COS 20 - Distributions And Range Limits

Tuesday, August 13, 2019: 8:00 AM-11:30 AM
L011/012, Kentucky International Convention Center
Presider:
Caitlin Mandeville
8:00 AM
Widespread regional bias in ecological and evolutionary studies
Zachary W. Culumber, University of Alabama in Huntsville, Florida State University; Jaime M. Anaya-Rojas, Florida State University; William W. Booker, Florida State University; Alexandra Hooks, Florida State University; Elizabeth Lange, Florida State University; Benjamin Pluer, Florida State University; Natali Ramirez-Bullon, Florida State University; Joseph Travis, Florida State University
8:20 AM
Eco-evolutionary dynamics of a range-expanding biocontrol agent: Evolution of dispersal, fecundity, and diapause timing at the expanding edge
Eliza Clark, Colorado State University; Ellyn V. Bitume, US Forest Service; Dan Bean, Colorado Department of Agriculture; Amanda Stahlke, University of Idaho; Paul Hohenlohe, University of Idaho; Ruth A. Hufbauer, Colorado State University
8:40 AM
An ensemble modeling framework to better predict distribution of at-risk species in the southeastern U.S
Carlos Ramirez-Reyes, Mississippi State University; Mona Nazeri, Mississippi State University; D. Todd Jones-Farrand, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Garrett M. Street, Mississippi State University; Kristine O. Evans, Mississippi State University
9:00 AM
Restoration of heterogeneity in climate velocity as a conservation strategy under climate change
Gregory Backus, University of California, Davis; Marissa L. Baskett, University of California, Davis
9:20 AM
How evolution modifies the variability of range expansion
Jennifer Williams, University of British Columbia; Ruth A. Hufbauer, Colorado State University; Thomas Miller, Rice University
9:40 AM
9:50 AM
Demographic range modeling reveals that climate and competition are insufficient to explain a species distribution
Emily L. Schultz, University of Arizona; Lisa Hülsmann, University of Regensburg; Michiel D. Pillet, University of Arizona; David D. Breshears, University of Arizona; Pieter A. Zuidema, Wageningen University & Research; Florian Hartig, University of Regensburg; R. Justin DeRose, Rocky Mountain Research Station; John D. Shaw, USDA Forest Service; Margaret E. K. Evans, University of Arizona
10:10 AM
Climate warming and microclimate feedbacks drive the expansion of woody species Morella cerifera L. into grasslands in temperate barrier islands
Heng Huang, University of California at Berkeley; Julie Zinnert, Virginia Commonwealth University; Lauren K Wood, Virginia Commonwealth University; Donald Young, Virginia Commonwealth University; Paolo D'Odorico, University of California at Berkeley
10:30 AM
Evolution during invasion of favorable habitat changes plant population performance under stressful conditions
Nicky Lustenhouwer, ETH Zurich, University of California; Jennifer Williams, University of British Columbia; Jonathan M. Levine, Princeton University
10:50 AM
Adaptation and acclimation of foliar vasculature, photosynthesis, and transpiration among herbaceous species
William W. Adams III, University of Colorado; Jared J. Stewart, University of Colorado; Barbara Demmig-Adams, University of Colorado
11:10 AM Cancelled
COS 20-10
Transgressive physiological traits explain broad-scale niche novelty in an allopolyploid fern complex (widthdrawn)
Christopher Krieg, University of Florida; Katherine A. McCulloh, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Robert P. Guralnick, Florida Museum of Natural History; Emily B. Sessa, University of Florida
See more of: Contributed Talks