Transcript Document

You’re invited!
The NC State Zoology and Botany Graduate Student Associations
present
The 9th Annual Zoology and Botany Graduate Student
Research Symposium
Friday, March 24th, 2006 8am-3pm; reception following
Talley Student Center, Blue Room
8:00 Breakfast, Green Room, Talley Student Center
Noon: Lunch, Lobby of David Clark Labs
8:30 Welcome and Opening Remarks
1:00 Open-Forum Poster Presentations (see poster list)
8:45 Emily Habinck
Correlated leaf traits among Arabadopsis thaliana ecotypes
1:30 Felix M. Del Toro-Silva
Ecophysiology of fishes: interacting effects of oxygen and temperature on fish
performance and nursery habitat quality
9:00 Veronica Miller
Selected demography and population estimation of Trachemys scripta
(yellow-bellied slider) in North Carolina as it relates to turtle harvesting
9:15 Jerome Brewster
Singing rates of ovenbirds and black-throated blue warblers
9:30 Wenheng Zhang
Gene duplication, selection, and rate of sequence evolution of
PISTILLATA homologues in dogwoods
9:45 Brenda Wichmann
Unique non-alluvial wetlands of the North Carolina Mountains and
Piedmont-quantitative analysis with implications for management and
protection
10:00 Morning Break
10:15 Wade Wall
Vegetation of a North Carolina Coastal Plain Wet Savanna
10:30 Krishna Pacifici
Effects of vegetation on the detection process in auditory avian point
count surveys
10:45 Allison Leidner
Using population genetic analyses to understand the impacts of habitat
fragmentation on a rare butterfly
11:00 Scott Dobrin
Axons to Glia: “You light up my life”
11:15 Tim Langer
Private support is more than dollars, but those are nice too
1:45 Shiloh Schulte
Improved nest survival of American Oystercatchers on the Outer Banks of North
Carolina: Effects of Hurricane Isabel
2:00 Caitlin Elam
Flora and Plant Communities of Cool Springs Environmental Education Center,
New Bern, North Carolina
2:15 Will Fields
Incorporating rainfall data into survey planning and PVA for salamanders
2:30 Susan Pate May
Impacts of the toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrum monilatum on three ecologically
important shellfish species
2:45 Sunny Snider
Species interactions affect movement rates of two exotic snail species
3:00 Closing Remarks and Rewards
Reception following at 4 pm at the home of Nick Haddad, 406 Brooks Ave.
POSTERS
(on display 8:30 am to 3 pm)
Christopher Butler
Atlantic Bluefin Tuna (Thunnus
thynnus) feeding ecology and
potential ecosystem effects during
winter in North Carolina
Sumie Okuwa
How are terminal Schwann cells
connected?
Becky Hylton
Effects of acid deposition,
calcium depletion, and mercury
toxicity on high elevation
Southern Applachian songbirds
and land snails
Nathan Tarr
The effects of vehicle disturbance
on shorebirds at Cape Lookout
National Seashore
11:30 Break
Funded by the NCSU Department of Botany, Department of Zoology, Graduate School, UGSA, BGSA, ZGSA, and Student Senate
For more information, contact Allison Leidner, [email protected]; or Caitlin Elam, [email protected]