John Benning was selected to receive the President's Student Leadership and Service Award (PSLSA), which recognizes the accomplishments and contributions of outstanding student leaders at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities. It is presented to approximately one-tenth of one percent of the student body for their exceptional leadership and service to the University of Minnesota … Continue reading John receives President’s Student Leadership and Service Award!
Article on Ryan’s Palmer Amaranth paper featured in MN Daily
Ryan was interviewed about our paper describing species distribution models for Palmer amaranth. Paper includes Tom and Peter Tiffin as co-authors. Check it out here!
Baby Hattie arrives!!
On February 21 at 5:24pm Harriet Ann Gorton Willis (aka Hattie) was born to Amanda Gorton and Charlie Willis! Congrats to all!!
New paper showing latitudinal and elevational gradients in seed predation from an international collaboration
John and Dave participated in an international collaborative experiment testing whether biotic interactions are stronger at low compared to high latitudes. The experiment was conducted from the equator to the arctic and from low to high elevation at each latitude. It is the first coordinated experiment involving real organisms to test this idea dating back … Continue reading New paper showing latitudinal and elevational gradients in seed predation from an international collaboration
New paper on species distribution models for the invasive plant, Palmer amaranth
Ryan, Tom, and Dave published a paper in Scientific Reports on species distribution models for Palmer amaranth, one of the most economically costly invasive species in North America. It has rapidly spread across the continent and devastated agriculture along the way. It only reached Minnesota in 2016 and it's future invasion potential is unknown. In … Continue reading New paper on species distribution models for the invasive plant, Palmer amaranth
Adam awarded Lake Minnetonka Garden Club Scholarship!
Adam Kostanecki, undergraduate researcher in the lab, was chosen to receive the Lake Minnetonka Garden Club scholarship. He was recognized for his "outstanding application, academic record, commitment to your education and community and your career goals in Botany research and public policy" Congrats Adam! (Gratulacje!)
NSF Speciation and mating system evolution grant funded
The Moeller Lab, in collaboration with Emma Goldberg (UMN EEB) and Yaniv Brandvain (UMN PMB), received four years of funding ($974,762) to investigate the role of mating system transitions in plant speciation. This new funding continues past work that revealed reproductive character displacement between incipient Clarkia species, and provided evidence of reinforcement in secondary sympatry. … Continue reading NSF Speciation and mating system evolution grant funded
Stephanie successfully defends masters thesis!
Stephanie gave a seminar and defended her masters thesis titled, "History, dispersal limitation, and environment shape the current and future ranges of forest herbs of the Southern Appalachians". For her thesis, she developed species distribution models for 8 forest herb species, half of which are narrow endemics to the Southern Appalachians. She examined the extent … Continue reading Stephanie successfully defends masters thesis!
Four lab members give talks at ESA
Amanda, John, Ryan, and Lauren all gave presentations on their recent research at the annual meeting of the Ecological Society of America in New Orleans this week.
NSF LTREB grant on geographic range limits funded
Our project on the evolution of geographic range limits in Clarkia xantiana was just funded for five years from the NSF Long-Term Research in Environmental Biology program (Moeller, PI; Geber, co-PI, Eckhart, co-PI). This work has been ongoing for 13 years and the new funding will result in 18-year datasets on population demography and associated … Continue reading NSF LTREB grant on geographic range limits funded