Shipping Day
It took some work but we got all the samples packed up at Rutgers and shipped to their new home at UCSC.
It took some work but we got all the samples packed up at Rutgers and shipped to their new home at UCSC.
Global Change Research Group celebrates Jaelyn Bos defending her preliminary dissertation proposal and giving a wonderful public talk on plans to study local adaptation to microclimates on coral reefs.
Manu Di Lorenzo, Sam Siedlecki, Clarissa Anderson, and Malin are co-chairing a US CLIVAR working group to plan for more effective coastal climate impact prediction and information delivery, including species on the move and other biological impacts for coastal economies.
After three years of work, we’re excited to share a data paper integrating 29 open source scientific bottom trawl surveys sampling >2,000 fish taxa in space and time over some of the most productive marine ecosystems of the world’s oceans.
We would like to welcome Dr. Mark Morales to the Global Change Research Group as our newest Post-Doctoral Researcher! Mark recently completed his PhD here at the University of California Santa Cruz. His dissertation work leveraged long-term fisheries-independent survey datasets,
We’re excited to be starting two new projects in the coming year! The first examines genomics, remote sensing, and climate adaptation in corals, in collaboration with the Coral Reef Alliance, the University of Leeds, and the University of Miami. The
Why are some species shifting to new locations faster than others? Jeewantha, Aurore, Malin, and a team of amazing collaborators met last week at CESAB in Montpellier, France to continue figuring it out.
POSITION DESCRIPTION The UCSC Center for Coastal Climate Resilience (CCCR) at the University of California, Santa Cruz is holding an open competition for three (3) Postdoctoral Fellowships. CCCR Postdoctoral Fellows will work with faculty mentors from two (or more) disciplines across the
We are incredibly excited to welcome two new members to the Global Change Research Group this fall! Maya Zeff is a first-year PhD student interested in changing networks of species interactions through time and across climate gradients. She comes with
Postdoc in process-based modeling of species distributions, University of California Santa Cruz A two-year postdoctoral position is available in the Global Change Research Group and Kroeker Lab in the Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology at the University of California