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Canadian Society for Ecology and Evolution Meeting 2017 With the Canadian Section, The Wildlife Society Victoria, BC | May 7 – 11 tion Can ad ia olu Ev n r Ecolog ty fo ya e i c nd o S na nn e die ia 201 7 Ca io lut o v ’É n S o c i été V ic to r d’Écolog ie e td Welcome Message Welcome to the CSEE’s 2017 General Meeting, the 12th in CSEE history. We are pleased to welcome Canada’s ecology and evolution research community to beautiful Victoria, British Columbia (within the traditional territories of the Lekwungen and WSANEC peoples), especially during the Spring season that is so marked by the glorious blooms of the local Garry Oak ecosystems. Be sure to get out and explore during your stay: there are many nearby local areas for getting to know Garry Oak ecosystem wildflowers (Beacon Hill Park is an excellent first stop), and the Victoria waterfront, especially from Ogden Point to Gonzales Point in Oak Bay, is excellent for birding. This year’s meeting brings together nearly 700 ecologists and evolutionary biologists from across Canada and around the world, and we have an exciting collection of symposiums, regular session talks, and posters. Of particular interest is the strong representation from Canadian graduate students and post-docs: be sure to check out the CSEE PhD Diversity and Excellence in Research Award winners in the Student Symposium on Monday, May 8th from 10:30 to 2:45 in the Victoria Conference Centre theatre. The 2017 conference is entirely volunteer run (the volunteers have been amazing and we are proud of what we've pulled together), and has been an enormous amount of work. You'll see volunteers around the VCC and the Royal BC Museum, identified by their "Volunteer" buttons. Feel free to ask questions. You will also see members of the media, identified by their "Media" buttons. Please feel free to talk to them about your research and teaching. We wish everyone a great conference, with lots of great science and new connections made, new ideas developed, and lots of energy for the year ahead! 2017 CSEE Organizing Committee President’s Welcome "Each year, the Canadian Society for Ecology and Evolution comes together for its annual meeting. While our society is a relatively young one, these meetings have become one of the best opportunities for researchers in our community to build networks, talk about discoveries, and find inspiration. Our science changes all the time, embracing new tools and techniques to construct, demolish, and reconstruct theories that explain the world around us. Our world is changing fast and in many ways. Whether through rapid evolution of antimicrobial resistance, changing population dynamics among our study species, or threats to biological diversity, our community makes extraordinary contributions to knowledge and, increasingly, to its application in practical terms. This latter point is worth emphasizing: the coin of the realm for researchers is excellence, but this currency can sometimes buy impact. Many evolutionary biologists, ecologists, and conservation researchers are excited about both discovery and the application of discovery to broader challenges at the science-policy interface. I think this is important for many reasons, not the least of which is that scientists must care - and be seen to care - about Canadian society, which funds them and their work. Fortunately, CSEE has never had a problem with engagement. After all, a founding purpose of CSEE is to raise public awareness of the importance of ecology and evolution to Canadian society. Another is to facilitate communication between CSEE members and decision-makers in the public, private, and non-governmental sectors. Our members are leading efforts to identify and protect species at risk through the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC), by working to bring evidence and transparency to environmental assessments, through sustained engagement and dialog with aboriginal communities, and through countless community presentations. CSEE’s researchers are making a difference. But CSEE’s first purpose is to promote the study of ecology and evolution in Canada. Sometimes, scientific excellence is the best ambassador. In 2016, three evolutionary biologists and ecologists were among Canada’s Steacie Fellowship winners - Elena Bennett, Mark Vellend, and Stephen Wright. Christian Landry’s work in experimental evolution earned him the same recognition in 2017. Our members constantly push the boundaries of knowledge outward, publishing papers, writing books, and helping younger colleagues to achieve more. For sustained excellence and countless contributions to science and the purposes of CSEE, I am especially excited to recognize Professor Sally Otto, the 2017 President’s Award winner. Sally is a world-leading researcher, a legendary mentor, and someone who makes a decisive difference to Canada. She has been one of the most eloquent and effective voices anywhere for using strong scientific evidence in protecting species at risk. She helped found the game-changing Liber Ero Fellowship Program for postdoctoral researchers and continues her service as its director. Despite all this leadership, impact, and brilliance, Sally is simply one of the kindest and most down-to-earth people I know. I could not be happier to have the chance to honour her contributions. CSEE 2017 promises to be thoroughly extraordinary. We have a terrific public science speaker, Dr. Anne Salomon, who will speak about adapting to ecological surprises. Our PhD Award winners will be recognized for remarkable achievements in research, selected from an historically competitive field of outstanding applicants. I am excited that we can share this meeting with a sister society, the Canadian Section of The Wildlife Society. We have everything in common and I hope we find ways to bring our groups together again in the future. Finally, Dr. Brian Starzomski has led the organization of this year’s annual meeting and deserves our profound gratitude. CSEE 2017 might break attendance records. If you’ve seen the list of field trips, it is easy to see why so many of us are assembling here! I am sure Brian would be the first to say that his team deserves enormous credit and I will thank members of the organizing committee for their efforts when I see them. I hope you will too. I look forward to meeting old friends and meeting many new ones over the course of this meeting. I can’t wait to hear about the many exciting things that our community has accomplished and what is coming soon. Have a wonderful time in Victoria! Jeremy T Kerr President, CSEE p.s. Your CSEE council has been working very hard on your behalf. I am deeply grateful for their leadership and the difference they make. -JTK" General Information CSEE2017 is a joint conference between the Canadian Society for Ecology and Evolution and the Canadian Section of The Wildlife Society. The conference will take place at the Victoria Conference Centre, 720 Douglas Street in Downtown Victoria, and in the Newcombe Hall of the Royal BC Museum across the street (675 Belleville Street). Sessions will run from 8am to after 5pm Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, with poster sessions from 4 to 6:15pm on Monday and Tuesday. There will be an associated reception with the poster sessions, and all posters will be available to view in the VCC’s Lower Pavilion on Monday and Tuesday (with beer in the afternoon! The poster sessions are sponsored by local microbreweries Phillips Brewery [phillipsbeer.com] and Victoria Caledonian Brewery & Distillery [vcaledonian.com]). Workshops and registration will happen on Sunday, with field trips to local ecosystems on Sunday and Thursday. See below for the full details poster and talks schedules. Coffee breaks will take place both within the level one of the VCC and the Lower Pavilion where the posters are displayed. Make sure to walk over there for coffee and check out the posters! Your talk should be uploaded on the day of your presentation, preferably before 745am in the room you are speaking in. Failing this, please make sure your talk is uploaded during the break before your session. Each talk should be uploaded to the laptop in the room - moderators may wish to organize files into folders before the session begins. Volunteers and/or AV technicians will be around to help with uploads. Talks must be in PowerPoint or PDF format, and will be run on Windows laptops - if there is time during upload, please check that your presentation formatting works ok on the conference laptops. Toavoidslowchangeoverbetweentalks,wewillnotallowpeopletousetheirownlaptops(e.g. noMacs,sorry). Youcandownloadtheconferencescheduleasanappathttp://cumulus.encore-us.com/with eventID0901-3348. Registration will be available on Sunday from 2pm to 8pm, at the registration desk in the Pre-function area of the Level One of the VCC. You can also register Monday starting at 7:30am. The banquet will take place at Harbour Towers Hotel, with doors open at 630pm. There will be a postbanquet after party on May 10th, 9 pm at the Bard and Banker in downtown Victoria. No registration is necessary, just show up for drinks and socializing: early if you like! For anyone who didn't grab a banquet ticket before they sold out, get a head start on the party! The Bard and Banker has an excellent dinner menu and a great ambiance. Your Local Organizing Committee Brian Starzomski (chair) Sarah Friesen Jake Fisher William Halliday Don Kramer Lia Chalifour Aerin Jacob Cameron Freshwater Alina Fisher Frances Stewart Gillian Fraser Sandra Frey Cole Burton Sara Wickham James Robinson Nancy Shackelford Erica Wheeler SWEEET Organizers: Sandra Frey, Frances Stewart, Risa Sargent French translations: Karine Lacroix We would like to thank the following volunteers Chris Darimont Julie Fortin Wiebe Nijland Kristina Tietjen Morgan Black Erin Rechsteiner Julia Amerongen Maddison Stefania Gorgopa Trevor Lantz Garth Covernton Rod Davis Luba Reshitnyk Emily Rubidge Jeff MacAdams Andrew Bateman Joel Gibson Becky Miller Ricki-Lee Jewell Tom Iwanicki Erin Tattersall Owen Fitzpatrick Desiree Bulger Josh Silberg Jamie McDevitt-Irwin Jason Straka Rana El-Sabaawi Jennifer Magel Jessica Holden Francis Juanes Jessica Holden Map of Downtown Victoria: Explore! Transportation Many people are staying at the University of Victoria. Buses #4 and #7 will take you directly from campus to the Victoria Conference Centre. Bus #14 and #15 will take you within a 5 minute walk of the VCC. An all-day bus pass costs $5. Map of the Victoria Conference Centre Level One (majority of conference events, including poster session) Level Two (conference events on Tuesday: Sidney, Colwood, and View Royal rooms) Congratulations to the winners of the CSEE PhD Diversity and Excellence in Research Award! This award celebrates the excellent work done by doctoral students in our society on a diverse array of questions in ecology and evolution. Award winners are in the final stages of their PhD and have stood out at this early stage in their careers as being top-caliber scientists and leaders. Come watch this year’s winners present their work at the Graduate Award Symposium on Monday May 8th (10:30 am - 3 pm in the