Rutger A Vos, Jason Caravas, Klaas Hartmann, Mark A Jensen, Chase Miller.
BMC Bioinformatics 2011, 12:63
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/12/63
open access
Abstract
Este es su espacio para difundir información sobre actividades, cursos, investigación, congresos, etc y promover el contacto entre nuestra comunidad filogenética. Todos pueden publicar. Bienvenidos!
INSTITUTO DE ECOLOGIA A.C. (INECOL) CONVOCATORIA PARA
OCUPAR DOS PLAZAS DE INVESTIGADOR
EL INECOL es un centro público de investigación adscrito al Consejo Nacional de
Ciencia y Tecnología que lleva a cabo investigación y formación de estudiantes en los
campos de la ecología, biodiversidad y sistemática, conservación y manejo de recurso
naturales. Cuenta con instalaciones en Xalapa, Veracruz y en Pátzcuaro, Michoacán así
como con estaciones de campo en zonas templadas y desérticas de Durango y en la zona
costera de Veracruz. Actualmente se encuentran asociados al INECOL 103
investigadores de tiempo completo, 95 técnicos académicos, 88 administrativos y 134
estudiantes de posgrado. La vida académica está organizada en nueve departamentos o
redes: Biodiversidad y Sistemática, Ecología Funcional, Ambiente y Sustentabilidad,
Biología Evolutiva, Manejo Biorracional de Plagas y Vectores, Manejo Biotecnológico
de Recursos, Ecoetología, Biología y Conservación de Vertebrados e Interacciones
Multitróficas. El INECOL invita a los investigadores interesados a ocupar dos plazas,
descritas a continuación.
DOS PLAZAS DISPONIBLES
Categoría disponible: Investigador Titular A
Contratación: Tiempo completo por 12 meses. Dependiendo del desempeño académico
se renovará el contrato. Después de tres años, los candidatos podrán solicitar su
definitividad.
Descripción de la Investigación:
El candidato seleccionado formará parte de la Red de Biodiversidad y Sistemática,
estando asignado y llevando a cabo sus investigaciones en el Centro Regional del Bajío
en Pátzcuaro, Michoacán. El proyecto principal del Centro es la Flora del Bajío y de
Regiones Adyacentes, un inventario detallado de las plantas vasculares de Guanajuato,
Querétaro y la parte norte de Michoacán, y la persona elegida se incorporará a un grupo
de cuatro investigadores y cinco técnicos académicos involucrados en dicho proyecto. El
aspirante deberá contar con amplios conocimientos sobre la taxonomía vegetal,
diversidad y morfología de plantas vasculares, además de tener experiencia en su colecta
y determinación. La plaza requiere experiencia en el uso de metodologías filogenéticas y
es necesario que el candidato esté familiarizado y tenga experiencia de primera mano con
las técnicas de laboratorio necesarias para la recopilación de datos moleculares, así como
con las técnicas para su análisis, tanto por métodos de parsimonia como de probabilidad.
Se dará preferencia a los candidatos con experiencia probada en la flora mexicana,
aunque no contar con la misma no cancela la candidatura.
Responsabilidades:
• Participar en trabajo de campo para la colecta de ejemplares para el herbario IEB y su
programa de intercambio.
• Colaborar en el proyecto Flora del Bajío y de Regiones Adyacentes a través de la
preparación de fascículos y la coordinación de tratamientos taxonómicos por especialistas
externos.
• Llevar a cabo estudios a largo plazo sobre la sistemática (molecular y tradicional) de
uno o varios grupos de plantas vasculares.
• Ayudar en el equipamiento, desarrollo y manejo del laboratorio de análisis moleculares.
• Impartir cursos de posgrado y dirigir tesis en los programas de Maestría y Doctorado
del INECOL.
• Publicar artículos en revistas reconocidas internacionalmente con factor de impacto, en
revistas nacionales, de divulgación y periódicos y ocasionalmente en libros.
• Presentar proyectos de investigación ante instituciones mexicanas o internacionales
tanto gubernamentales como privadas.
Requisitos:
• Licenciatura en Biología o Ecología y contar con un Doctorado en Ciencias con
especialidad en Sistemática Vegetal.
• Contar con al menos un posdoctorado en el área de conocimiento.
• Ser autor o co-autor de 5-7 artículos en revistas científicas con factor de impacto,
habiendo publicado al menos 3 de ellos en los últimos 3 años.
• Contar con experiencia en la colecta de ejemplares botánicos.
• Haber preparado revisiones y tratamientos florísticos sobre plantas vasculares.
• Haber llevado a cabo investigación en sistemática molecular sobre un grupo de plantas
vasculares.
• Tener experiencia en el uso de metodologías filogenéticas, tanto por métodos de
parsimonia como de probabilidad
• Tener experiencia de primera mano con las técnicas de laboratorio necesarias para la
recopilación de datos moleculares
• Es deseable pero no indispensable haber vivido y trabajado en Latinoamérica.
• Hablar y escribir en español e inglés de manera correcta.
• Capacidad de trabajar en equipo, habilidad para negociar, atender con precisión y
rapidez situaciones que así lo requieran, así como llevar a cabo simultáneamente varias
tareas.
• Contar con experiencia en presentación de proyectos.
• Disposición para viajar y trabajar fuera de horario regular.
• Contar con licencia de manejo (recomendable).
Procedimiento para presentar solicitudes:
Los interesados enviarán una carta describiendo su experiencia relacionada con el perfil
de la plaza, su curriculum vitae e información de tres referencias, incluyendo sus
teléfonos y sus correos electrónicos. Se contactará únicamente a las referencias de los
candidatos finalistas. La revisión de solicitudes comenzará en la fecha de publicación de
la convocatoria y se extenderá hasta el 31 de de julio de 2011. Los candidatos
seleccionados deberán ocuparlas antes del 1 de octubre de 2011. Favor de enviar los
documentos citados en archivos PDF o Word a:
Secretaría Académica
Instituto de Ecología A. C.
Correo electrónico: secretaria.academica@inecol.edu.mx
Página web: www.inecol.edu.mx

