We are excited to invite you to our symposium on Advances in Marine Evolutionary Biology, at the Joint Congress on Evolutionary Biology 2024 in Montreal. If your research is a good fit, please do not hesitate to submit your abstract. #Evol2024@Evol_mtg
https://t.co/ntU9BuwZs7
Join us tomorrow morning at AD1 #SMBE2023. Our symposium on conservation genomics has it all, metagenomics, real-time genomics, aDNA, simulations, genetic load, landscape genomics, genomic predictions and more!
Are you attending #SMBE2023? If you are interested in hybridization and want to hear about a cool 🐟 system to study it, come talk to me today at poster 821 (San Paolo Cloisters) 😄
The largest and most complex chapter of my PhD thesis has been published!
Read about the funky #Lumpfish in #PLOSONE: "Global, regional, and cryptic population structure in a high gene-flow transatlantic fish" https://t.co/52pPCiOA3C
Watch a recording of yesterday's lunch webinar "Swedish cleaner fish in Norwegian salmon farms - risks and consequences" with @EllikaFaust marine evolutionary ecologist @goteborgsuni https://t.co/ukyAGcVGa2
I'm happy to be able to take part in this final @Margen_II meeting. It's been a pleasure to work with such a diverse group of researchers. I look forward to seeing what will be our next step!
We are happy so many stakeholders are joining us today to link research and innovation in aquatic ecology and genomics to business and resource management in the Kattegat-Skagerrak region. Talking about #Tagging#Biologging#Modelling#Genomics and much more
Every year millions of cleaner fish are caught along the Swedish coasts and transported to salmon farms in Norway for parasite control. In our next Sea and Society Talk on August 30 @EllikaFaust@goteborgsuni discuss the effects of this translocations: https://t.co/eleZVBtdkn
Congratulations @EllikaFaust@goteborgsuni who today successfully defended her thesis ”Crossing barriers: Genetic consequences of translocating wild cleaner fish for aquaculture”. #marinescience
Lumpfish, lumpsucker or adorable little grape fish, call it what you want. But did you know that your local lumpfish might be just that, a local who came back?
‼️Preprint out‼️https://t.co/oNylEc4w58
🧵 below
#OneMoreChapterDone#PhDThesisInProgress
@EevaJansson @Havforskningen
We used genetics to figure out how different this fish really is across the Atlantic. Turns out there is a lot more population structure than previously known. Despite its transatlantic distribution and high migratory ability!
You can now apply for funding to come work with us at the Tjärnö Marine Lab! Deadline for applications Feb 13th. https://t.co/K8MMxCI5PC
@CeMEB_community @Sea_and_Society#Tjarnolab