VCC Theatre) Isabelle LaforestLapointe Université de Montréal Norah Brown Tess Grainger University of British University of Columbia Toronto Tiago Simões University of Alberta Honorary Mentions: Kathryn Anderson (UBC) Joey Bernhardt (UBC) Aneesh Bose (McMaster) Sean Boyle (Laurentian) Sean Godwin (Simon Fraser) Rosalyn Kilgour (Guelph) Zilong Ma (Lakehead) Rebekah Oomen (Dalhousie) Gabriel Pigeon (Sherbrooke) Alana Schick (Ottawa) Benoit Talbot (Western) Evelyn Jensen University of British Columbia, Okanagan Congratulations to the 2017 Early Career Award Winners The CSEE Early Career Awards recognize outstanding accomplishments and promising future research potential in ecology and evolution by scientists early in their careers. We are delighted to announce that the recipients for the 2017 awards are Dr. Emily Darling, from the University of Toronto and the Wildlife Conservation Society, and Dr. Sean Anderson, from the University of Washington. Dr. Anderson and Dr. Darling will give their award lectures Wednesday afternoon between 2 and 3pm in the VCC theatre. Sean Anderson Sean is a quantitative population biologist who links theory with data through statistical and simulation models to improve predictions about ecological systems and inform management and policy decisions. In particular, he is interested in how we can estimate population status with limited data and in the role of variance, risk, and extreme events in population dynamics. Because these problems are complex, a large part of his research involves method and software development and is often highly collaborative. His work spans across taxa (e.g. birds, moths, grizzly bears, sea cucumbers, salmon), ecosystems (marine, freshwater, terrestrial), methods (empirical, simulation, theoretical), spatial scale (regional, national, global), and time periods (modern, historical, paleontological). Emily Darling Emily is a community ecologist and conservation biologist who is motivated to understand how human activities are altering coastal and marine ecosystems. Her research focuses on three interrelated themes: quantifying interactions between multiple stressors and the prevalence of ecological synergies, coral life histories and trajectories of community change on coral reefs, and managing marine ecosystems for resilience to climate change. Her work integrates multiple approaches, ranging from literature reviews, meta-analyses, and statistical analyses of long-term monitoring data, to quantitative field experiments and socio-economic surveys to understand the complex ecological dynamics of coastal systems. Congratulations to the 2017 CSEE President’s Award Winner Dr. Sally Otto CanadianSocietyforEcologyandEvolution Sociétécanadienned’écologieetd’évolution President’sAward/PrixduPrésident 2017 SarahOtto UniversityofBritishColumbia Inrecognitionofsustainedexcellenceincontributionsto EcologyandEvolutionandthegoalsofthe CanadianSocietyforEcologyandEvolution Dr. Otto will give her award lecture Sunday evening at 6:30pm in the VCC theatre Congratulations to the 2016 Student Presentation Award Winners (CSEE 2016, St. John’s Newfoundland) Best oral presentation: Rebecca Batstone, University of Toronto Root foraging and mutualism-stabilizing traits in the model legume Medicago truncatula Kira Hoffman, University of Victoria A human-driven and climate-influenced fire regime over the past seven centuries in a coastal temperate rainforest, British Columbia, Canada Ruth Rivkin, University of Toronto Mississauga The role of sexual system and latitude on insect herbivory rates in Sagittaria latifolia (Alismataceae) New Phytologist Prize: Kenneth Thompson, University of Toronto Urbanization drives parallel adaptive clines in plant populations Poster presentation: First place: Hayley Alloway, Memorial University Physiological evidence for alternative reproductive strategies in men Second place: Jesse Hoage, Laurentian University Developing a metabarcoding strategy for soil mesofaunal communities to monitor the ecological impacts of intensified biomass harvesting in forestry We wish to thank our sponsors Food and Drinks near the Victoria Conference Centre This is only a small selection of places to visit, and there are plenty of other pubs and restaurants of all types to enjoy throughout Victoria. Fort Street, just up the hill from the VCC, is an excellent place to look for food at lunch, especially the blocks between Douglas and Blanshard Streets. $ - under $10 CND $$ - $11 to $30 CND $$$ - $31 to $60 CND Dinner Restaurants Ebizo, $$ Victoria’s best sushi. Small space so make a reservation if possible. 604 Broughton Street Walking time: 5 min Rebar, $$ Fun and bustling restaurant with vegan, vegetarian, and fish options. Extensive cocktail menu. 50 Bastion Square Walking time: 8 min Pho Vuong, $ No-nonsense and delicious Vietnamese food. Vegan stock available for pho dishes. 622 Fisgard Street Walking time: 14 min 10 Acres, $$ Farm-to-table cuisine in a friendly and fun atmosphere. 614 Humboldt Street / 620 Humboldt Street / 611 Courtney Street Walking time: 3 min / 3 min / 4 min Northern Quarter, $$ Great cocktail and beer selections and really tasty food. However, portions are small so don’t come hungry! Upbeat live bands and trivia depending on the night. 1724 Douglas Street Walking time: 13 min Tapa Bar, $$ Cozy Spanish bistro with an extensive small plates menu and fully loaded bar. Also boasts a small but great patio if the weather is cooperating. Sangria! 620 Trounce Alley Walking time: 8 min Be Love, $$ The food is really good in this aggressively healthy restaurant that offers mostly vegan fare. 1019 Blanshard Street Walking time: 7 min Bin 4 Burger Lounge, $$ Gourmet burgers made with local ingredients. A mix and match menu means everyone in your group will leave happy. 50% off burgers (with drink purchase) after 9pm. 911 Yates Street Walking time: 16 min Cafe Brio, $$$ Italian inspired west coast cuisine with an excellent wine list, top-notch food, and great service. Order half portions of the food so that you can try all the dishes! Knowledgeable biologist bartender: you may want to sit at the bar. Reservations recommended. 944 Fort Street Walking time: 13 min Il Terrazzo, $$$ A rustic Italian restaurant known for its gourmet comfort food, extensive wine list, and romantic ambiance. It’s a hidden gem in Waddington Alley between Yates and Johnson Street, so don’t miss it! 555 Johnson Street Walking time: 12 min Brewpubs and Pubs Spinnakers Gastro Brewpub, $$ A Victoria institution and one of Canada’s original Brewpubs, founded in 1984. In addition to their large selection of delicious beers April 28th - May 7th is BC Cider Week at Spinnakers, so head over to check it out before the conference! A pleasant 20-30 minute walk along the harbour walkway from downtown gets you to Spinnaker’s in Vic West. 308 Catherine Street Walking time: 25 min The Drake Eatery, $$ Very extensive and eclectic craft beer selection, small pub-style menu serving local and organic foods. Often busy, but a very relaxed and friendly atmosphere. 517 Pandora Avenue Walking time: 13 min Canoe Brewpub, $$ A great option for large groups. Huge patio, good food and beers. Live music on select nights of the week. 450 Swift Street Walking time: 16 min The Churchill, $$ One of the best beer selections in Victoria wrapped in a slick atmosphere and served with some tasty small food plates. 1140 Government Street Walking time: 7 min Garrick’s Head Pub, $$ English style pub with a huge beer selection and a menu packed with all your pub favorites plus some. 66 Bastion Square Walking time: 8 min Smith’s Bar and Restaurant, $$ A dim, snug locals pub on the with good drink specials, especially during “friendly hour” from 8-10pm. Popular late night spot. 777 Courtney Street Walking time: 5 min Swan’s Brewpub, $$ Character brewpub and home to an amazing collection of First Nation’s artwork. A large sun room patio allow for “outdoor” seating even on cool, windy days. 506 Pandora Avenue Walking time: 13 min The Guild, $$ A charming brewpub serving a delightful fusion of west coast and classic British pub fare and featuring locally farmed meats and veg. 2 for 1 snacks from 3-5pm. Moderately-sized but varied craft beer selection. 1250 Wharf Street Walking time: 10 min The Mint, $$ Delicious Himalayan and fusion eatery with mint-based cocktails and evening DJ’s. 1414 Douglas Street Walking time: 9 min Yates Street Taphouse, $$ Sports bar because Hockey! 759 Yates St. Walking time: 8 mins Coffee Caffe Fantastico TRE, $$ 810 Humboldt Street Walking time: 5 min Sequoia Coffee, $ 675 Belleville Street (inside the RBCM) Walking time: 2 min Picnic, $ 506 Fort Street Walking time: 8 min Habit Coffee Atrium / Chinatown, $$ 808 Yates Street / 552 Pandora Avenue Walking time: 13 min / 11 min Discovery Coffee, $ 1001 Blanshard St / 281 Menzies St / 664 Discovery St Walking time: 7 min / 9 min / 16 min Union Pacific Coffee, $ 537 Herald Street Walking time: 16 min Hey Happy Coffee, $$ 560 Johnson Street (Market Square) Walking time: 12 min Wild Coffeehouse and Bistro, $ 632 Yates Street Walking time: 9 min Lunch Foo Ramen Bar, $$ Yummy asian street food, beers and ciders are served in this cute and small joint. Outside patio seating available. 762 Broughton Street Walking time: 6 min intimidatingly long line but if you have time it’s worth it and moves faster than you’d expect. 1006 Wharf Street Walking time: 6 min Royal BC Museum’s Year-long Food Truck Festival, $ Outdoor food court featuring local food trucks: DeadBeetz (Burgers), Puerto Vallarta Amigos (Mexican), The Love Perogy (perogies), and Yummy Truck (sandwiches, shawarmas and more). Option Monday - Saturday from 11am 3pm. 576 Belleville Street (RBCM) Walking time: 2 min Tacofino, $$ Really popular non-traditional Mexican joint. Hefty burritos for those who are hungry. Fast service. Not much seating so a great lunch-togo option. 787 Fort Street Walking time: 7 min Fishhook, $$ Extremely fresh seafood dishes with an Indian twist. Its reasonable prices and ample portions make this a great spot for lunch or dinner. Seating is tight, so not recommended for large groups. 805 Fort Street Walking time: 9 min La Taqueria Pinche Taco Shop, $$ Another popular and delicious mexican joint serving authentic style tacos, burritos, cervezas and margaritas. Try the rajas con crema taco, yum! On taco Wednesday you can buy 4 tacos and get 2 free (they are small tacos so this is not an overly gluttonous deal)! 766 Fort Street Walking time: 8 min The Pink Bicycle, $$ Gourmet burger joint that advocates for locally sourced and sustainable ingredients. Consistently delicious and healthy (for a burger). 1008 Blanshard Street Walking time: 7 min Green Cuisine, $$ A Victoria institution, for vegetarians at least. Super healthy, vegetarian buffet. Self-serve by weight -- so don’t get the heavy stuff! Ask for their student discount. 560 Johnson Street (Market Square) Walking time: 12 min Famous Original, $ Tasty, large slices of NY style pizza and more options for greasy but delicious sides and sandwiched. Cheap beer! 538 Yates Street Walking time: 10 min Red Fish Blue Fish, $$ Waterfront food truck with fresh and sustainably caught fish tacos and burgers and oyster sandwiches. Usually features an Chorizo & Co. Spanish Eatery, $ A mash-up of a deli, café, and restaurant with Spanish flair. Great for breakfast, lunch, and dinner (open until 10pm on weekends!). 