lab group field trip, with 600 lbs of party favors to take home…
Expanding Your Horizons outreach
Graduate students Petra Deane-Coe, Stepfanie Aguillon, and Natalie Hofmeister led a workshop in ornithology and evolution for 9th-grade girls from across New York as part of Cornell’s Expanding Your Horizons (EYH) Conference this past Saturday. Stepfanie managed a hands-on bird-banding demonstration while lab members Jen Walsh, Dave Toews, and Sahas Barve…
Sapayoas are cool
Sapayoas are cool: a group of Cornell students including current senior Ben Van Doren and junior Sarah Djelski are getting some nice attention for their paper on the biology of the enigmatic Sapayoa, a little-known bird of Panama and northern South America that turns out to be the only representative…
Congrats to two lab group alumni
New paper on goose phylogeography and conservation
New paper on goose phylogeography and conservation: In this paper, visiting researcher Cecilia Kopuchian (Centro de Ecología Aplicada del Litoral, Argentina) and Leo Campagna from our lab use genomic data to explore the history of colonization of the Malvinas/Falkland Islands by the Upland Goose (Chloephaga picta) and the Ruddy-headed Goose…
Welcome back Milene
Grants to Grads
Grants to Grads: congratulations to graduate student Natalie Hoffmeister for a substantial travel award from the Einaudi Center for International Studies for her forthcoming pilot study of local adaptation in Argentinian seabirds, and similar congratulations to graduate student Stepfanie Aguillon for a substantial Peacock Award from the Garden Society of…
New paper on sparrow hybridization by postdoc Jen Walsh
New paper on sparrow hybridization by postdoc Jen Walsh: Jen just published a neat paper from her PhD work at UNH; study looks at the genetic interplay between hybridizing Saltmarsh and Nelson’s Sparrows and finds evidence for neutral diffusion of some regions; strong selection and local adaptation in other genomic…
Cornell article on our Patagonia field course
Shawn Billerman to return to Cornell as a postdoc!
Dustin has tenure!
Congratulations to Dustin Rubenstein, who was just awarded tenure at Columbia University! Dustin is one our our group’s longest-term colleagues and alumni, dating to his PhD years here at Cornell when we worked together on starling evolution, the Kenya field course, and much more. Here is a throw-back photo of…
Galapagos Curriculum 2016
Art, Science, and Writing in and about the Galapagos: we just returned from the field component of our three-class curriculum for freshmen that uses the Galapagos Islands as a linked framework for training in writing, evolutionary biology, and artistic expression. My thanks to the course leaders — Liz, Nick, Scott,…
A preview of a book to come…
NSF smiles upon us
NSF smiles upon us. In this era of 4% funding rates, we are particularly appreciative of having been awarded a significant grant from the National Science Foundation for a new study entitled “Quantifying genomic porosity in non-model radiations.” In addition to Irby and Leo Campagna (Leo was a prime mover…
Welcome to new postdoc Jennifer Walsh!
Welcome to Dr. Jennifer Walsh, a new postdoc based in our program at the Lab of Ornithology. Jen’s work on the genomics of hybridization, adaptation, and divergence in Nelson’s and Saltmarsh Sparrows is supported by a two-year NSF Fellowship she received to explore the evolutionary biology and conservation genomics of…
John Sullivan discovers and describes a new genus
Dispatch in Current Biology by Leo Campagna
Dispatch in Current Biology by Leo Campagna: A review of the work by Tuttle et al. (2016) Current Biology on the origin and possible fate of a fascinating supergene that determines the coloration and mating behavior of a widespread North American bird. Accompanying artwork is by Liz Fuller, a Bartels…
Nick Mason lands NSF DDIG grant!
Nick Mason lands NSF DDIG grant! Congratulations to Nick for being awarded $20K of research funding from the National Science Foundation in support of his dissertation project. Nick’s new grant is titled Integrative species delimitation, cryptic coloration, and climatic niche breadth in a widespread, recent radiation of songbirds.
David Toews awarded a Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship!
Current postdoc David Toews just got the fantastic news that he has been awarded a two-year Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship! This very prestigious award from the Canadian government goes only to the very top Canadian scholars across all disciplines in science and medicine. We are very excited that David plans to…