Richard Klim
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The Abstract Book has been published on the Meeting Website.
Symposium sessions include...
s1.2: Cracraft, Sanin, Claramunt & Smith. The assembly of the North American avifauna: theory, method, and empirical approaches.
s1.3 Smith & Cracraft. Large-scale biogeography of the North American avifauna.
s1.4: Smith. Assembly of the pelagic avifauna of North America: including insights gleaned from the fossil record of the Pan-Alcidae.
s1.5: Oswald & Steadman. Historical diversity and extinction of New World passerines: evidence from Pleistocene fossils.
s1.6: Barker. It matters how you slice it: a new molecular perspective on the timing and success of interhemispheric dispersal in oscine passerine birds.
s1.7: Winger & Ree. Geographic range evolution and diversification in migratory North American birds. [Emberizoidea]
s1.8: Rabosky, Winger, Lovette, Barker, Burns, Klicka & Lanyon. The temporal and spatial dynamics of speciation during the New World nine-primaried oscine radiation.
s1.9: Weir. Latitudinal gradients in time to reproductive isolation of New World birds.
s1.10: Ksepcka, Grande & Clarke. Advances in the understanding of Early Cenozoic avian evolution from the Green River avifauna.
s1.11: Mitchell. Ecological diversity of the 52-million year old Green River birds.
s5.7: Friedman, Lutrell & Omland. Rates of carotenoid plumage evolution in passerine birds: Is there an intrinsic bias towards red? [Emberizoidea]
s6.1: Reddy & Marks. Introduction to Symposium. How well do we know the Old World tropics?
s6.2: Bowie. The scramble for Africa’s montane highlands: patterns of colonization and diversification. [Nectariniidae, Pycnonotidae]
s6.3: Block, Hackett, Bates, Goodman & Raherilalao. Explosive or non-explosive adaptive radiation? Cryptic diversity alters diversification rate estimates for the Bernieridae, a Malagasy passerine radiation.
s6.4: Price & Mohan. Causes of the mid-elevation peak in east Himalayan songbird diversity.
s6.5: Sorenson, DaCosta, Stryjewski, Balakrishnan & Spottiswoode. Contrasting patterns of divergence and diversification in African brood parasites.
s6.6: Bates, Engel & Kahindo. Assembly of an African continental montane avifauna: an assessment of the Albertine Rift avifauna.
s6.7: Kimball & Braun. Patterns of diversification in the Phasianidae.
s6.8: Moyle, Hosner & Oliveros. Insights into the origins and diversification of the Philippine avifauna.
s6.9: Voelker & Bowie. Diversification in an Afro-Asian songbird clade reveals multiple trans-oceanic dispersals and a southern to northern colonization pattern in Africa. [Copsychini]
s6.10: Robin, Gupta, Vishnudas & Ramakrishnan. Comparative phylogeography of the entire understory bird community in the Western Ghats (India) sky islands reveals differential impacts of island structure on population structure.
s6.11: Kirschel, Gonzalez & Moyle. A molecular phylogeny of Pogoniulus tinkerbirds contradicts current taxonomy based on morphology and plumage.
s6.12: Fjeldså. The early expansion of songbirds (Oscines) in Asia and Africa.
s10.1: Webster. Ornithological Specimens in the 21st Century.
s10.4: Bostwick. The integrated evolution of behavioral and morphological novelties in manakins (Pipridae) as revealed by digital and physical natural history specimens.
s10.5: Mason, Burns & Shultz. Combining museum and media collections to study multimodal sexual signaling and acoustic adaptations in tanagers (Thraupidae).
s10.6: Derryberry, Seddon, Claramunt, Brumfield & Tobias. Of songs and specimens: using vouchered behaviors to examine song evolution in avian radiations. [Furnariidae]
s10.8: McCormack, Tsai & Faircloth. Prospects for using target enrichment and next-generation sequencing to collect thousands of DNA loci from museum specimens.
s10.9: Wright, Gregory & Witt. Flight ability drives genome size reduction in birds.
s10.12: Winkler, Orzechowski, Pegan, Chalkowski, Stager, Kapoor, Hruska, Greg & Hite. Collecting the total specimen package: research and educational opportunities for museum expeditions.