807 Fort Street Walking time: 9 min Brunch Jam, $$ Modern comfort food (chicken and waffles, etc) served in huge portions. Quite often this restaurant has long lines (indicating good food?) so go early. 542 Herald Street Walking time: 15 min Mo:Lé, $$ An upbeat café with a local and organic focus. It is a popular spot so there’s usually a bit of a wait, but you can wait in comfort at Habit Coffee next door (with a coffee!). Many vegan, vegetarian, and gluten-free options. 554 Pandora Ave Walking time: 13 min The Blue Fox Cafe, $$ A bright and busy restaurant offering huge portions of breakfast, brunch, and lunch favorites (eggs benny, pancakes, etc). Go before 9 am for a great deal on their breakfast special of the day. 919 Fort Street Walking time: 12 min Shine Cafe, $$ A small but popular restaurant with tasty, classic breakfast and lunch items. Sides include Scottish potato scones and cornbread. 1320 Blanshard St Walking time: 12 min Nourish Kitchen & Cafe, $$ Health conscious, local, organic foods and drinks on a rotating seasonal menus. The restaurant and cafe are located on the first floor of a funky character home. The second floor of the house is open to cafe patrons and feature loads of comfy nooks for chatting or studying. 225 Quebec Street Walking time: 11 min John’s Place, $$ A quirky all-day breakfast diner with friendly staff and vintage décor. Their huge menu offers great eggs benny, pancakes, and even scrambled eggs with perogies! 723 Pandora Ave Walking time: 11 min Honorable mention Cook Street Village Located close to downtown Victoria, Beacon Hill Park, and Dallas Road beachfront, this neighbourhood boasts several popular Victoria eateries including The Beagle Pub, Pizzeria Primastrada, Rica Mexican, and the excellent Big Wheel Burger. Grab your food to go and wander down to the beach and enjoy one of the best picnic locations in Victoria! Walking time: 15-20 mi Public Science Talk: Dr. Anne Salomon, Simon Fraser University Monday, 630pm, Victoria Conference Centre Theatre (and simulcast to nearby rooms) Adapting to Surprise in Our Coastal Oceans: Lessons from Kelp Forests, Ancient Clam Gardens and Pacific Herring Ecological surprises challenge science and society. While emerging evidence points to the existence of abrupt shifts in ecosystems worldwide, predicting when and where they will occur is notoriously difficult because unraveling their mysteries requires understanding both ecological and social phenomena that occur across different scales of space and time. By drawing on examples from British Columbia’s kelp forests, ancient clam gardens and Pacific herring, while gleaning insights from ecological, archaeological and traditional knowledge, I will share our recent discoveries on these tipping points, how humans coped with them in the past, and how these strategies can inspire and catalyze solutions to the world’s environmental challenges of today. Program Sessions: Workshops and Symposiums Sciencecommunication101 Thishalf-dayhands-onworkshopwill teach you key science communication principles and strategies to communicate your research to the public. First, we will learn & discuss how to explain complex subjects to non-expert audiences and how to work with journalists. Second, participants will choose one of two more in-depth sessions on 1) using social media (with David Shiffman), or 2) narrative storytelling (with Aerin Jacob). By the end of this workshop, you will know the basics of communicating science to non-expert audiences and where to find more information. The workshop will be held 8-11 am on Sunday, May 7 in downtown Victoria. Cost is $25 (let us know if this prevents you from participating), space is limited. Sunday8am–11am(RoyalBCMuseum,NewcombeHall) SWEEET(SymposiumforWomenEnteringEcology&EvolutionToday)— Fortheir2017theme“Addressinggenderbiasinecologyandevolution”,SWEEETwill hostaworkshopforindividualsofallgenderstolearnabouttherolethatimplicitgenderbias playsinthescientificlandscape.Ourgoalistoprovideaninformativesessionwhereparticipants firstlearnabouttheroleofgenderbiasininstitutionalsettings,includingitseffectsonkey aspectsofcareerbuilding,suchasrecruitmentandevaluation.Wehavedesignedthesymposium toincludealargeamountoftimetodiscusstheworkshopmaterial,aswehavelearnedfrompast yearsthatthisisoneofthebestwaystolearnfromourpanelists,audiencemembers,andtheir experiences. Sunday11am–3pm(RoyalBCMuseum,NewcombeHall) RWorkshop(MapsandSpatialDatawithR)– Thisworkshopsessionwillintroduceparticipantstodatavisualizationwiththesoftware applicationR,withafocusonspatialdata.BriefintroductionstoRpackagesthatareusefulfor makingmaps,andforhandlingandvisualizingspatialdatawillbeincluded.Wewillbeginwith someRbasics,andwillthenmoveontomorespecializedmethods.Theworkshopwillbebased ontheimplementationofexamples.NopriorexperiencewithRisrequired. Sunday3pm-6pm,SaanichRoom,VictoriaConferenceCentre MentalHealthinAcademia– Aimedatcurrentstudents,postdoctoralfellows,faculty,andanyoneinterested,thisworkshop willdiscussmethodsforstayinghealthyandhappyinthemidstofacademicpressure. Sunday3pm-6pm,OakBayRoom,VictoriaConferenceCentre Thisyear,thestudentStrategiesforSuccessworkshopwilltakeplaceatGarrick'sHeadpub onMay9that7pm.Theeventisstructuredasanumberoftableswithonetopicaddressedat each,suchas:findingscholarshipopportunitiesandwritingscholarshipapplications,choosing wheretodoyourMSc/PhD/PDF(whatthingstolookforinalabandalocation),advicefor studentshopingtodoadegree/post-docabroad,academicjobapplications(researchand teachingpositions),careersingovernment/industry,tipsforwritingyourMSc/PhDthesis, creatingwork/lifebalance,jugglingkidsandacademiccareers,andsciencepolicy.Betweenone andthreefacultymembers,postdoctoralfellows,orpeoplewithnon-academicpositionsare assignedtoeachtopic.Workshopattendeescanthenmovearoundthedifferenttopicsthatthey areinterestedin(speed-datingstyle).Thisworkshopisdesignedtobeasafespacewhere studentsandpostdocscanaskquestionsandreceiveadvicefromexperiencedpeopleinarelaxed ambience.Thiseventhasbeenabigsuccessinthepast,andagreatopportunityfornetworking. Pleasenotethatthereisamaximumcapacitytothepub,sopleasemakesuretoregisteronline beforehand. -MélanieJeanandJulieLee-Yaw,yourCSEEstudentandpostdocreps CSEE2017 Symposia Insights of evolution Living in the eco-evolutionary theatre: Research guided and inspired by intensive field observations Complex coevolution: Understanding how coevolution may operate differently across diverse interaction types, systems, and scales Using experimental evolution to reveal the eco-evolutionary impacts of global change Ecological epigenetics Methods in ecology Uncertainty in ecology and conservation Remote camera networks to scale up ecological insights and conservation applications Exploring the roles of mechanistic and phenomenological models in ecology Natural history collections: A source and sink for ecological and evolutionary research Species and community interactions Metacommunity theory for real-world communities: Theoretical and empirical advances for trophic metacommunities Host-associated microbes: From protective microbes to pathogens Sensory and behavioural ecology Ecological and evolutionary dynamics in fluctuating environments Understanding sensitive ecological communities Consequences of rapid ecological change in mountain ecosystems Seagrass ecology and conservation along Pacific and Atlantic coasts Conservation challenges associated with aquatic soundscapes Ecology and evolution in a changing climate Canadian protected areas in a changing climate: A cross-ecosystem approach Species interactions in a warming world Life on the edge: Mechanisms of adapting to climate change The broader context Ecology and evolution in a social context The tension between science and advocacy in ecology, evolution, and conservation biology Linking environmental law and science Accelerating urban ecology in Canada: Identifying current research approaches, gaps, and needs in Canadian cities Ecological, evolutionary and environmental synthesis in the 21st century Field Trips Urban Ecology Walking Tour: May 11th FREE Join naturalist Thomas Munson (Environmental Technician, City of Victoria Parks) on an hour and a half walking tour through the crowning jewel of Victoria’s parks system: Beacon Hill Park. This site, which extends from the downtown core all the way to the Strait of Juan de Fuca, is rich in cultural significance to the Lekwungen First Nations People, whose past landscape management techniques cultivated the many of the natural features we see there today. Tour highlights will include stops at the Great Blue Heron nesting site (bring your binoculars), a visit to camas gardens (in bloom throughout May), and opportunities to view rare and endangered plant species (bring your camera)! The cost is free and maps and plant guidebooks will be provided. Please email [email protected] to register for this field trip. Ecology and Restoration of Garry Oak Ecosystems: May 7th [FULL] Garry oak ecosystems are among the most endangered habitats in Canada – reduced to less than 5% of their historic range. Visit two sites where degraded areas have been restored to biodiversity hotspots. At Fort Rodd Hill National Historic Site, Parks Canada has converted one acre of lawn into a diverse wildflower meadow and woodland. The Haliburton Biodiversity Project features the conversion of a reed canary grass monoculture and agronomic grass field to diverse herbaceous meadow habitat. Both sites operate nurseries growing native plants for local recovery efforts. Gulf Islands National Park Reserve, Sidney Spit (SKŦÁMEN): May 11th [FULL] Join Parks Canada scientists as they share their experiences conducting restoration in the Salish Sea. Two projects will be highlighted: 1) ecological restoration of a coastal sands ecosystem; and, 2) ecocultural restoration of Coast Salish clam gardens. There is no dock on Sidney Island and access will be via boat (rigid hull inflatable) landing on the beach. Attendees will have to crawl over the boat hull. Additionally, there are no trails on Sidney island. This trip is not recommended for people with mobility issues. Botanical Beach and Avatar Grove: May 11th [FULL] Only a few hours from Victoria, the beautiful Botanical Beach in the Juan de Fuca Provincial Park is rich with intertidal life and fantastic geological features. Just off the shore, grey whales, orcas, sealions, and harbor seals are common sights. Join scientists exploring the tide pools, followed by a trip to Avatar Grove, one of the remaining stands of old growth coastal forest on Vancouver Island. The magnificent forest, located in the traditional territory of the Pacheedaht First Nation, houses massive, twisting red cedars and Douglas firs. These trees represent some of the oldest on this coastline, reaching up to 1,000 years of age and 40+ feet in circumference. Species-at-risk hotspot Trial Island Ecological Reserve: May 11th [FULL] Trial Island Ecological Reserve off the coast of Victoria houses one of the most outstanding known assemblages of rare and endangered plant species in BC. The reserve comprises parts of