COS 104 - Distributions and range limits

Thursday, August 9, 2007: 8:00 AM-11:30 AM
J2, San Jose McEnery Convention Center
8:00 AM
 The biogeography of a mimicry complex is revealed by a citizen-science butterfly monitoring program
Leslie Ries, University of Maryland; Sean Mullen, University of Maryland
8:20 AM
 The role of range edges in determining adaptive climate responses in the cut-leaved monkeyflower (Mimulus laciniatus)
Jason P. Sexton, University of California, Merced; Kevin J. Rice, University of California Davis; Sharon Y. Strauss, University of California, Davis
8:40 AM
 The southeastern Australian Point Conception: Supply-side ecology for a marine invertebrate approaching its geographic range limit
Eszter Z. Hidas, University of Wollongong; Todd Minchinton, University of Wollongong; David J. Ayre, University of Wollongong; Justin A. Lathlean, University of Wollongong
9:00 AM
 The southeastern Australian Point Conception: Does life-history predict population structure and species range limits?
David J. Ayre, University of Wollongong; Todd Minchinton, University of Wollongong; Cecile Perrin, University of Wollongong
9:20 AM
 Geographic distribution and intertidal population status for the Olympia oyster, Ostrea conchaphila, from Alaska to Baja
Maria P. Polson, California State University, Fullerton; Danielle C. Zacherl, California State University, Fullerton
9:40 AM
10:10 AM
 The role of environmental stochasticity in setting range limits
William F. Morris, Duke University; Daniel F. Doak, University of Colorado
10:30 AM
10:50 AM
 Distribution modeling of species at a coarse scale: How are we doing?
Volker Bahn, Wright State University; Brian McGill, University of Maine
11:10 AM
 The scale-dependence of range maps in ecology and conservation
Allen Hurlbert, University of North Carolina; Walter Jetz, Yale University
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