4th - 8th July 2011
Introduction
The Biennial conferences of the Systematics Association provide a forum for systematists from different disciplines to present and discuss their research. The Sixth Biennial Conference was held at Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh in August 2007. The conference was attended by about 240 delegates from a broad international audience. The format was a mixture of open sessions and focussed thematic symposia.
MORE INFORMATION >>>
INTRODUCCIONES
Harrison, C. J & J. A. Langdale. 2006. A step by step guide to phylogeny reconstruction. PDF.
De Luna, E. J.A. Guerrero & T. Chew-Taracena. 2005. Sistemática biológica: avances y direcciones en la teoría y los métodos de la reconstrucción filogenética. PDF.
De Luna, E y B.D. Mishler. 1996. El concepto de homologia filogenetica. PDF.

Fort Collins, Colorado, USA
24 July - 6 August 2011
Application Deadline: 15 May was the preferred application deadline, after which time people will be admitted to the course following review of applications by the admissions committee. However, later applications are accepted.
http://www.molecularevolution.org/workshops/WME
Michael P. Cummings, Scott A. Handley and Kendra Nightingale, Co-Directors
The Workshop consists of a series of lectures, demonstrations and computer laboratories that cover various aspects of molecular evolution. Faculty are chosen exclusively for their effectiveness in teaching theory and practice in molecular evolution. Included among the faculty are developers and other experts in the use of computer programs and packages such as BEAST, *BEAST, DataMonkey, FigTree, Genealogical Sorting Index, GARLI, HyPhy, LAMARC, MAFFT, MrBayes, and SeaView who provide demonstrations and consultations.
For more information and online application see the Workshop web site -