Symposium sessions include...
s1.2: Cracraft, Sanin, Claramunt & Smith. The assembly of the North American avifauna: theory, method, and empirical approaches.
s1.3 Smith & Cracraft. Large-scale biogeography of the North American avifauna.
s1.4: Smith. Assembly of the pelagic avifauna of North America: including insights gleaned from the fossil record of the Pan-Alcidae.
s1.5: Oswald & Steadman. Historical diversity and extinction of New World passerines: evidence from Pleistocene fossils.
s1.6: Barker. It matters how you slice it: a new molecular perspective on the timing and success of interhemispheric dispersal in oscine passerine birds.
s1.7: Winger & Ree. Geographic range evolution and diversification in migratory North American birds. [Emberizoidea]
s1.8: Rabosky, Winger, Lovette, Barker, Burns, Klicka & Lanyon. The temporal and spatial dynamics of speciation during the New World nine-primaried oscine radiation.
s1.9: Weir. Latitudinal gradients in time to reproductive isolation of New World birds.
s1.10: Ksepcka, Grande & Clarke. Advances in the understanding of Early Cenozoic avian evolution from the Green River avifauna.
s1.11: Mitchell. Ecological diversity of the 52-million year old Green River birds.
s5.7: Friedman, Lutrell & Omland. Rates of carotenoid plumage evolution in passerine birds: Is there an intrinsic bias towards red? [Emberizoidea]
s6.1: Reddy & Marks. Introduction to Symposium. How well do we know the Old World tropics?
s6.2: Bowie. The scramble for Africa’s montane highlands: patterns of colonization and diversification. [Nectariniidae, Pycnonotidae]
s6.3: Block, Hackett, Bates, Goodman & Raherilalao. Explosive or non-explosive adaptive radiation? Cryptic diversity alters diversification rate estimates for the Bernieridae, a Malagasy passerine radiation.
s6.4: Price & Mohan. Causes of the mid-elevation peak in east Himalayan songbird diversity.
s6.5: Sorenson, DaCosta, Stryjewski, Balakrishnan & Spottiswoode. Contrasting patterns of divergence and diversification in African brood parasites.
s6.6: Bates, Engel & Kahindo. Assembly of an African continental montane avifauna: an assessment of the Albertine Rift avifauna.
s6.7: Kimball & Braun. Patterns of diversification in the Phasianidae.
s6.8: Moyle, Hosner & Oliveros. Insights into the origins and diversification of the Philippine avifauna.
s6.9: Voelker & Bowie. Diversification in an Afro-Asian songbird clade reveals multiple trans-oceanic dispersals and a southern to northern colonization pattern in Africa. [Copsychini]
s6.10: Robin, Gupta, Vishnudas & Ramakrishnan. Comparative phylogeography of the entire understory bird community in the Western Ghats (India) sky islands reveals differential impacts of island structure on population structure.
s6.11: Kirschel, Gonzalez & Moyle. A molecular phylogeny of Pogoniulus tinkerbirds contradicts current taxonomy based on morphology and plumage.
s6.12: Fjeldså. The early expansion of songbirds (Oscines) in Asia and Africa.
s10.1: Webster. Ornithological Specimens in the 21st Century.
s10.4: Bostwick. The integrated evolution of behavioral and morphological novelties in manakins (Pipridae) as revealed by digital and physical natural history specimens.
s10.5: Mason, Burns & Shultz. Combining museum and media collections to study multimodal sexual signaling and acoustic adaptations in tanagers (Thraupidae).
s10.6: Derryberry, Seddon, Claramunt, Brumfield & Tobias. Of songs and specimens: using vouchered behaviors to examine song evolution in avian radiations. [Furnariidae]
s10.8: McCormack, Tsai & Faircloth. Prospects for using target enrichment and next-generation sequencing to collect thousands of DNA loci from museum specimens.
s10.9: Wright, Gregory & Witt. Flight ability drives genome size reduction in birds.
s10.12: Winkler, Orzechowski, Pegan, Chalkowski, Stager, Kapoor, Hruska, Greg & Hite. Collecting the total specimen package: research and educational opportunities for museum expeditions.
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