Storer Lectureship feat. Beth Shapiro, University of California, Santa Cruz | October 25, 2022

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  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2023
  • The Tracy and Ruth Storer Lectureship in the Life Sciences Presents "Climate Change and the Deconstruction of Species (Peer Lecture)"
    About the series: The Tracy and Ruth Storer Lectureship in the Life Sciences was established in 1960, to invite distinguished biological scientists to campus to present lectures and meet with faculty members and graduate students in their field of interest. Past Storer Lectures have included Nobel laureates, members of the National Academy of Science and acclaimed authors in medicine and the life sciences.
    Dr. Shapiro is an evolutionary biologist who specializes in the genetics of ice age animals and plants. As professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at UC Santa Cruz and investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, she uses DNA recovered from bones and other remains to study how species evolved through time and how human activities have affected and continue to affect this dynamic process. Her work focuses on organisms ranging from influenza to mammoths, asking questions about domestication, admixture, speciation, and pathogen evolution. Her current work also develops techniques to recover increasingly trace amounts of DNA, such as from environmental and water samples, and use these data to discover how biological communities and ecosystems might be made more resilient. A 2009 MacArthur Fellow, Shapiro is an award-winning popular science author and communicator who uses her research as a platform to explore the potential of genomic technologies for conservation and medicine. Her newest book, Life As We Made It: How 50,000 Years of Human Innovation Refined - and Redefined - Nature, was published in October 2021.

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