University of Maryland BEES
An interdepartmental graduate program emphasizing fundamental and applied research in the areas of behavior, ecology, evolution, systematics and related disciplines
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Announcements
Organismal Biology Day was held on Monday, April 28. Dr. Jan Komdeur delivered the seminar followed by lunch for all and a graduate student research poster session. View photos here!

Application Deadline
Fall 2008 admissions is now complete. Fall 2009 application deadline is December 10, 2008.

Training in Paleobiology
The BEES program and the Smithsonian Institution now offer joint training with fellowship opportunities for qualified candidates in the area of Paleobiolgy within the BEES training mission. Please see the faculty lists for participating faculty and their research interests.

BEES Seminar Series
BEES seminars are held Mondays at noon in room 1103 of the Bioscience Research Building. Click here for the schedule.

Graduate student accolades
-Ed Zattara was a recipient of a Summer Research Fellowship from the Graduate School. Congrats, Ed!

-Congrats to Julie Byrd and Katie Schneider for receiving Goldhaber Travel Awards.

-Katie Schneider was awarded the Hockmeyer Fellowship from the College of Chemical and Life Sciences for the academic year 2008-2009.

-Jennifer Siani and Laura Craig were awarded Wylie Dissertation Fellowships for 2008-2009.

-Congratulations to Andreanna Welch who received a Smithsonian Predoctoral Fellowship for her research titled "Temporal and Spatial Variation in the Genetic Diversity of the Hawaiian Petrel (Pterodroma sandwichensis)."

-Two BEES students received Smithsonian Postdoctoral Fellowships!
   -Silvana Marten-Rodriguez "Floral variation in Caribbean Heliconia: the role of geographic mosaics and pollination             systems"
   -Eric Lind "Cascading effects of white-tail deer herbivory on insect biodiversity"

-Sheila Reynolds won First Place in her category at the UM Graduate Research Interaction Day on April 17 for her poster titled "Male aggression drives spatial association of kin in satin bowerbirds."

-Kelly O'Quin recently received research awards from Sigma Xi and the Cosmos Club Foundation for his research on vision in cichlid fishes. Congrats, Kelly!

-Recent NSF Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grants:
       - Emily Amitin (Wilkinson Lab) - "Postcopulatory sexual selection and gametic isolation in stalk-eyed flies"
       - Julie Byrd (Hawthorne Lab)   - "The effects of hybridization in hollies on genetic differentiation in native host races                                                      of the holly leafminer"
       - Silvana Marten-Rodriguez (Fenster Lab) - "Quantifying pollen limitation and reproductive assurance mechanisms                                                      in Gesnariae species with contrasting pollination systems"
       - Holly Martinson (Denno/Fagan Labs) - "Food webs in stable isotope space: How patch size and connectivity alter                                                      food web structure, functional redundancy, and trophic position"

   
 

BEES Program Office, 2239 Bio/Psych Building, College of Chemical and Life Sciences
University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742
phone: (301) 405-4552 | email: beesoffice@umd.edu | site map