts

C110 8:50 Trevor Price Drivers of tree species richness patterns across the east Himalayan elevational gradient

C111 9:10 Alexander White Himalayan bird communities reveal the integration of tropical, temperate and arid biomes

C112 9:30 Chad Brassil Ecological communities in pursuit of an elusive equilibrium

C113 9:50 Malyon Bimler Assessing how microclimate impacts coexistence dynamics: a case study of Western Australian annual plants

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

C114 10:40 Elizabeth Miller Extinction and time help drive the marine-terrestrial biodiversity gradient: Is the ocean a deathtrap?

C115 11:00 Margaret Mayfield Climate effects on coexistence outcomes

C116 11:20 Rachel Germain The spatial scaling of plant diversity and its ecological correlates: experimental evidence from a global biodiversity hotspot

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C117 11:40 Christopher Klausmeier

Trait-based perspectives on species coexistence in variable environments

Social Networks & Invasion Ecology | Curlew Moderator: Samuel Scarpino

ID Time Presenter Title C118 8:30 Samuel Scarpino On the predictability of infectious disease outbreaks

C119 8:50 Theadora Block Familiarity breeds contempt for badge plumage experiments in sparrows

C120 9:10 Erol Akçay Evolution of cooperation on dynamic social networks

C121 9:30 Daizaburo Shizuka Demographic processes and social network dynamics in animal populations

C122 9:50 Casey terHorst Evolution to overcome biotic resistance to invasion is limited by multiple species interactions

10:10 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

C123 10:40 Megan Sabal Trade-offs between migration speed and predator evasion with hatchery and wild salmon

C124 11:00 Matthew Walsh Rapid evolution mitigates the ecological consequences of an invasive species (Bythotrephes longimanus) in lakes in Wisconsin

C125 11:20 Po-Ju Ke The effect of soil cultivation length on plant-soil microbe interaction

C126 11:40 Sahas Barve Big larders but skinny helpers: territory quality and density dependence in a highly social bird

Monday afternoon, 8 January 2018

Symposium: 150 Years of The American Naturalist Organizers: Daniel I. Bolnick & Judith L. Bronstein

Time Presenter Title

S9 1:00 Marjorie Weber Macroevolution of plant defense: a letter from the future to a pioneering woman in science.

S10 1:30 Allison Barner The missing theory of species co-occurrence in ecology

S11 2:00 Tadashi Fukami John Sutherland’s legacy and the current effort to embrace historical contingency in ecological and evolutionary community assembly

S12 2:30 Ophélie Ronce Metapopulation Genetics and the evolution of dispersal: an homage to slow science and to a unique scientific character, Isabelle Olivieri

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3:00 Coffee Break - Refreshments in Chapel

S13 3:30 Yoel Stuart Parallel evolution through 150 years of The American Naturalist

S14 4:00 Stephen de Lisle Ecological character displacement: from between to within species

S15 4:30 Erik Svensson Evolution along latitudinal gradients: homage to Kirkpatrick and Barton

S16 5:00 Mathew Nielsen Misinformation in a new climate: the role of reliable information in the evolution of phenotypic plasticity

