Eventos
Program
SYMPOSIUM SCHEDULE | |
---|---|
8h30 | Welcome and opening ceremony |
PART I: DOCUMENTING AMAZONIAN BIOTIC HISTORY | |
8h40 | Building an understanding of the biotic and environmental history of Amazonia Joel Cracraft (American Museum of Natural History, USA) and Lúcia G. Lohmann (Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil) |
9h00 | Databasing Amazonian plants and the importance of point locality data to biogeographic studies Barbara Thiers (The New York Botanical Garden, USA) |
9h20 | Databasing Amazonian vertebrate collections Thomas Trombone (American Museum of Natural History, USA) & Joel Cracraft (American Museum of Natural History, USA) |
9h40 | Using geo-referenced data to understand patterns of diversity José Alexandre Felizola Diniz-Filho (Universidade Federal de Goiás, Brazil) |
10h00 | Using geo-referenced data to understand patterns of endemism applying spatial congruence Claudia Szumik (CONICET-Instituto Superior de Entomologia, Tucumán, Argentina) & Pablo Goloboff (CONICET-Instituto Superior de Entomologia, Tucumán, Argentina) |
10h20 | Coffee Break |
PART II: DOCUMENTING AMAZONIAN ENVIRONMENT | |
10h50 | Using remote sensing and data layers to understand the history of Amazonia Kyle McDonald (The City University of New York, USA) |
11h10 | Neogene models of Amazonian paleogeography Ken Campbell (Natural History Museum of Los Angeles, USA) and Afonso Nogueira (Universidade Federal do Pará, Brazil) |
11h30 | Large-scale environmental modeling of Neogene Amazonia Sharon Cowling (Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Canadá) |
11h50 | Plio-Pleistocene environmental change in Amazonia: What do we know and what we don’t know Frank Mayle (University of Edinburgh, UK) |
12h10 | Precipitation Patterns in South America during the Late Pleistocene: Possible implications for Amazonian Biodiversity Francisco William Cruz (Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil) |
12h30 | General Discussion Moderators: Lúcia G. Lohmann & Joel Cracraft |
13h00 | Lunch – Restaurants around FAPESP |
PART III: BIOTIC HISTORY (PHYLOGEOGRAPHY & PHYLOGENY) | |
14h00 | Using phylogeographic analyses to understand former environmental change Ana Carnaval (The City University of New York, USA) |
14h20 | Using historical biogeography to reconstruct landscape history in Amazonia Camila Ribas (Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia, Brazil), Alexandre Aleixo (Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Brazil), John Bates (The Field Museum, USA) & Joel Cracraft (American Museum of Natural History, USA) |
14h40 | Current state and future perspectives on primate systematics Horácio Schneider (Universidade Federal do Pará, Brazil) & Iracilda Sampaio (Universidade Federal do Pará, Brazil) |
15h00 | The assembly and evolution of Amazonian butterfly communities Andrew Brower (Middle Tennessee State University, USA), André Freitas (UNICAMP, Brazil) & Karina Lucas (UNICAMP, Brazil) |
15h20 | Coffee Break |
15h50 | What molecular data have taught us about the ecology and evolution of the Brazil nut family (Lecythidaceae, Ericales) Scott Mori (The New York Botanical Garden, USA) & Chris Dick (University of Michigan, USA) |
16h30 | Biogeography of Bignonieae (Bignoniaceae): Insights into the assembly of the Amazonian Biota Lúcia G. Lohmann (Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil) |
16h50 | Using bioinformatics to integrate knowledge about Amazonian biodiversity Rob Guralnick (University of Colorado-Boulder, USA) |
17h10 | The Evolutionary Atlas of Amazonian Biodiversity John Bates (The Field Museum, USA) |
17h30 | Symposium closure and general discussion Moderators: Joel Cracraft & Lúcia G. Lohmann |
Página atualizada em 25/02/2013 - Publicada em 18/02/2013