two elongated rocky islands and associated islets. Twenty-eight species of vascular plants listed as rare in British Columbia are present in the reserve, 15 of which are in the categories of greatest rarity in the province. The reserve also encompasses a traditional First Nations and Songhees bulb harvesting site. We have been granted special permission from Parks Canada to visit the island, and in exchange we will be spending a few hours in the morning pruning invasive plant species (mostly English ivy). There is no dock on Trial Island and access will be via boat (rigid hull inflatable) landing on the beach. Attendees will have to crawl over the boat hull. Additionally, there are no trails on Trial island. This trip is not recommended for people with mobility issues. Royal BC Museum Collections Tour: May 11th FREE The Royal BC Museum is dedicated to preserving and sharing the human and natural histories of British Columbia. The museum hosts an impressive assembly of ichthyology, herpetology, ornithology, mammalogy, paleontology, invertebrate zoology, entomology, and botany collections. CSEE 2017 conference attendees are invited to take a one-hour behind-the-scenes tour of select natural history collections guided by Royal BC Museum curators, collection managers, and research associates. Poster Presentations Posters will be on display all day Monday and Tuesday (8-9 May), but presenters are only required to stand with their posters from 4:00 to 6:15 PM on the day that they are assigned. The numbers below match the numbers assigned to poster boards in the Lower Pavilion at the Victoria Conference Centre. Presenters with even numbers (i.e., 2, 4, 6, ..., 98) will be at their posters on Monday, 8 May, and presenters with odd numbers (i.e., 1, 3, 5, …, 99) will be at their posters on Tuesday, 9 May. Poster presenters can set up their posters as early as 2:00 PM on Sunday, 7 May. All posters must be taken down by 7 PM on Tuesday, 9 May. Poster dimensions must be 120 × 120 cm or smaller. 1. SamuelStarko,PatrickMartone.Allometricscalinginkelps:Size-dependentpatterns, 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. covariation,andtheimportanceofhabitat. StevenAnderson,BruceFord,-AnneWorley.Diversityincreaseswithlatitudeforspringemergingplantsandinsects:implicationsforreproductionintherewardlessorchid, Cypripediumcandidum. LouisAstorg,AndrewHendry,AlisonDerry.Incorporatingevolutionintoinvasionbiology: Nativespeciespersistenceinfaceofexoticinvasion. JiaxinBai,MelaniaCristescu.TheeffectofpHonDaphniapulex,Daphniapulicariaand Daphniapulex-pulicaria. IsabelBarrio,DavidHik,JóhannÞórsson,K.Svavarsdottir,I.SigþrúðurJónsdóttir.11,000 yearsofsheepgrazinginIceland:Canstate-and-transitionmodelsimproveour understandingofecologicalprocesses? DavidBeauchesne,KévinCazelles,GuillaumeBlanchet,DominiqueGravel,Philippe Archambault.Predictingthespatialdistributionofecologicalnetworks. BeatrixBeisner,AlexandreLanglais-Bourassa,LaurentFraser.Metacommunitystructure andbiodiversityinurbanstreams. KazuhiroBessho,HisashiOhtsuki,AkiraSasaki.Evolutionofenergysupplyfromhaploid gametophytesto diploidsporophytesinmacroalgaeandterrestrialplants. CoryBishop,LoriGraham.Ananalysisofthemicrobiomeofeggmassesofasalamanderthat formsasymbiosiswithunicellulargreenalgae. LéaBlondel,SandraKlemet-N’Guessan,MarilynScott,AndrewHendry.Justkeepswimming: Rheotaxisbehaviorofwildguppiesvariesalongrivergradients. MannfredBoehm,DarioOjeda,QuentinCronk.Dissectingthebacon-and-eggsphenotype: TranscriptomicsoffloralcolourchangeinLotus. MaegwinBonar,EricVanderWal,KeithLewis.Implicationsofdecliningpopulationsizeon seasonalaggregationinagregariousungulate. ColeBrachmann,GuillermoHernandezRamirez,DavidHik.Doabioticconditionsinfluence alpineplantgrowthinrecently-deglaciatedterrain? StevenBrady,KateMacneale.Thepromiseandpitfallsofabioticindicatorasviewed throughtwodecadesofstreamhealthmonitoring. DanielBuonaiuto.Floral-foliatephenologicalpatternsofdeciduouswoodyplantsinanera ofglobalchange. 16. DoreenCabrera,D.Andres,PhillipMcLoughlin,LucieDebeffe,SarahMedill,AlastairWilson, 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. JocelynPoissant.Repeatabilityofflightinitiationdistanceandhabituationinalarge herbivore. JuliCarrillo,XiaohongLi,MichaelGarvey,IanKaplan,BaopingLi.Domesticationoftomato hasdisruptedattractionofherbivorenaturalenemiestopest-damagedplants. CatherineChamberlain.Theeffectsoffalsespringeventsonfoliatephenophasesandthe durationofvegetativerisk. AlexChubaty,EliotMcIntire,BarryCooke,SteveCumming,YongLuo.Borealinsect disturbanceinSpaDES:Anintegratedsimulationmodelofmountainpinebeetleeastward spread. SheilaColla,JennyMcCune,AnjaCarlsson,SheilaColla,ChristinaDavy,BrettFavaro,Adam Ford,KevinFraser,EduardoMartins.Assessingpubliccommitmenttoendangeredspecies protection:ACanadiancasestudy. GregoireCortial,GescheWinkler,RyanWoodland.Geneticheterogeneityofthecoastal foragespeciesNeomysisamericana. VanessaCraig.Thinkoutsidetheuniversity:Professionalbiologistsguidemanagementin BC! JohnCristiani,MaryO’Connor.Alarvaldispersalmodelforunderstandingseagrasshabitat connectivity. AnnaCrofts,CarissaBrown.Borealconifergerminationandseedlingestablishmentacross substrates:Alaboratoryapproachtoexaminingsubstratesuitability. MarkDale,TanBao.Structureandfunctionofecologicalnetworks:Insightsfromgraphlet analyses. SarahSchroeder,LeannaBoyer,FrancisJuanes,MayciraCosta.RemotesensingofBullkelp (Nereocystisleutkeana)intheSalishSeausinghighresolutionsatelliteimagery. CharlottedeKeyzer,NicoleRafferty,JamesThomson.Canpollinationfacilitateplantrange shiftsunderclimatechange? AlisonDerry,StéphanieGuernon,ChristianZimmerman,HeidiSwanson.Climatechange impactsonMeHgbioaccumulationinWesternArcticlakes:Theroleofcommunity compositonandallochthonyincrustaceanzooplankton. PaulineDeschodt,AlanaBreitkreutz,JennyCory.Multiplepathogeninteractions:Ishost nutritionagamechanger? ChristopherEckert,StephanieGreer,StephenWright.Doesadramaticgenome-wide reductioningeneticdiversitysuggesttheevolutionofself-fertilizationviareproductive assuranceinaPacificcoastalduneplant? DavidEnsing,ChristopherEckert.Analysisofmorphological,phenological,andfitness relatedtraitsrevealsvaryingselectionacrosstheelevationaldistributionofyellowrattle (RhinanthusminorL.Orobanchaceae). OwenFitzpatrick,MorganHocking,ChrisDarimont,JohnReynolds,BrianStarzomski.Atest ofsubsidizedislandbiogeographywithinsularplantcommunities. KatieFlorko,GregoryThiemann,MarshaBranigan,JodiePongracz,JeffreyBromaghin.Has seaicelossaffectedthedietcompositionofpolarbears(Ursusmaritimus)inthewestern CanadianArctic? JulieFortin,EricHiggs.Biodiversitychangethroughrepeatphotography. GillianFraser,JasonFisher,JohnVolpe.Motherknowsbest?Implicationsoffemalecaribou habitatselectiononcariboucalfsurvival. 36. ManuelGonzález,JonathanRamiro,EloySánchez,AlbertoGil,MaríaFúster.Managing 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. human-greatcarnivoresconflictsinahighlyhumanizedlandscape:theCantabrianMountains (NWSpain). NatalieRideout,ZacchaeusCompson,DonaldBaird.Pictureperfect?Useofimagingsoftware asarapidtoolforassessingcommunitybodysizedistributionsofbenthicmacroinvertebrate samples. DerekGray,JordanRead,SimonHook,PhillipSchneider,JohnLenters,CatherineO'Reilly, SapnaSharma,StephanieHampton.Impactofmeasurementfrequencyanddatagapsonthe calculationoflakewarmingtrends. JemmaGreen.Ifyoubuildit,willtheycome?Evaluatingtheconservationpotentialof developedlandscapesforaquatic-breedingamphibians. ArielGreiner,PatrickThompson,AndrewGonzalez.Habitatconnectivityimpactsecosystem functioning. HilaryHamilton,LouisGosselin.Theroleofmotilityonstresstoleranceandontologyin intertidalmarineinvertebrates. VincentHanlon,SallyAitken.DosomaticmutationsspeeduptheevolutionofSitkaspruce? BarbaraHawkins,RamniqueUbhi,JohnKranabetter.Variationininorganicnitrogenuptake capacityamongectomycorrhizalfungalspecies. TravisHeckford,JeffShatford.Silviculturalprescriptions:Implicationsforwildlifehabitatin BC’stemperaterainforest. TravisHeckford.Ataleoftwotrees:Stoichiometryofbalsamfirandwhitebirchinthe borealforest. DavidHik,IsabelBarrio,GuillermoBueno,IngibjörgJónsdóttir,MartinMörsdorf,Virve Ravolainen,EevaSoininen.Advancingresearchonherbivoryinarcticandalpineecosystems. DezeneHuber,LisaPoirier.Anassessmentofthediversityofground-dwellinginvertebrates inthreeurbanland-usetypesincentralBritishColumbia. BriannaIwabuchi,LouisGosselin.Oneisland,twoclimates:Marinespeciesoneastandwest coastsofVancouverIslandexperiencedifferentclimateconditions. DeborahJenkins,GlennYannic,JamesSchaefer,JamesConolly,JustinaRay,NicolasLecomte. Populationstructureofcaribouinanice-boundarchipelago. NatalieJones,JonathanShurin.Non-nativepredatorsalternovelcommunitydynamics. KatrinaKaur,MeganFrederickson.Doant-plantmutualismsdrivediversificationinants? AliceKenney,CharlesKrebs,PetraVillette.Cancameratrapsbeusedtoestimatewildlife abundanceinYukonborealforest? DeanKoch,SubhashLele,MarkLewis.SpatialMarkovmodelforMountainPineBeetle outbreaksinBC. MichelLaforge,EricVanderWal.Consistentindividualdifferencesintrackingforage phenology.*PresentingonTuesday. GenevièveLajoie,StevenKembel.Identifyingleadingaxesofvariationamongmicrobes: Lessonsfromplantandanimalecology. RobertLalonde,JamieMacEwan.Doesthehostmatter?DistributionoftheEurytoma spongiosacomplexamongtwospeciesoflocallyco-occurringhost. MylesLamont,DavidHancock.Poles,platformsandpoplars:Buildingraptormitigationnests inBritishColumbia. 58. JeffreyLane,AndrewMcAdam,ErynMcFarlane,CoryWilliams,MurrayHumphries,David 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. Coltman,JamiesonGorrell,StanBoutin.Theredsquirrel'sclimatechangerelationship:It's complicated. AbigailLeeper,JaleneLamontagne.Reproductivetrade-offsinamastseedingspecies. BaileyLei,DiegoCarmona,MarcJohnson.Theeffectsofplantsexontheevolutionof phenotypicplasticityinplantdefences. JaymeLewthwaite,AmyAngert,StevenKembel,SimonGoring,JonathanDavies,Arne Mooers,FelixSperling,StevenVamosi,JanaVamosi,JeremyKerr.Butterflyclimatedebtis significantandmoderatedonlybyrangesize. QinLi,DenaGrossenbacher,AmyAngert.Nichedivergencedrivenbyrangeoverlapandtime inMimulus. FranceLiboiron,JustineAmmendolia,JessicaMelvin,JacquelynSaturno,MaxLiboiron.A zeropercentplasticingestionratebysilverhake(Merlucciusbilinearis)fromthesouthcoast ofNewfoundland,Canada. AmandaLiczner,SheilaColla.Assessingat-riskbumblebeehabitatinOntarioforthe conservationofdecliningspecies. JessicaMacSween,KenOakes,ShawnLeroux.Effectsofhyperabundantmooseonstream ecosystemfunctioninginCapeBretonHighlandsNationalPark. RonanMarrec,MajidIravani,BrankoHricko,JahanKariyeva,HeleneWagner.Characterizing land-usedriversofthemultiscalelandscapeconnectivityinAlberta,Canada. GillianMartin,FrédéricChain,NicolasFortinSt-Gelais,MelaniaCristescu,PaulDelGiorgio, BeatrixBeisner,AlisonDerry.Comparingthemetapopulationgeneticsandmetacommunity structureofboreallakezooplanktoncommunities. PetraMcDougall,KathreenRuckstuhl.Vigilanceisaboutmorethanjustwatchingfor predators:Socialmimicryofvigilancebehaviourcontributestogroupcohesion. PhilipBatista,FSperling,DHuber.Analysisofgeneticpolymorphismsofcytochromep450s betweenmountainpinebeetle(Dendroctonusponderosae)populations. AnneMcIntosh,ArnoldJanz,DanFarr.Areplantcommunitiesrecoveringafterwellsite reclamationinAlberta'sgrasslandandforestedsites? TracyMcKay,DougMacNearney,BarryNobert,KarinePigeon,LauraFinnegan.Caribou mortalityandpredationriskinachanginglandscape. KaileyMichnal,AmroZayed,SheilaColla.Urbandeterminantsofforagingrange,nestdensity andreproductivesuccessinthecommoneasternbumblebee,Bombusimpatiens. JohnMillar,NikhilLobo,AndrewMcAdam.SmallmammalstudiesintheRockyMountains. ChandraMoffat.Hostplanttraitsandherbivoreadaptation:Harnessingevolutionaryecology forpestmanagement. WilliamMurphy,MaryReid.Drillbabydrill:HostselectionoftheMountainPineBeetlein centralAlberta. RyleeMurray,WendyPalen,JoshuaMalt.Warmingfromdiversiondamsreducesthermal safetymarginforstreamdwellingamphibianlarva. EricNeilson,StanBoutin.Humandisturbancealterstherelativepredationrateofmoosein theAthabascaoilsands. RebekahOomen,HalvorKnutsen,EsbenOlsen,SisselJentoft,NilsStenseth,Jeffrey Hutchings.TranscriptomicvariabilityinpopulationresponsesofAtlanticcodtotemperature. MarindeOut,RonYdenberg.Wildgoosechase:long-distanceeffectsofWhite-tailedSea EaglepopulationrecoveryonBarnacleGoosemigration. 