Monday evening, 8 January 2018

7:30 PM 150th Celebration Bonfire Mixer BBQ Area & Fire Pit

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Symposium I: Maladaptive Evolution Saturday, 6 January 2018, 1:00-5:30 PM Organizers: Steven Brady, Andrew Hendry, Andrew Gonzalez Throughout the history of evolutionary biology, scientists have marveled at adaptation and trained their sights on the ways that natural selection shapes the evolution of fitness advantages. Indeed, the terms adaptation and evolution have become nearly synonymous. By contrast, the processes and occurrences of maladaptation (the evolution of relative and absolute fitness declines) have received less attention. This relative lack of inquiry into maladaptation is surprising when we consider that the overwhelming majority of species that have ever existed are now extinct, making clear the inescapable and pervasive nature of maladaptation. Indeed, literature reviews indicate that even in contexts where local adaptation is expected, maladaptation is present in about 1/3 of the cases. Maladaptation, it seems, is as much a product of evolutionary dynamics as is adaptation. Despite the apparent prevalence of maladaptive evolution, we understand very little about its dynamics and distribution. For example, each year the number of papers concerning adaptive evolution exceeds that of maladaptive evolution by an order of magnitude. Importantly, the few studies formally emphasizing and studying maladaptation have received only modest attention, perhaps because their fragmented and scattered appearance in the literature makes them seem like exceptions to the general rule of strong adaptation. We hope that this symposium will pave the way to a more balanced study of evolution by catalyzing the development of insights into the phenomenon of maladaptation. By showing that maladaptation is actually common and potentially increasing—and by providing a clear approach for studying and communicating maladaptation—we hope to foster the development of a more balanced study of evolution, one that accurately characterizes both adaptive and maladaptive fitness dynamics.

Symposium II: 150 Years of The American Naturalist Sunday, 7 January 2018, 1:00-5:30 PM & Monday, 8 January 2018, 1:00-5:30 PM Organizers: Daniel I. Bolnick, Judith L. Bronstein The American Naturalist is the oldest scientific journal published in North America. Over its 150-year history, the journal has had a huge impact on how we understand the natural world. To celebrate the journal’s past impact, and chart its current course and future, we will hold a symposium at the Asilomar meeting, on the afternoons of January 7 and 8. Rather than organizing the symposium around a single theme, we will showcase some of the breadth of ideas published in the journal. Each talk will highlight one or more influential past papers published in The American Naturalist. The talks will trace the history of how the classic paper(s) have affected the field in general, the speaker’s own work, and the future of the field. We solicited applications for the talks, placing particular weight on attracting proposals by junior researchers. Applications were reviewed by a committee.

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Awards Graduate Student Travel Grant—To facilitate graduate students attending the conference, ASN will award a small number of travel grants to randomly selected graduate students. When registering, current graduate students may choose to be considered for a travel grant.

In addition to the regular annual ASN awards to be presented at the summer meeting, three awards will be presented at the Asilomar conference: Ed Ricketts Award will be given for the outstanding student oral presentation. In honor of the naturalist and zoologist Ed Ricketts (the model for ‘Doc’ in John Steinbeck’s book Cannery Row), the ASN will present the winning student with a plaque and $400 award. When registering a talk, current undergraduate, masters, or PhD students may choose to be considered for this award.

Ruth Patrick Student Poster Award will be given for the outstanding student poster. The winning presenter will receive a plaque and $400 award. When registering a poster, current undergraduate, masters, or PhD students may choose to be considered for this award. This award honors Ruth Patrick, a prominent botanist and limnologist who won the 1996 National Medal of Science.

Don Abbott Postdoctoral Research Award will be given for the outstanding contributed presentation (talk or poster) by a current postdoc. The award commemorates Don Abbott, a professor at Stanford University and Hopkins Marine Station, an outstanding teacher and marine invertebrate researcher. The winning presenter will receive a plaque and a $400 award. When registering a talk, current postdoctoral researchers may choose to be considered for this award.

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Participants List

Name Email Institution Talk ID Arvid Ågren [email protected] Cornell University S4 Erol Akçay [email protected] University of Pennsylvania C120

Melis Akman [email protected] University of California- Berkeley C89

Molly Albecker [email protected] East Carolina University C84

Suzanne Alonzo [email protected] University of California Santa Cruz

Priyanga Amarasekare [email protected] University of California

Los Angeles C61

Amy Angert [email protected] University of British Columbia

Sonya Auer [email protected] University of Glasgow C76

Justin Bain [email protected] Northwestern University & Chicago Botanic Garden

P4

Carrie Barker [email protected] Louisiana State University P6

Allison Barner [email protected] University of California, Berkeley S10

Sahas Barve [email protected] Old Dominion University C126 Carina Baskett [email protected] Michigan State University C63 Ron Bassar [email protected] Williams College C46

