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20 de febrero de 2009

ASPT Travel Grants for Students

American Society of Plant Taxonomists
2009 Travel Grants for Students

The ASPT is happy to announce a new grant program focused on increasing student participation at the annual meeting. The grants may be used to pay for travel, meeting registration, lodging, and/or food expenses associated with attendance at the annual meeting. Each applicant must be an active member of ASPT and may be an undergraduate or graduate student pursuing a degree in plant systematics (graduate students) or at least seriously interested in plant systematics (undergraduates). Up to 20 awards of $300 will be made in 2009.

The ASPT Membership Committee will use a lottery to select grant recipients, allowing at least 14 grants for students planning to present papers at the meeting, with the remainder (up to 6) going to those who will not be presenting. Grant recipients will be notified prior to the deadline for abstract submission and will pick up their checks at the ASPT banquet. Each recipient will also be awarded a free ticket to the banquet.

Completed applications should be received by Lynn Clark, chair of the ASPT Membership committee, by March 10, 2009. Please note that the application requires the signature of the student´s advisor to confirm that the individual is an active student, is seriously interested in plant systematics, and would benefit from attendance at the 2009 annual ASPT meeting. If possible, please send completed applications by e-mail (pdf file of scanned application) rather than by US mail or FAX.

Applications should be mailed to:

Dr. Lynn G. Clark
Chair, ASPT Membership Committee
Dept. of Ecology, Evolution and Organismal Biology
Iowa State University
353 Bessey Hall
Ames, IA 50011-1020
FAX: 515-294-1337

19 de febrero de 2009

Curso-Taller sobre el”Proyecto mexicano del código de barras de la vida”

Se les informa a los interesados que se realizará en las instalaciones del Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas del Noroeste S.C., en La Paz, B.C.S., el Curso-taller (teórico-práctico) sobre el “Proyecto Mexicano del código de barras de la vida” durante los días 5 y 6 de marzo 2009.

Dirigido a Investigadores y profesores investigadores (curadores) que trabajen con la sistemática de algún grupo en particular y que estén interesados en participar en el proyecto iBOL (International Barcode of Life) enfocado al proyecto mexicano.

El taller es parte del proyecto “Mexicano del Código de barras para la vida” que se desprende de las redes del CONACYT, donde participan CONABIO, ECOSUR, IB-UNAM y CIBNOR, con laboratorios en las tres últimas instituciones. El curso será impartido por el Dr. Manuel Elías Gutiérrez (ECOSUR) y Dr. Sergio Ticul Álvarez Castañeda (CIBNOR).
Para más información ingresar al siguiente link http://www.cibnor.gob.mx/eplant1.php?pagID=anuncios/codigobarra/index

Debido a que el proyecto tiene cupo limitado de otorgamiento de becas completas (avión y hospedaje) y parciales (sólo hospedaje) los criterios de asignación de becas se basarán en la representatividad geográfica, institucional y de los grupos de estudio. Para participar en el evento enviar correo a Dra. Patricia Cortés Calva pcortes04@cibnor.mx

Dra. Patricia Cortés-Calva
Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas del Noroeste, S.C.

Edificio “R” 9B. Mar Bermejo 195, Col. Playa Palo de Santa Rita

La Paz, B.C.S., C. P. 23090 México. Tel. 612 1238484 ext. 3332
Tel. Dto. 6121238493; Fax.6121253625
pcortes04@cibnor.mx

Smithsonian Botanical Symposium 2009

Smithsonian Botanical Symposium, Department of Botany:

'Genes, Genomics, and Genome Evolution in Plants'.

27-28 March 2009
Washington, DC
Presented by the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History Department of Botany in collaboration with the United States Botanic Garden with support from the National Science Foundation Plant Genome Program and the Cuatrecasas Family Foundation.
Ever since Darwin, biologists have sought to understand how species evolve. The complexity and flexibility of the plant genome, as first revealed by Mendelian genetic methods, likely render plants especially able to adapt to changing environments. The new tools of genomics, initially driven by studies of model organisms, are now being applied across the diversity of plant life. Comparative studies have addressed the role of variation in genes, gene families and genomes in such processes as speciation, domestication and floral development. This Symposium, hosted by the Department of Botany, will highlight results of current studies on plant genes and genomes, especially as they apply to fundamental questions in evolutionary biology, crop improvement and ecosystem sustenance in rapidly changing environments worldwide."

Invited Speakers
  • Jeff Bennetzen, University of Georgia
  • Rob DeSalle, American Museum of Natural History
  • Bob Jansen, University of Texas
  • Susan McCouch, Cornell University
  • Jill Preston, University of Kansas
  • Gerry Tuskan, Oak Ridge National Lababoratory
  • Ken Wurdack, National Museum of Natural History
Information and registration at http://botany.si.edu/sbs/

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