80. SreedeviRamachandran,GermanAvila-Sakar.Theinfluenceofsoilfertilityontomato 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. tolerancetoWhiteflies. SamridhiRijal,KathreenRuckstuhl.Seasonalvariationinparasiteeggcountsofsixparasites inmaleandfemalebighornsheep,Oviscanadensis. BrentRobicheau,EdSusko,MarleneSnyder.RibosomalDNArepresentsanancientsourceof pseudogenesandjunkDNA. SethRudman,MatthewBarbour,JulianHeavyside,DolphSchluter.Ecologicalconvergence viaparallelspeciation. SapnaSharma,JohnMagnuson,DerekGray,CatherineO’Reilly,JordanRead,Stephanie Hampton.Onthinice:Arelakesfeelingtheheat? EricSpilker,KaraMacAulay,EvelynMerrill,RobinSteenweg,MarkHebblewhite,Jesse Whittington.Assessingrelativeabundanceandresourceselectionfunctionsforpredicting predationriskinamulti-speciespredatorcommunity. RoyceSteeves,FrancisLeBlanc,StevenLeadbeater,NellieGagné.Survival,geneexpression, andviralevolutioninwildandfarmedAtlanticsalmonchallengedwithinfectioussalmon anemiavirus(ISAV). DonaldStewart,BrentRobicheau,EmilyChase,RandyHoeh,SophieBreton.Usinganovel mitochondrialprotein-codinggene(F-orf)forspeciesidentificationinfreshwatermussels (Bivalvia:Unionoida)–ACaseStudy. RyanTate,AndrewZink.Theeffectoferrorratesandcognitiverulesontheevolutionof signalrepertoiresandmultimodalcommunication. CorrinaThomsen,MirandaHart.Fungalbiofertilizersasapotentialsourceofmicrobial invasion. AlexanderVanNynatten,DevinBloom,BelindaChang,NathanLovejoy.Visualevolutionin marine-derivedAmazonianfishes. QuinnWebber,MichelLaforge,MaegwinBonar,ChrisHart,AlecRobitaille,SanaZabihi,Eric VanderWal.Anempiricalintegrationofmovementecologyandanimalpersonalityrevealsan unexpectedtrade-offinspace-useandforagingstrategies. JacobWeil,AngeleenOlson,EmmaPascoe,WillDuguid,CameronFreshwater,Skip McKinnell,FrancisJuanes.Variationincondition-at-ageofreturningsockeyesalmon (Oncorhynchusnerka)withclimateandpinksalmonabundanceintwoBritishColumbian rivers. DebraWertman,KatherineBleiker,StevePerlman.Thelightattheendofthetunnel: Photosensitivityindevelopingmountainpinebeetle(Dendroctonusponderosae). SaraWickham,BrianStarzomski.Marinenutrientsubsidiestosmallislands:Seawrackasa consistentvector. KirstenWilcox,JohnReynolds.Fromwatertowing:Howsalmonsubsidiesinfluence riparianhabitatqualityforPacificwrens,anavianinsectivore. PirminNietlisbach,LukasF.Keller,ErikPostma.Quantitativegeneticsofheterozygosity. AndreaWishart,CoryWilliams,AndrewMcAdam,StanBoutin,BenDantzer,Murray Humphries,JeffreyLane.TestingFisher’sprincipleacrossgenerationsinNorthAmericanred squirrels(Tamiasciurushudsonicus). AnneWorley,MelissaPearn,JessicaGuezen,StevenAnderson,BruceFord.Short-termlimits toreproductionintwospeciesofrewardlessslipperorchids(Cypripedium):Resources, pollinatorabundance,orpollinatorpreference? ShahabZareyan,ChristophHauert,SarahOtto.Self-deceptioninanevolutionarygame. JessicaMiller.Theroleoftheaccessoryglandsinspermcompetitioninaspecieswith alternativereproductivetactics. 101. MinakoIto,EmilyAdamczyk,MaryO'Connor,MasahiroNakaoka.Comparisonsof seagrass-associatedinvertebratecommunitiesinnative,introducedandmixedseagrassbeds atCrescentBeach,BC. 102. JosephBurant,EvaKok,AnneDekinga,TheunisPiersma,KimberleyMathot.Exploratory behaviourinredknots:Ataleofontogeny. 103. KatieDavidson,BrianStarzomski,JohnReynolds,RanaEl-Sabaawi,MorganHocking, ChrisDarimont.Seaweedsubsidiesinfluenceislandmouseecology. 104. SamanthaStraus,LeticiaAviles.Economiesofscale:Energeticcostsandbenefitsofgroup livinginasocialspider. 105. SusanGordon,ShannonMeadley-Dunphy,MeganFrederickson.Comparingphenologies inaseeddispersalmutualism. 106. KimberlyDohms,AndrewHuan,MarkDrever.Nestsearching:Howmucheffortis required? 107. FelipePerez-Jvostov.Morphologicalresponsesoftropicalstreamfishestoanthropogenic habitatalteration. 108. DesireeBulger.EvaluatingBritishColumbia'sArtificialReefsinaConservationContext. 109. SarahFriesen,NatalieBan.Incorporatingconnectivityintomarineprotectedarea networkplanning:TheNorthernShelfBioregion. 110. AndrewHendry,FelipePérez-Jvostov.NSERCCREATEinBiodiversity,Ecosystem ServicesandSustainability. 100. Sun Room: Victoria Conference Centre Theatre Saanich Oak Bay Newcombe Hall RBCM 08:00 08:00 - 11:00 Science communication 101 11:00 11:00 - 15:00 Symposium for Women Entering Ecology & Evolution Today (SWEEET) 14:00 15:00 14:00 - 20:30 Registration, coffee and snacks available Reg. desk, Level 1 15:00 - 18:00 15:00 - 18:00 Maps and Spatial Data with Mental Health in Academia R 18:00 20:00 20:30 18:00 - 20:00 Welcome & CSEE President's Award talk (Dr. Sally Otto) Mon Ecological and Uncertainty in Ecology Evolutionary Dynamics in and Conservation Fluctuating Symposium Environments Symposium Stickleback ecology and Accelerating urban ecology Host-associated Phylogenetics in Canada: Identifying evolution microbes: from current research protective microbes to approaches, gaps, and pathogens Symposium| needs in Canadian cities Microbial ecology Theatre Saanich Oak Bay 1 08:00 Seasonality, climate change, and consumer-resource dynamics, John Fryxell Uncertainty and the relationship Convergent evolution of a color vision Linking urban landscape structure to between human and environmental well- gene facilitates adaptive radiation of ecosystem service provision , Matthew being, Shripad Tuljapurkar threespine stickleback into different light Mitchell environments, David A. Marques 08:15 Hot and cold, wet and dry: The role of season in structuring aquatic food webs, Bailey McMeans Heterozygosity and asymmetry in threespine stickleback, Matthew Morris 08:30 A fitness trade-off between seasons Incorporating climate uncertainty into causes multigenerational cycles in models of Spectacled Eider survival in phenotype and population size, Gustavo Alaska, Katie Christie Betini Temporal variation shapes phenotypic Incorporating novel ecosystems and and genetic diversity in bar-built estuary layered landscapes for ecological populations of threespine stickleback, restoration in cities, Valentin Schaefer Antoine Paccard 08:45 The role of phenological assembly in plant communities, Elizabeth M. Wolkovich Managing natural resources in the face of uncertainty in future environments, Byron K. Williams Ecological interactions and genome structure contribute to repeatable patterns of genomic divergence in threespine stickleback, Diana J. Rennison Socio-ecological interactions in the The impact of non-pathogenic urban forests: Residents and their trees, phylloplane bacteria on insect disease Tenley Conway resistance: The importance of ecological context, Jenny Cory 09:00 Dynamics of seasonal adaptation in Drosophila melanogaster , Emily Behrman Uncertainty in wildlife monitoring and management, Anne Loosen Speciation seen through the lens of biomechanics: A multidisciplinary approach using fish locomotion and feeding in marine and freshwater threespine stickleback, Sean Rogers Strategic planning for urban forestry in Canada: Sharing knowledge and engaging communities across disciplines, Adrina Bardekjian 09:15 Niche conservatism and evolution in fluctuating environments, Robert Holt Climate and grazing management contribute to uncertainty about carbon storage and sequestration in the Canadian prairies, Cameron Carlyle Genetic basis of covariation between Ecological health in Metro Vancouver: temperature-associated traits in marine Current projects and emerging topics, and freshwater threespine stickleback Marcin Pachcinski (Gasterosteus aculeatus ), Sara J. Smith Microbial ecology of seaweed, Matthew Comparison of genomic and Lemay microsatellite profiles from wolves and coyotes, Astrid V. Stronen The widespread failure of adaptive management in fisheries, Carl Walters Lab versus wild: Phenotypic covariation Whales, bees, forests, and birds: in threespine stickleback, Tegan Barry Raising the profile of biodiversity in Vancouver, Angela Danyluk What's on your skin: New insights into Characterizing fitness landscapes in the overall function and variation of skin Darwin's finches with a hierarchical microbiome in amphibians, David model, Marc-Olivier Beausoleil Lesbarreres Room: 09:30 09:45 Natural selection for life histories in seasonal environments, Mark Boyce Museum collections symposium Symposium Oak Bay 2 Effects of ecological context on the phenotypic divergence of stickleback ecotypes, Rebecca J. Best What can human-wildlife encounters in the city tell us about urban ecology?, Justin Podur Esquimalt West Coast Newcombe RBCM Rapid evolution of microbe-mediated protection, Kayla King Introduced common reed (Phragmites australis ) in western Canada: A future problem or not?, Geraldine A. Allen Welcome, Kelly Sendall Tree-ectomycorrhizal symbioses: Does A comparative analysis of mitochondrial Working together to mobilise biodiversity diversity confer function?, Holly Moeller DNA in dioecious (Anodonta anatina ) collections data in Canada, Anne and hermaphroditic (Anodonta cygnea Bruneau ..., Emily Chase Thermal stress alters host-parasite interaction and drives parasite distribution in a marine invertebrate, Alyssa Gehman Phylogeography of Oreohelix land snails in southern Alberta and Saskatchewan, Zach Dempsey What's in the box: Preliminary data from A student's-eye view of taxonomy and genomic signatures of adaptive collections research in Canada, Jamie diversification in box-ironbark eucalypts, Fenneman and Jeanette Whitton Jasmine Janes Strong community structuring of Exploring the surprisingly finely defensive heritable symbionts is shaped dissected genomes of the Helianthus by context-dependent transmission hybrid species, Gregory L. Owens rates, Jacob Russell Connecting urban ecology and municipal Understanding the impacts of infrastructure, Michelle Molnar environmental exposure on gut microbiome diversity and host health using a wild population of deer mice..., Elliot Schmidt Coffee Break 10:00 - 10:30 Environmental marginality and range limits in Arabidopsis lyrata , Julie LeeYaw Discovering and archiving the tree of life, Wayne Maddison Climate change, phenology and species interactions: Opportunities and challenges of natural history collections, Heather Kharouba Mon CSEE PhD diversity & excellence Research award symposium Stickleback | Salmonid ecology and evolution NSERC scholarships & Exploring the roles of fellowships