Events
Scroll to calendar listings to view all events and seminars offered by EEB
- EEB Seminars
- Livestream seminars can be viewed here seminar link.
Seminars in other departments
Atwood Colloquium in Ecology & Evolution
This special two-day event provides a fantastic opportunity to learn about the most exciting research in ecology & evolution being done at U of T and abroad.
Broadening Representation & Equity With Science (BREWS)
We promote inclusion and equity through community-building tea breaks and data-driven discussions. We are always looking for speakers & ideas for discussions, so please get in touch!
Conservation Science Group
The EEB Conservation Group is a collaboration of undergrad & grad students, postdoctoral researchers and faculty interested in conservation science.
Upcoming & Past Events
April 10, 2015 10th Annual Atwood Colloquium
Friday April 10 & Saturday April 11, 2015
April 9, 2015 Sticky fish, sliding into sand and shark saws – biomechanics of the sea
Adam Summers, University of Washington
April 9, 2015 Dispersal, connectivity, and genetic structure of the California sea cucumber (Parastichopus californicus): implications for marine management
Amanda Xuereb, Appraisal seminar
April 9, 2015 Morphological evolution of the feeding mechanism in stingrays
Matt Kolmann, Appraisal Seminar
April 8, 2015 Evolutionary trends in the functional morphology of Neotropical cichlids
Jessica Arbour, Exit seminar
April 1, 2015 Mitochondrial DNA Discordances: what drives them?
Pedro Bernardo, Appraisal seminar
March 30, 2015 Exploited within the host, outcompeted in the environment: the difficult life of a facultative pathogen
Speaker: Tom Platt, EEB Postdoctoral Fellow in the Mideo lab Host: Nicole Mideo lab page: mideo.eeb.utoronto.ca/
March 23, 2015 Plant-pollinator interactions in a changing climate
Nicole Rafferty, EEB postdoctoral fellow in the Thomson lab
March 19, 2015 Population dynamics and Allee effects in meerkats
Speaker: Andrew Bateman: Postdoctoral collaborator in the Krkosek lab
March 17, 2015 The impact of above- and below-ground interactions on the success of an invader
Krystal Nunes, Appraisal Seminar