The Willi Hennig Society 12th International workshop in Phylogenetic Methods |
Posgrado,
Instituto de Ecología, AC.
Xalapa, Ver (México).
Do model-based phylogenetic analyses perform better than parsimony? A test with empirical data
de Cladistics Early on line de Andrew V. Z. Brower
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1096-0031.2010.00342.x/abstract
Abstract
The use of model-based methods to infer a phylogenetic tree from a given data set is frequently motivated by the truism that under certain circumstances the parsimony approach (MP) may produce incorrect topologies, while explicit model-based approaches are believed to avoid this problem. In the realm of empirical data from actual taxa, it is not known (or knowable) how commonly MP, maximum-likelihood or Bayesian inference are inaccurate. To test the perceived need for “sophisticated” model-based approaches, we assessed the degree of congruence between empirical phylogenetic hypotheses generated by alternative methods applied to DNA sequence data in a sample of 1000 recently published articles. Of 504 articles that employed multiple methods, only two exhibited strongly supported incongruence among alternative methods. This result suggests that the MP approach does not produce deviant hypotheses of relationship due to convergent evolution in long branches. Our finding therefore indicates that the use of multiple analytical methods is largely superfluous. We encourage the use of analytical approaches unencumbered by ad hoc assumptions that sap the explanatory power of the evidence. © The Willi Hennig Society 2010.
Deadline for applications 26 November 2010
This joint Wellcome Trust-EMBL-EBI advanced course aims to provide researchers with the theoretical knowledge and practical skills required to carry out molecular evolutionary analysis on their own data, as well as on data drawn from sequence databases. The course will combine basic assumptions and ideas fundamental to the field with discussion of cutting-edge methodologies, and is therefore relevant to researchers with a range of different experience levels.
Graduate Fellowships
The National Evolutionary Synthesis Center is now seeking to include graduate traineeship to our portfolio in facilitating broadly synthetic research to address fundamental questions in evolutionary science. We are offering one-semester fellowships for graduate students to pursue research either with a NESCent sabbatical scholar, working group, or postdoctoral fellow. The research should be in line with the goals of the sabbatical scholar and/or working group and may include integrating datasets, developing databases, performing analyses, programming and software development, etc. Support will not be provided to collect or generate new data. When relevant, graduate students are expected to be full members of working group. Ultimately we expect the graduate student to lead and author aspects of the research.
Read more >>> http://www.nescent.org/science/GraduateFellowships.php
Norman MacLeod and colleagues' call to develop automated species-identification systems is laudable (Nature 467, 154–155; 2010), but let's not forget a core feature of taxonomic work that depends on a scholar's input — the discovery of new characters.
Unexpected evolutionary novelties in morphology and physiology, for example, are what make taxonomic exploration rewarding. Taxonomists set out to discover and track such novelties and their evolutionary history. It is in this sense that taxonomy provides the empirical basis for understanding speciation and phylogeny.
There is a place for automated pattern detection, but it would not work with the 5,000 species of Drosophila, say, which are identified by their many different structures. Taxonomy can independently test and verify identifications without relying on patterns of single characters, as the long list of synonymies in any biological group testifies. The practice of taxonomic revision and publishing detailed monographs ensures that character distributions, species status and phylogenetic relationships are subject to repeated and critical testing.
We should beware the trend to confuse automatic identification tools with those that are useful for discovering new species. The emerging field of cybertaxonomy is an advance only if it is understood as enhancing and enabling theory-rich descriptive taxonomy, not replacing it.
As in many other modern scientific fields, including diagnostic medicine and molecular genetics, a final step involving a human expert is essential.
Help with the shortage of professional taxonomists needed to identify organisms (Nature 467, 154–155; 2010) may also come from an unexpected source — social networking on the Internet.
Through social networking, the identification process can be made more efficient while simultaneously spreading real taxonomic knowledge. The facility is available to anyone, unlike other technologies that require specialized equipment.
In its first year of operation, the website iSpot (http://ispot.org.uk) has helped 6,000 users to identify 25,000 sightings of some 2,500 species, from lichens to birds. The website works by linking experts (including amateur experts) with beginners through a sophisticated reputation system that encourages users to help and learn from each other.
Eventually, DNA bar-code matching and image recognition might be added to the tools available. But these will be aids, not replacements, for people learning how to identify species.

1Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Biodiversity Institute, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045, USA

Cesky Krumlov, Czech Republic
23 January - 4 February 2011, individual research session 4 - 11 February 2011
Application Deadline: 1 October 2009
http://www.molecularevolution.org/workshops/WME
Michael P. Cummings, Scott A. Handley and Naiara Rodriquez-Ezpeleta Co-Directors
The Workshop consists of a series of lectures, demonstrations and computer laboratories that cover various aspects of molecular evolution. Faculty are chosen exclusively for their effectiveness in teaching theory and practice in molecular evolution. Included among the faculty are developers and other experts in the use of computer programs and packages such as BLAST, BEAST, Clustal W and Clustal X, FASTA, FigTree, Genealogical Sorting Index, GARLI, LAMARC, MAFFT, Migrate-N, MrBayes, PAML, PAUP*, and SeaView who provide demonstrations and consultations.
The Annual New Zealand Phylogenetics Meeting
Sunday 6th - Friday 11th February, 2011The 15th annual New Zealand meeting on the interface of mathematics and biology in the study of phylogeny, genome analysis and molecular evolution will be held at Leigh. It will be summer in New Zealand, so expect temperatures in the mid-20s to 30s Celsius. There's heaps to do, including diving and fishing. More information on the Leigh By The Sea website.
The meeting will be held at the The Leigh Sawmill Café.
WEBSITE: http://www.math.canterbury.ac.nz/bio/events/leigh2011/

My mentor, hero and I hope friend, David Lee Hull died this morning, at the age of 74, according to Jay Odenbaugh.
If not for the fact that David marked my masters thesis and remarked that he hoped to see some of it published, I would never have considered myself competent enough to publish, and hence would never have ended up an academic (at the tender age of 48).
David Hull was one of the first graduates from the University of Indiana’s HPS program. During that program he attended a seminar with Karl Popper in the course of which he wrote a paper on essentialism in biology. Popper took it upon himself to send this, without telling Hull, to the BJPS, and the first David knew of it was when the proofs arrived. He hurriedly rewrote it (in ways Popper would not have approved, but Popper never read the final version, apparently) and it became the most cited paper of its time in the philosophy of biology.
Patricia Dávila-Arandaor by regular mail:
preferably by e-mail (pdavilaa@servidor.unam.mx)
Facultad de Estudios Superiores, Iztacala, UNAM8. Applicants will be informed by e-mail of receipt of their proposals.
Av. de los Barrios no. 1
Los Reyes Iztacala, Tlalnepantla
Edo. de México 54090
México

The My-Plant.org Team is happy to announce that we are officially launched! My-Plant is more than just another social networking site, it provides users with a unique mechanism for finding and associating with others who share common interests in specific plant clades.
My-Plant.org is not meant to supplant other networking, web or data sites. Rather, My-Plant.org is designed to bring together the people, tools and repositories of information from across the plant science community as a whole. My-Plant.org is an evolving community and we welcome feedback from the community.
Science 6 August 2010: | |
|

Topic: High Performance Computing for Phylogenetics
Meeting dates: October 13-15, 2010
Location: NIMBioS at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Co-sponsors: NIMBioS, iPlant, and National Institute for Computational Sciences
Tutorial leaders Eric Carr (NIMBioS); Jim Ferguson (National Institute for Computational Sciences, Univ. of Tennessee/Oak Ridge National Laboratory); Susan Holmes (Stanford Univ.); Brian O'Meara (Univ. Tennessee); Alexis Stamatakis (Technical Univ. of Munich); Dan Stanzione (Texas Advanced Computing Center/iPlant); Bob Thomson (Univ. California Davis); and James Wilgenbusch (Florida State Univ.)
Objectives: This tutorial focuses on how to use TeraGrid, the CIPRES Portal, the iPlant Discovery environment, university clusters, and other typically free HPC resources for phylogenetic analysis. The tutorial is geared primarily toward biologists (including students, postdocs and faculty) who are at least moderately experienced with phylogenetic analysis and who have datasets to run but who are typically running analyses on their own desktops, though other researchers, such as statisticians or mathematicians working in phylogenetics, are encouraged to apply. Learning can be enhanced for people applying as a team (such as a pairing of a biologist and a statistician who collaborate in their work).
MORE INFO HERE >>>