“Fish in rum” project highlighted in Science
Our NSF-funded Albatross Re-Collection project got written up in a nice piece by Erik Stokstad here!
Our NSF-funded Albatross Re-Collection project got written up in a nice piece by Erik Stokstad here!
On Monday, Kyra eloquently defended her Ph.D. dissertation, “Conservation genomics of marine fish populations,” and passed with flying colors! Her committee included Drs. Kristen Ruegg, Julie Lockwood, Christina Bergey, and Malin. Chapters 1 is published (Fitz et al. 2022 Evolutionary
Update 1 September 2024: This position has now been filled. Postdoc in temporal population genomics and global change at the University of California Santa Cruz A two-year postdoctoral position is available in the Global Change Research Group in the
The Global Change Research Group welcomes two incoming PhD students, Rae Fadlovich and Mikaela Salvador! After finishing her master’s at Utah State University, as part of the Quantitative Fisheries and Aquatic Ecology Lab, Rae will be joining the GCRG
It took some work but we got all the samples packed up at Rutgers and shipped to their new home at UCSC.
Global Change Research Group celebrates Jaelyn Bos defending her preliminary dissertation proposal and giving a wonderful public talk on plans to study local adaptation to microclimates on coral reefs!
We are incredibly excited to welcome two new members to the Global Change Research Group this fall! Maya Zeff is a first-year PhD student interested in changing networks of species interactions through time and across climate gradients. She comes with
The Global Change Lab in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (https://www.eeb.ucsc.edu/) at the University of California Santa Cruz (UCSC) invites applications for a Global Change Assistant Researcher. The Researcher will assist with population and historical genomics research, develop
The Global Change Biology research group (https://pinsky.marine.rutgers.edu/) in the Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources is searching for an organized, enthusiastic, and skilled population genomics researcher. This position is half-time (19.5 hours per week). We use population genomics and
Malin has coauthored two new perspective pieces in Science. The first, with Nina Therkildsen of Cornell, highlights the underappreciated effects of fishing on evolutionary dynamics within (and among) exploited species. The second, with Alexa Fredston, discusses the stark choice we