information mechanistic and phenomenological models in ecology symposium Oak Bay 1 Room: Theatre Saanich 10:30 Introduction Diet specialization in Threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus ) in response to lake physical characteristics and the presence of Signal crayfish (Pacificasticus leniusculus ), Douglas Curley 10:45 Altered competition under ocean Eco-evolutionary interactions in acidification influences species- but not stickleback elemental composition, community-level response to food Rana W. El-Sabaawi supply, Norah Brown (UBC) Leaf bacterial diversity mediates plant Determinants of brook charr resource diversity-ecosystem function polymorphism in Canadian Shield lakes, relationships, Isabelle Laforest-Lapointe Vincent Rainville (University of Montreal) 11:30 11:45 Phylogenetics | Evolutionary theory Museum collections symposium West Coast Newcombe RBCM Oak Bay 2 Esquimalt Mechanism and the unknown: Or, how to predict the future, Kim Cuddington Systemic stress levels in Vancouver Chromosome inversions and adaptation Elevation, crypsis, and community Island marmots may correlate to human to heterogeneous environments in structure of neotropical arthropods, intervention: Implications for the seaweed flies, Claire Merot Sarah Dolson management of a critically endangered mammal, Madison J. Acker Mechanism versus phenomenology in models of insect outbreak, Greg Dwyer Maternal stress and predator odour effects on juvenile cuttlefish antipredator responses to ink and alarm cue, Kevin R. Bairos-Novak The genomic significance of pervasive Reconciling phenological observations broad-scale heterogeneity in with flowering records in herbaria, T. recombination rate along chromosomes Jonathan Davies during early population divergence, Marius Roesti Morphological responses of threespine Mechanistic and phenomenological Effects of local predation pressure on Tracing the footprints of a moving stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus ) to models for animal movement patterns in prey fish behaviour and evasion of an Setophaga warbler hybrid zone, Silu two non-native predators, Hannah M. invasive predator, Adrienne E. Berchtold Wang Natalie Weiskopf and Kathleen Lorenzo ecology, Mark Lewis Kienzle (NSERC scholarship & fellowship officers) 11:00 11:15 Stress, Antipredator behaviour Reptile phylogeny and the origin and early radiation of lepidosaurs, Tiago Simões (University of Alberta) How do different modelling techniques compare to predict species and communities patterns?, Ben Bolker Investigating the sub-lethal effects of predation in black tailed prairie dogs, Colleen Crill The effect of ploidy level on the rate and Using museum specimens and other spectrum of new mutations, Nathaniel best available data to assess insect Sharp conservation status: A lesson from the IUCN Red List bumblebees, Sheila Colla Ecological drivers of covariance in productivity among Fraser River sockeye salmon conservation units, Cameron Freshwater Prediction: What is it, why do we do it and how to do it better, Korryn Bodner Exploring stress biomarkers in an avian The evolution of constraint as an model, Gillian Johnstone adaptation, Andrew Simons Patterns in salmon dynamics in space and time on the Central Coast of British Columbia, Eric Hertz *Linking ecological theory and data* From ecological theory to empirical data, the missing statistical link, F. Guillaume Blanchet Winter temperature experience affects The genomics of purging inbreeding cognitive responses in black-capped depression, Sarah J. Baldwin chickadees (Poecile atricapillus) , Robert Jeff Martin The dead keep talking, Leah R. Ramsay Discussion Lunch 12:00 - 13:30 (on your own) Mon Room: CSEE PhD diversity & excellence Research award symposium Salmonid ecology and evolution Theatre Saanich Mate choice, hybridization Newcombe RBCM Esquimalt West Coast Evolutionary bargaining games: Ecological and evolutionary stability in a consumer-resource based model of mutualistic interactions, Gordon G. McNickle The effects of anthropogenic and biological noise on fish behavior and physiology: A meta-analysis, Francis Juanes Population level variation in host plant response to multiple symbionts, James Franklin Addressing the potential cumulative The genetic signature of evolutionary impacts of land use and climate change rescue with sex, Matthew Osmond on fish and wildlife in northern Ontario, Cheryl Chetkiewicz Do mate choice errors slow the spread of the invasive brown spruce longhorn beetle?, Jennifer Anderson Motorboat noise disrupts co-operative interspecific interactions, Isabelle Côté Fungal bio-fertilizers can affect local plant communities, Vasileios Kokkoris Freshwater conservation planning in an Life history trade-offs, sexual conflict, intact landscape, Brie Edwards and the maintenance of variation in Drosophila melanogaster , Devin Arbuthnott Female preference for alternative male morphs in the Kribensis cichlid (Pelvicachromis pulcher ), Peter Hurd Experimental and natural nutrient subsidies alter steelhead life history, Colin J. Bailey Tracking marine mammals in the presence of human induced ocean noise, Ben Hendricks Mast seeding patterns in five North American conifer genera (1912-2014), Jalene LaMontagne Phylogenetic patterns of amphibian Variation in symbiont preference drives community disassembly from concurrent symbiont evolution, Rebecca T. land-use change and climate, Dan Batstone Greenberg Flexible mate choice may regulate gene flow between sympatric pumpkinseed sunfish ecotypes (Lepomis gibbosus ), Beren Robinson Understanding a dolphin's soundscape to assess the potential changes in habitat use, Matt Pine Can traits predict changes in species abundance?, Julie Messier Proactive conservation planning for high- Phenotypic selection on architectural value habitats of caribou and grizzly effects in Delphinium glaucum bears in the Muskwa-Kechika (Ranunculaceae), Ilona Clocher Management Area, northeast British Columbia, Nobuya Suzuki Rapid evolution of reproductive isolation during speciation: Evidence from Lochmaea capreae leaf beetle, Shaghayegh Soudi 13:45 Canada's wild salmon policy: An assessment of conservation progress, Michael H. Price 14:00 Looking through the bottleneck: Long-term shifts in the phenology of Genomic analysis of historical and juvenile salmon migration across contemporary population genetic species and location, Jonathan Moore variation in the Pinzon Island Galapagos tortoise, Evelyn Jensen (UBC-O) Oak Bay 2 Evolutionary theory | Selection Assessing biodiversity response to landuse and climate change in Nova Scotia: A proposed ecosystem framework, Sean Basquill 13:30 Oak Bay 1 Policy and planning Marine mammal vocalizations in a The inclusion of positive interactions in changing Arctic soundscape: Impacts of modeling the niche space of desert decreased sea ice and increased ship annuals, Alessandro Filazzola traffic, William Halliday Multi-scale responses to warming in an Glacial recession and salmon futures, experimental metacommunity, Tess Kara Pitman Grainger (University of Toronto) 14:15 Conservation challenges Plant ecology associated with aquatic soundscapes symposium 14:30 Congratulations Genome wide association and signatures of selection studies for sea age in North American Atlantic salmon populations using Next Generation Resequencing and the new North American 50K SNP chip, Elizabeth G. Boulding 14:45 *Application in ecology and evolution* Ecology vs. evolution: Comparing applications of research fields, Jeff Bowman Reduced growth in wild juvenile sockeye Ambient noise from natural sources and Drivers of variation in the sugar maple salmon infected with sea lice, Sean shipping in the western Canadian Arctic, (Acer saccharum ) leaf and root Godwin Stephen Insley microbiome along environmental gradients, Steven Kembel Coffee Break 15:00 - 15:30 Survival by genotype: Patterns at Mc1r are not black and white at the White Sands ecotone, Simone Des Roches Sexual conflict can constrain the evolution of reinforcement, Alison Wardlaw Mon Room: Social systems Salmonid ecology and evolution Ecology of PlantPlastics in the Herbivore Interactions in environment Cold Places Policy and planning Evolution | Communication Reproductive ecology and behaviour West Coast Newcombe RBCM Theatre Saanich Oak Bay 1 Oak Bay 2 Esquimalt 15:30 Exploring the evolution of eusociality in a primitively eusocial paper wasp using population genomics, Kathleen Dogantzis Fishing for sympatry: Historical and contemporary neutral processes shaping Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus ) in Labrador, Canada, Sarah Salisbury *Conservation* Marine vessel movements: Mitigation of noise through data collection, strategic planning, and management support, Rosaline Canessa Plastic pollution in the total environment: A review of marine plastic contamination in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, Justine Ammendolia Taking the path of least resistance: how Multilevel and sex-specific selection on Identifying correlates of captive breeding conservation science got left behind in competitive traits in North American red success in amphibians, Alannah Biega the design of the largest Canadian squirrels, David Fisher marine protected area, Rodolphe Devillers 15:45 Competitive interactions and the Dietary thiaminase and its effects on The chemical arms race between hungry mechanisms behind negative frequency- reproductive traits in three populations of herbivores and clever plants, Jennifer dependent selection on aggression, Atlantic salmon, Kimberly T. Mitchell Forbey Julia Kilgour Microplastic ingestion by Venerupis Timing of protection of critical habitat philippinarum and Crassostra gigas on matters, Tara G. Martin intertidal shellfish farms and 'wild' beaches in BC, Canada, Garth A. Covernton Is the experimental evolution of wild red Parent-offspring cannibalism in the squirrels repeatable?, Andrew G. plainfin midshipman fish, Aneesh P. H. McAdam Bose 16:00 The effect of individual variation of Environmental pathogen transmission sociality on reproductive success and between farmed and wild salmon body condition in a Canadian population populations, Dylan Shea of black-tailed prairie dogs, Jillian M. Kusch Grazing Arctic tundra: Plant to ecosystem responses, Greg Henry Determining the efficacy of depurating microplastics from Pacific oysters (Crassostrea gigas ) Redefining ecological integrity by decoupling energy capture and conversion, Charles Martin Assignment methods tailored for Repeatability and reproductive RADseq data in conservation genomics, consequences of boldness in female Thierry Gosselin grey seals, David Coltman 16:15 Nest-site competition and the A test of parallelism in the axes of socioecology of reproduction in eastern morphological divergence in Icelandic carpenter bees, Miriam Richards arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus ), Matthew Brachmann Effects of resource manipulation on Influence of subtidal and intertidal temperate grassland vegetation under a shellfish farming on microplastic changing climate, John Serafini contamination in cultured Pacific oysters (Crassostrea gigas ) from British Columbia, Matthew R. Miller The effect of target setting on conservation in Canada's