Rachael Bay [email protected] University of California Davis C93

Craig Benkman [email protected] University of Wyoming

Shannon Beston [email protected] University of Texas at Arlington C58

Malyon Bimler [email protected] University of Queensland C113

Theadora Block [email protected] University of California Santa Cruz C119

Léa Blondel [email protected] McGill University L13

Carl Boettiger [email protected] University of California Berkeley C64

Carol Boggs [email protected] University of South Carolina C53

Daniel Bolnick [email protected] University of Texas at Austin S

Joseph Braasch [email protected] University of Arizona P8 Gideon Bradburd [email protected] Michigan State University C101

Steven Brady [email protected] Southern Connecticut State University S

Chad Brassil [email protected] University of Nebraska C112

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Heather Briggs [email protected] Harvard University C80

Kinsey Brock [email protected] University of California Merced C23

Judith Bronstein [email protected] University of Arizona C40 Kaitlyn Brown [email protected] University of Toronto C27

Gina Calabrese [email protected] University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill C81

Kelly Carscadden [email protected] University of Colorado Boulder C21

Shannon Carter [email protected] Rice University C90 Katrina Catalano [email protected] Rutgers University C108 Patrick Clay [email protected] Rice University C29

Kyle Coblentz [email protected] Oregon State University C70

Aaron Comeault [email protected] University of North Carolina C8

Jesse Czekanski-Moir [email protected] SUNY-ESF C1

Andrius Jonas Dagilis [email protected] University of Texas at

Austin L6

Jonathan Davies [email protected] McGill University C69 Stephen de Lisle [email protected] Lund University S14

André de Roos [email protected] Universiteit van Amsterdam C57

Kira Delmore [email protected] Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology C91

Simone Des Roches [email protected] University of California Santa Cruz L2

Rui P B Diogo [email protected] Howard University C16 Marion Donald [email protected] Rice University P10 Kathleen Donohue [email protected] Duke University C94 Jeremy Draghi [email protected] Brooklyn College CUNY C109 Shane DuBay [email protected] University of Chicago C68

Danielle Edwards [email protected] University of California, Merced

Joan Edwards [email protected] Williams College P16 Katherine Eisen [email protected] Cornell University C38

Nancy Emery [email protected] University of Colorado Boulder

William Fagan [email protected] University of Maryland C78

Sarah Fitzpatrick [email protected] KBS, Michigan State University S

James Fowler [email protected] USFS Rocky Mt. Res. Station

Hannah Frank [email protected] Stanford University C15

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Jannice Friedman [email protected] Syracuse University C9

Maren Friesen [email protected] Washington State University L10

Luke Frishkoff [email protected] University of Toronto C20 Tadashi Fukami [email protected] Stanford University S11 Becky Fuller [email protected] University of Illinois L3 Eben Gering [email protected] Michigan State University C49

Rachel Germain [email protected] University of British Columbia C116

Ryan Germain [email protected] Cornell University C74 Aleeza Gerstein [email protected] University of Minnesota S5

George Gilchrist [email protected] National Science Foundation

Andrew Gonzalez [email protected] McGill University Charles Goodnight [email protected] University of Vermont C71

Kiyoko Gotanda [email protected] University of Cambridge C48 & S21

Ryan Greenway [email protected] Kansas State University C6 Kevin Gross [email protected] North Carolina State Univ. C65 Grant Haines [email protected] McGill University C62

Jacob Heiling [email protected] North Carolina State University C42

David Hembry [email protected] University of Arizona C11 Andrew Hendry [email protected] McGill Univeristy S Molly Hetherington-Rauth

[email protected]

University of Toronto Mississauga C17

Jessica Hite [email protected] University of Nebraska, Linocln C32

Robert Holt [email protected] University of Florida C26 Joanna Hubbard [email protected] Truman State University

