› Bridging the gap between demography and epidemiology: the wild boar - African swine fever system as a case study - Rémi Fay, UMR5558 LBBE
10:20-10:30 (10min)
› How does host crowding affect parasite life histories? A mark-recapture study in the ectoparasitic salmon louse (Lepeophtheirus salmonis) - Alexius Folk, University of Bergen
10:30-10:40 (10min)
› Integral projection models provide insight into host-parasite dynamics: a mistletoe case study - Ollie Spacey, Department of Biology, University of Oxford
10:40-10:50 (10min)
› Keynote: Inference on age-specific fertility in ecology and evolution. Learning from other disciplines and improving the state of the art. - Fernando Colchero, Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, University of Southern Denmark
10:50-11:00 (10min)
› Keynote: How do social processes shape life history trajectories and population performance in a female-dominated society? Insights from a long-term project on spotted hyenas in the Serengeti - Sarah Benhaiem, Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research
11:30-12:00 (30min)
› Elephant poaching: A family tragedy - Jasper Croll, University of Amsterdam [Amsterdam]
12:00-12:10 (10min)
› Kin in space - Mark Roper, University of Amsterdam
12:10-12:20 (10min)
› Generations and lineages: growth, overlap, persistence, and extinction - Hal Caswell, University of Amsterdam
12:20-12:30 (10min)
› The diversity of kinship structures across mammals - Victor Ronget, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 - Faculté des sciences et technologies
12:30-12:40 (10min)
› The demographic consequences of personality in the wandering albatross - Van de Walle Joanie, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
12:40-12:50 (10min)
› Life History and the Maintenance of Biodiversity - Kenneth Jops, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign [Urbana]
12:50-13:00 (10min)
› Keynote - Traits, life history, and species interactions as key mechanisms in forecasting community resilience to climate change - Maria Paniw, Estación Biológica de Doñana
14:30-15:00 (30min)
› When do leading and rear edges of the range shift slower or faster than climate? Insights from a mathematical model - Ophelie Ronce, Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution de Montpellier
15:00-15:10 (10min)
› Detecting climate signals in populations across life histories - Stéphanie Jenouvrier, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
15:10-15:20 (10min)
› Adaptations to land-use change threaten population persistence under climate change: Demographic consequences of seed dormancy loss in a warmer world - Eva Conquet, University of Zurich
15:20-15:30 (10min)
› Including different timeframes for climate drivers, and why it matters for population dynamics. - Sanne Evers, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ, German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg
15:30-15:40 (10min)
› Planting long-lived trees in a warming climate: investigating a trade-off in the optimal provenance - Adèle Erlichman, Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution de Montpellier
15:40-15:50 (10min)
› Does environmental variability matter for tree population dynamics under climate changes? - Laura TOUZOT, University Grenoble Alpes, INRAE, LESSEM
15:50-16:00 (10min)
› Keynote: Predicting and decomposing fitness responses to changing variability of explicit environmental drivers - Yngvild Vindenes, Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo
16:30-17:00 (30min)
› Life history predicts global population responses to the weather in terrestrial mammals - John Jackson, University of Sheffield
17:00-17:10 (10min)
› Forecasting the geography of population structure and dynamics with demographic distribution models - William Petry, North Carolina State University [Raleigh], Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory
17:10-17:20 (10min)
› The tree manifold: why biogeochemists should be demographers - Sean McMahon, Smithsonian Institution
17:20-17:30 (10min)
› The drivers of life history strategies - Rob Salguero-Gomez, University of Oxford [Oxford]
17:30-17:40 (10min)
› Redefining demographic strategies to cope with environmental variability - Maja Kajin, University of Oxford, University of Ljubljana
17:40-17:50 (10min)
› Seasonality effects on large-mammal co-occurrence patterns - Dilsad Dagtekin, University of Zurich, Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies
17:50-18:00 (10min)
› A novel ecological impact assessment by using life-table response experiment and interstage flow matrices: Effects of habitat fragmentation and temporal environmental variation on Trillium camschatcense - Hiroyuki Yokomizo, National Institute for Environmental Studies
18:00-18:45 (45min)
› Climate adaptation beyond genes: how epigenetic variation aids adaptation and population persistence in a changing climate - Maarten Postuma, Wageningen University and Research [Wageningen], Radboud university [Nijmegen]
18:00-18:45 (45min)
› Demography of a long-lived fish in response to climate change: matching climate cycles to life span - Mark Belk, Brigham Young University
18:00-18:45 (45min)
› Developmental plasticity on a widespread amphibian, a window to climate change consequences - Hibraim Perez, Facultad de Estudios Superiores Iztacala, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
18:00-18:45 (45min)
› Evolutionary rescue from climate change: male indirect genetic effects on lay-dates and their consequences for population persistence - Myranda Murray, Department of Biology [Trondheim]
18:00-18:45 (45min)
› How will climate change impact the evolution of senescence in a rare perennial orchid? - Eric Holton, Univeristy of Tokyo - Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
18:00-18:45 (45min)
› Hybridization as an extinction threat for an endangered lupine - Aspen Workman, German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research, Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research GmbH - UFZ
18:00-18:45 (45min)
› Modelling forests dynamics at scale using integral projection models (IPMs) and multi-temporal LiDAR - Alice Rosen, University of Oxford
18:00-18:45 (45min)
› SORTEE: promoting open, reliable, and transparent ecology and evolutionary biology - Edward Ivimey-Cook, University of Glasgow
18:00-18:45 (45min)
› Structured demographic buffering: Environment variance and autocorrelation influence population dynamics via different mechanisms - Samuel Gascoigne, University of Oxford
18:00-18:45 (45min)