boreal: What is the right amount of area to protect?, Darren J.H. Sleep The quantifiable value of outreach to herpetofaunal conservation, Sean P. Boyle 16:30 Effects of neighbour familiarity on intrusion risk and behavioural time budgets in a territorial squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus ), Erin Siracusa 16:45 How did egg-laying and work behaviours Intraspecific resource competition and decouple from solitary antecedents to phenotypic selection in polymorphic eusocial castes?, David N. Awde Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus ), Oliver Franklin , Maggie M. Dietterle Population genetics of Athabasca River Climate and land use inform range Evaluating contaminants associated with Global Human Footprint project, Oscar Basin bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus ), expansion of a large boreal herbivore in plastic ingestion in an Arctic seabird, Venter Emma K. Carroll a novel agro-ecosystem, Michel P. Jennifer Provencher Laforge The role of bison as ecosystem Plastics and other anthropogenic debris Prioritizing management actions when engineers in the aspen parkland , Peter in freshwater birds from Canada, Dave data is scarce and systems are Tarleton Shutler complex, Laura Kehoe What does the tweet say: The use of Spatial autocorrelation of white-throated social media for science communication, sparrow song variation at the Alina Fisher neighbourhood scale, Scott M. Ramsay Media and storytelling as a tool for science communication, Josh Silberg Reconstructing habitat change at a multispecies goose breeding area, East Bay, Southampton Island, Nunavut, Peter Kotanen Theatre 18:00 – 20:30 Saanich Oak Bay 1 More reasons why picking the right spatial scale is so #@&! hard, Andrew D. Moraga Oak Bay 2 Anne Salomon, Public Lecture Adapting to Surprise in Our Coastal Oceans: Lessons from Kelp Forests, Ancient Clam Gardens and Pacific Herring Poster Session A: Monday 16:00 - 18:15 The causes and consequences of the variability in incubation behaviour in tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor ), Nghia Tran Tue Room: Remote camera networks to scale up ecological insights and conservation applications symposium The tension between Ecological epigenetics science and advocacy symposium | Bird in ecology, evolution, Migration and conservation biology symposium Metacommunity theory for real-world communities: theoretical and empirical advances for trophic metacommunities symposium Oak Bay 2 Population dynamics Life histories: phenology, sex, sex ratio Complex coevolution: understanding how coevolution may operate differently across diverse interaction types, systems, and scales symposium Consequences of Rapid Ecological Change in Mountain Ecosystems Symposium Esquimalt West Coast Newcombe RBCM level 2: Sidney Eco-evolutionary dynamics in a contemporary human population, Patrick Bergeron Differences in early life history Pollen specialization by bees and A century of ecosystem change in traits between sexual and asexual pollen protection by plants: is there the Canadian Rocky Mountains, Easter daisies favor the an arms race?, Jessica Forrest Andrew Trant establishment of asexuals , Evan Hersh Ecology & Evolution in a Social Context Symposium Biodiversity Theatre Saanich Oak Bay 1 08:00 Promise and pitfalls of scaling up ecological insights using remote cameras, Cole Burton Safeguarding scientific credibility in ecology and conservation biology, Mark Vellend Why so bitter? The epigenetics of Current advances and future flavour and aroma in hops., Linda challenges of reconciling the Rutledge horizontal metacommunity with a vertical world, Coreen Forbes 08:15 Landscape and climate change: Ecological insights from cameratrap research, Jason T Fisher Getting out of the ivory tower: Genetic and epigenetic response Informing policies for reforestation, to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill conservation and climate change, in S. alterniflora, Marta Robinson Sally Aitken A general framework for trophic metacommunity ecology, Laura Melissa Guzman Are populations of migratory tree- Diet-dependent sex ratios in roosting bats declining?, Erin Tigriopus californicus : Evidence Baerwald for ESD in a system with stable PSD, Erin Hornell Evolution and specificity in an The conservation value of Social structure modulates the insect defensive symbiosis, Steve mountain environments to birds in evolutionary consequences of Perlman North America, Kathy Martin social plasticity: A social network pers..., Pierre-Olivier Montiglio Functional diversity in fragments: The joint effects of ecological drift and deterministic responses, Leila Forsyth 08:30 Trophic traps: Inferring species relationships from camera trap imagery, Adam Ford Mercury rising: Epigenetic response to mercury exposure in songbirds, Kristin Brzeski Simple rules for complex spatial food web dynamics, Dominique Gravel Meta-analyses reveal the world is truly chaotic: How did humans succeed in such a place?, Nicholas C. Collins Sanctions, partner recognition, and Spatial genetic structure of variation in mutualism, Jeremy Alberta's bighorn sheep: Yoder Population resilience and implications for harvest management, Jamie Gorrell Measuring diversity using entropy (Shannon), covariance (Simpson), and independence (linkage disequilibrium), Root Gorelick 08:45 A new Automated Behavioural Scientific integrity and Ants and plants: Epigenetic Response system to integrate contributions to policy: Seeing the responses to multiple mutualist playback experiments into camera limits, Jeremy Kerr partners, Rebecca Kartzinel trap studies, Liana Zanette Embracing variability: Food webs Climate change effects on the in space and time, Kevin McCann predator-prey relationship between polar bears and common eider seaducks, Cody Dey Decomposing direct and indirect Coevolution's ups and downs: A Are coastal mountains responding effects of early-life environment on long-term study of sex in a natural to climate change differently?, fitness of bighorn ewes, Gabriel population, Amanda Gibson Luise Hermanutz Pigeon 09:00 A comparison of multiple spatial capture-recapture models for estimating carnivore densities using field data, Joanna Burgar Cascading effects of spatial structure across trophic levels, Rachel Germain The strength of densitydependence in mountain ungulates varies over time, Marco Festa-Bianchet The role of coding trinucleotide Co-evolution across the spectrum repeats within candidate genes in of host/microbiota integration, the adaptation of an iconic Laura Parfrey northern mammal, Canada lynx (Lynx canadensis ), Melanie Prentice Where fast is slow: Experimental Root behavioral responses to effects of changing soil nutrients and neighbors, Dr. JC. temperature and nutrients on a Cahill subarctic, alpine plant community, Jill Johnstone Diversity productivity relationships across scale, Eric G. Lamb 09:15 Camera trap surveys to inform management decision making, Angela Fuller Sex differences in migratory Ecological drift across trophic restlessness of black-throated blue levels: Consequences for warblers during spring migration, metacommunities, Denon Start Jessica Deakin Why most studied populations should decline, Stephen Heard Shifting birthdates in bighorn sheep: Can individuals track changes in local weather?, Limoilou-Amélie Renaud Whitebark pine on the edge? Gene-environment interplay in Abiotic and biotic drivers interact to behavior and evolution: lessons limit species range, Alana Clason from Drosophila melanogaster , Dr. Julia Saltz Preserving phylogenetic diversity can be a poor strategy for preserving functional diversity, Florent Mazel 09:30 Advancing field conservation by developing new camera trap methods and collaborations in the Pacific Northwest, Robert Long Stopover timing and refueling in relation to migration distance and sex in Wilson's warbler, Yolanda E. Morbey What causes cyclical population dynamics? The roles of disease and fecundity in the western tent caterpillar, Paul MacDonald Lack of diapause in aphid Cooperation, conflict, and parasitoids from mild winter areas: coevolution, Megan Frederickson Ecological and evolutionary insights, Kévin Tougeron Canada's mountain ecosystems: Towards a better integration of biotic and abiotic drivers of rapid change, David Hik Are the most evolutionary distinct species the most original?, Vahab Pourfaraj 09:45 Monitoring large-scale trends in wildlife populations using remote cameras, Jesse Whittington Epigenetic changes in natural populations: Its role in the demography of cyclic mammals, Rudy Boonstra The distinction between advice and advocacy in science, Jeff Hutchings Conservation of peripheral populations illustrate the tension between advise and advocacy in the absence of scientific consensus, Jeannette Whitton Coupled spatial-trophic dynamics in bromeliad food webs, Diane Srivastava Large variation in migration routes *Grassland trophic cascades* of hybrid flycatchers, Thor Veen Songbirds and small mammals cause trophic cascades in montane grassland ecosystems, William Harrower The effects of climate change on sex determination and growing time in a northern population of snapping turtles, Melanie Massey Population dynamics of the adopted migrant life history in fish, Luke A. Rogers Coffee Break 10:00 - 10:30 The role of coevolution in the assembly and disassembly of mutualistic communities, Scott Nuismer *Bacterial Symbiosis* Diversity and nutritional mutualism of Wolbachia in Bat flies (Streblidae, Nycteribiidae ), Haewon Shin Drivers of post-fire understory regeneration in the conifer dominated boreal forest of southern Northwest Territories, Alison White level 2: Colwood level 2: View Royal Selection on colony foraging aggressiveness favors social susceptibility in social spiders, Jonathan Pruitt A multi-method comparison of substratum community assessment techniques and the implications for diversity indices a..., Kieran D. Cox Social relationships shape vocal interactions of male Black-capped Chickadees at dawn, Dr. Jenn Foote Ecological variation, mate sharing, Using environmental DNA to and the potential for sperm monitor winter aquatic biodiversity, competition in Wellington tree Jori B. Harrison weta, Dr. Tina Wey Discussion Diversity-stability hypothesis: Are we looking at the right scale?, Guillaume Rheault Tue Remote camera networks | Mammalian movement and activity Theatre Pollution Saanich 10:30 Flying cameras: Promises and pitfalls of drones for wildlife ecology, Sophie Gilbert Wildlife health indicators and mercury exposure: A case study of river otters (Lontra canadensis ) in central British Columbia, Canada, Shannon M. Crowley 10:45 Fish on film in the temperate deep: Oil sands and the marine An underwater method environment: Current knowledge comparison, Lily Burke and future challenges, Stephanie J. Green Pollinator-mediated facilitation explains asymmetric rarity advantages in experimental plant communities, Katie Brown 11:00 Camera trapping for pollinators: Using time-lapse cameras on a flower lure to index pollinators in fragmented boreal forests, Federico Riva 11:15 Carnivore activity patterns in Impacts of industrial noise on owl relation to landscape development occupancy and seasonal use in and competitor