Emily Hudson [email protected] University of Nebraska-Lincoln C45

Parris Humphrey [email protected] Harvard University C22

Amanda Hund [email protected] University of Colorado at Boulder C33

Travis Ingram [email protected] University of Otago C24

Ryosuke Iritani [email protected] University of California, Berkeley C31

Darren Irwin [email protected] University of British Columbia

Jennifer Ison [email protected] College of Wooster P18

Anthony Ives [email protected] University of Wisconsin, Madison

Aubrie James [email protected] Cornell University P12

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Christopher Johnson [email protected] ETH Zurich C83

Alex Jordan [email protected] Max Planck Department of Collective Behaviour S8

Hannah Justen [email protected] Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology P11

Ambika Kamath [email protected] Harvard University S7 Po-Ju Ke [email protected] Stanford University C125

Kane Keller [email protected] California State University, Bakersfield C37

Lukas Keller [email protected] University of Zurich S3

Lesley Kim [email protected] University of Louisiana at Lafayette L12

Holly Kindsvater [email protected] Rutgers University C10

Joel Kingsolver [email protected] University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill S1

Christopher Klausmeier [email protected] Michigan State University P9 &

C117 Thomas Koffel [email protected] Michigan State University Nicholas Kortessis [email protected] University of Arizona C25

Hiroko Kurokawa [email protected] Forestry and Forest Product Research Institute

Raffica La Rosa [email protected] University of Colorado Boulder L8

Jennifer Lau [email protected] Michigan State University L15 Charlotte Lee [email protected] Duke University C100 Elena Litchman [email protected] Michigan State University C54 Jonathan Losos [email protected] Harvard University

Candace Low [email protected] San Francisco State University C59

Bruce Lyon [email protected] University of California, Santa Cruz

Susan Magnoli [email protected] Kellogg Biological Station, Michigan State University

C51

Marc Mangel [email protected] University of California Santa Cruz C102

Luana Maroja [email protected] Williams College P7

Ari Martinez [email protected] University of California, Berkeley C19

Harshad Mayekar [email protected] IISER Thiruvananthapuram L16

Margaret Mayfield [email protected] The University of Queensland C115

Michael McCoy [email protected] East Carolina University C60 Helen McCreery [email protected] Michigan State University C73

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Elizabeth McHuron [email protected] University of California, Santa Cruz

Gail McPeek [email protected] Dartmouth College Mark McPeek [email protected] Dartmouth College Sarah McPeek [email protected] Kenyon College Axel Meyer [email protected] University of Konstanz C52 Elizabeth Miller [email protected] University of Arizona C114

Eliot Miller [email protected] Cornell Lab of Ornithology C12

Thomas Miller [email protected] Florida State University L4

Holly Moeller [email protected] University of California Santa Barbara L1

Michael Moore [email protected] Case Western Reserve University C79

Manuel Morales [email protected] Williams College P17

Trish Morse [email protected] University of Chicago Press

Nathan Muchhala [email protected] University of Missouri - St. Louis C97

Erica Newman [email protected] University of Arizona C67

Mathew Nielsen [email protected] University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill S16

Anne Panetta [email protected] University of Colorado, Boulder C47

Abigail Pastore [email protected] University of Queensland L7 James Peniston [email protected] University of Florida C2

Mario Pesendorfer [email protected] Cornell Lab of Ornithology C103

Amanda Preece [email protected] California State University, Monterey Bay

Trevor Price [email protected] University of Chicago C110

Stephen Proulx [email protected] University of California Santa Barbara C5

Kenji Quides [email protected] University of California, Riverside C44

Daniel Rabosky [email protected] University of Michigan

David Rasmussen [email protected] ETH Zürich C92 Maria Rebolleda-Gomez [email protected] University of Pittsburgh S2

Emlyn Resetarits [email protected] University of Texas at Austin C35

William Resetarits [email protected] University of Mississippi

David Reznick [email protected] University of California, Riverside C14

Sarah Richman [email protected] University of Arizona C43

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Robert Ricklefs [email protected] University of Missouri-St. Louis

Mary Rogalski [email protected] University of Michigan S

Hilary Rollins [email protected] Case Western Reserve University C86

Ophélie Ronce [email protected] CNRS S12 & S19

Locke Rowe [email protected] University of Toronto

Volker Rudolf [email protected] Rice University C85

Megan Sabal [email protected] University of California Santa Cruz C123

Julia Saltz [email protected] Rice University S6 Sarah Sanderson [email protected] McGill University P1 Samuel Scarpino [email protected] Northeastern University C118

Samuel Scheiner [email protected] U.S. National Science Foundation C4

Johanna Schmitt [email protected] University of California Davis C88

Matthew Schrader [email protected] The University of the South C3

Orlando Schwery [email protected] University of Tennessee, Knoxville C98

Elizabeth Scordato [email protected] California State Polytechnic University, Pomona

C95

Allison Shaw [email protected] University of Minnesota C105 Ben Sheldon [email protected] University of Oxford

Daizaburo Shizuka [email protected] University of Nebraska-Lincoln C121

Marta Shocket [email protected] Stanford University P14

Ellen Simms [email protected] University of California Berkeley P5

Michael C. Singer [email protected] Plymouth University S20 Lotte Skovmand [email protected] McGill University L14 Daniel Smith [email protected] University of Chicago P19 David Smith [email protected] Williams College P15 Gordon Smith [email protected] University of Arizona C39 Denon Start [email protected] University of Toronto C75

Rachel Steward [email protected] University of South Carolina C99

Adrian Stier [email protected] University of California Santa Barbara C106

Sharon Strauss [email protected] University of California Davis L5

Yoel Stuart [email protected] University of Texas, Austin S13

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Erik Svensson [email protected] Lund University S15 Gaku Takimoto [email protected] The University of Tokyo P13

Yun Tao [email protected] University of California Riverside C30

Casey terHorst [email protected] California State University, Northridge C122

Kelly Thomasson [email protected] University of California, Santa Barbara L9

John Thompson [email protected] University of California, Santa Cru

Silas Tittes [email protected] University of Colorado at Boulder C66

Joseph Tobias [email protected] Imperial College London C13 Benjamin Toscano [email protected] Rice University C55 Mauro Toshiro Caiuby Sugawara [email protected] University of British

Columbia L11

Joseph Travis [email protected] Florida State University C107

Michelle Tseng [email protected] University of British Columbia C50

Mark Urban [email protected] University of Connecticut S Lawrence Uricchio [email protected] Stanford University C96

Benjamin Van Allen [email protected] University of California San Diego C56

Jeremy Van Cleve [email protected] University of Kentucky C77 Courtney Van Den Elzen [email protected] University of Colorado

Boulder C7

Laura Vander Meiden [email protected] University of Nebraska,

Lincoln P2

Sacha Vignieri [email protected] Science/AAAS Susana Wadgymar [email protected] University of Georgia C82

Donald Waller [email protected] University of Wisconsin - Madison C72

Matthew Walsh [email protected] University of Texas at Arlington C124

Paul Wason [email protected] John Templeton Foundation

Ben Wasserman [email protected] University of California-Santa Cruz C34

Marjorie Weber [email protected] Michigan State University S9 Na Wei [email protected] University of Pittsburgh C87 Arthur Weis [email protected] University of Toronto P3

Camille Wendlandt [email protected] University of California, Riverside C36

Alexander White [email protected] University of Chicago C111

Michael Whitlock [email protected] University of British Columbia

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Alice Winn [email protected] Florida State University

Jeremy Yoder [email protected] California State University Northridge C41

Bo Zhang [email protected] University of Miami C104 Sara Zlotnik [email protected] Purdue University