co-occurrence, the boreal forest, Julia Shonfield Sandra Frey Clonal growth increases outcross mating opportunities, Marcel E. Dorken Seagrass genetic diversity Effects of urbanization on fish life enhances production at multiple history traits: Lessons from life history stages, Randall Hughes guppies, Piata Marques Stable isotopes and fatty acids reveal freshwater aquatic prey in the diet of wolves, Sean A. O'Donovan 11:30 Camera traps tell us where animals live, but more so, where animals move, Frances Stewart Inferring growth dilution from latitudinal variation in fish growth and mercury bioaccumulation, Shyam Thomas Pollinator-dependent invasive species impacts on network structure and community traits, Sandra Gillespie Turning up the heat on seagrass wasting disease , Morgan Eisenlord A temporal shift in prey species Preserving adaptive capacity availability decreases trophic under intensifying ocean diversity in community structure acidification, Terrie Klinger among a predator assemblage in a changing Arctic, David J. Yurkowski Predator functional responses: Breathing new life into old theory, Dennis Murray 11:45 Spatially explicit density estimation in a large-scale grizzly bear study using spatial capture-recapture models, Andy J. Royle Calcified herbivore loss may disproportionately drive responses to ocean acidification in natural communities. Kathryn M. Anderson Global trends in pollinator community diversity and composition in response to interactive climate and land-use changes, Peter Soroye Effects of multiple Hunting promotes slow life disturbances/stresses on eelgrass histories in brown bears, Joanie epifaunal communities, Mathieu Van de Walle Cusson Vertebrate-wide scaling of metabolic rate and respiratory surface area, Jennifer S. Bigman Has predator management Genomic insights into local Patterns of plant succession and neglected to consider the impact of adaptations in Ovibos Moschatus , scale of observation in an extreme ecology on predator behaviour?, Erin Prewer environment, Katriina O'Kane Kyle Plotsky Room: Pollination systems Seagrass ecology and Life histories: conservation along reproduction, Pacific and Atlantic senescence coasts symposium Animal diet Oak Bay 1 Oak Bay 2 Esquimalt West Coast Understanding multiyear variability in the yield of pollinator dependent highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum ), Kyle Bobiwash Secondary production of macrobenthic communities in seagrass (Zostera marina , eelgrass) beds and bare softsediments across differing environmental conditions in Atlantic Canada, Melisa Wong Post-reproductive lifespan and Untangling aquatic food webs grandmothering in a pre-industrial using DNA and text-mining, human population, Sacha C. Zacchaeus G. Compson Engelhardt Seascape connectivity effects on the nursery value of temperate seagrass ecosystems, Angeleen Olson Variation in the timing and magnitude of peak reproductive effort affects rate of senescence, Anni Hämäläinen Evaluating the seasonal use of estuarine habitats by juvenile salmon and resident fish communities, Lia Chalifour Morphological changes in offspring DNA metabarcoding reveals the associated with parental broad and flexible diet of a senescence, Robert Laird declining aerial insectivore, Beverly McClenaghan Parasitic infection: A missing piece Pollinator-mediated impacts of of the ocean acidification puzzle, alien plants on natives: New data Colin D. MacLeod provide new insights, Julia Charlebois Does habitat selection constrain adaptive life-histories?, Douglas W. Morris Life On the Edge: Mechanisms of Adapting to Climate Change Symposium Foraging Newcombe RBCM level 2: Sidney Genetic structure of populations level 2: Colwood level 2: View Royal A resistance mapping approach to assess landscape effects on genetics and dispersal of the Rocky Mountain Apollo butterfly, Helen Chen Decoupling habitat fragmentation from habitat loss: Butterfly assemblages on lake islands support the habitat amount hypothesis, Zachary G. MacDonald Does access to anthropogenic food subsidies affect glucose metabolism of raccoons?, Albrecht Schulte-Hostedde Population genomics of whitetailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus ) introduced on Anticosti Island, Jérémie Fuller Competing taxa suppress each other's diversity, Abdel Halloway Tundra plant responses to experimental warming and snowmelt timing, Esther Frei Behaviour of animals in wild populations within urban vs suburban habitats, Jesse Hacker The effect of landscape on genetic differentiation in western Alberta populations of the alpine butterfly Parnassius smintheus , Melissa Lucas Effects of disturbance and environmental factors on plant communities at freshwater springs, Kayleigh G. Nielson Coral symbiosis and survival during the 2015/2016 El Niño event, Danielle Claar Applying the functional response Population genetics and invasion Using plant traits to understand framework to human-pest history of the invasive European plant-soil feedback in temperate interactions, Mélodie Kunegel-Lion fire ant, Myrmica rubra , in Toronto, forests, Jonathan A. Bennett Ontario, Canada, Shannon A. Meadley Dunphy Evolutionary traps: A role for niche Habitat-mediated predation and conservatism in limiting species' selective consumption of spawning responses to global change, salmon by bears, Luke Andersson Jeremy Kerr A century of ecological change Demographic compensation and reflected in the stable isotopes of a climatic tipping points in migratory aerial insectivore, Philina monkeyflowers, Amy Angert English Transcriptomic variability in population responses of Atlantic cod to temperature, Rebekah Oomen Ancient diversification in glacial Local plant diversity responses to refugia leads to intraspecific temperature and water availability: diversity in caribou, Jean L. Polfus Synthesizing evidence from experimental data, Véronique Boucher Lalonde Tremendous genetic drift and accumulation of deleterious mutations may not preclude thermal adaptation in lake trout, Anne-Laure Ferchaud Lunch 12:00 - 13:30 (on your own) Biodiversity Assessing birds and lichen as indicators of biodiversity in a managed subboreal watershed in British Columbia, Kerrith McKay Tue Room: 13:30 Living in the ecoevolutionary theatre: research guided and inspired by intensive field observations symposium Canadian protected areas in a changing climate: A crossecosystem approach symposium Species interactions in Marine ecology a warming world symposium Ecological, evolutionary and environmental synthesis in the 21st century symposium Community ecology Esquimalt West Coast Theatre Saanich Oak Bay 1 Oak Bay 2 Variation of lateral plate pehnotypes in threespine stickleback fish: Adaptation, developmental constraint, or both, Mike Bell Integrating static and dynamic spatial management for biodiversity persistence under climate change, Shawn Leroux Shifts in insect development rate alter phenological overlap and community interactions, Lauren Buckley Biotic homogenization of seagrass Ecological, evolutionary and Population responses of rodent fishes associated with coastal environmental synthesis in the species to agriculture on the Great anthropogenic activities, 21st Century , Stephanie Hampton Plains of Canada, Leanne Heisler Josephine Iacarella 13:45 Forest ecology Parasitism and symbiosis Genetic structure of populations Aquatic ecology Newcombe RBCM level 2: Sidney level 2: Colwood level 2: View Royal The role of disturbance on treeline establishment and range expansion from a seed's perspective, Lucas Brehaut Describing the cophylogenetic relationship between the Myrsidea chewing louse and its Neotropical Mionectes flycatcher host, Andrew Cook Fine-scale genome-wide analysis of spawning herring (Clupea harengus ) populations in the Northwest Atlantic, Angela P. Fuentes-Pardo Weak correlation between assemblages of non-biting midges (Diptera: Chironomidae) and environmental factors in wetlands in Alberta, Canada , Heather Proctor Protected areas: How to design Dispersal governs the resilient networks using reorganization of ecological connectivity, Christopher Blackford networks under environmental change, Patrick Thompson Identifying human impacts on eelgrass faunal biodiversity in Barkley Sound, Vancouver Island, Emily Adamczyk Forest fragmentation differentially From rares to richness: Spectrums Alternative management of Varroa Geographic variation in the genetic affects the movement behavior of of plant rarity and diversity in the destructor mites using their odour structure of a mussel hybrid zone, the main pollinator and seed boreal forest, Varina Crisfield responses, Allie Flinn David J. Innes disperser of a tropical understory herb, Luis A. Arias-Medellin How Pacific salmon shape streams and riparian forests: Implications for ecosystem-based management, Jessica C. Walsh Benefits and challenges of UAV Maladaptation, Steven Brady mapping for seagrass ecology and conservation, Natasha Nahirnick Testing for variation in competition Intact forest landscapes: importance and intensity among Definitions, use, and clarity. Kate old-field plant species, Brandon Edwards Schamp Host allometry influences the evolution of parasite hostgeneralism, Amy L. Hurford Diversity meets decomposition: Are local decomposer communities influenced by local riparian conditions?, Natalie Westwood Relative importance of colonist quantity, quality, and arrival frequency to the extinction of two zooplankton species, James S. Sinclair Vegetation dynamics in SpaDES: The recoded LANDIS-II biomass succession model, Yong Luo Fine-scale spatial correlations of Genetic structure of rhinoceros parasite prevalence with final-host auklet populations throughout the abundance and waterbody age in North Pacific, Marie Prill a waterfowl-Gammarus acanthocephalan system, Zhuoyan Song National and regional scale patterns of benthic insect betadiversity in Canadian rivers, Colin J. Curry Adaptive genetic variation at salivary protein genes in bloodfeeding generalist ectoparasites, Benoit Talbot Fine-scale genetic structure and effective size of an isolated and endangered population of woodland caribou, Geneviève Turgeon Factors affecting decomposers and decomposition dynamics differ in boreal peatlands, Carlos Barreto Assessing genetic structure in subalpine larch (Larix lyallii ), a high-elevation deciduous conifer species, Marie C. Vance Drought causes shift in functional role of aquatic macroinvertebrate from shredder to predator, Sarah Amundrud 14:00 The evolution of interspecific interactions, Dolph Schluter Responses of marine habitatforming organisms to climate change: conserving the stage when the players build the set, Jennifer Sunday Temperature dependency of consumptive dynamics and dispersal structure local and regional coexistence, Benjamin Gilbert 14:15 A gillnet fishery considered as an experiment in artificial selection, Graham Bell Integrating climate risk and refuge Identifying gaps and priorities in into data-driven portfolios of understanding climate change protected areas, Emily Darling impacts on food webs, Erin Cameron Preferred prey hotspots for juvenile salmon in the Skeena estuary, Michael Arbeider 14:30 Adaptive Polymorphism in Flatfishes, Carolyn Bergstrom Planning for Neo-tropical migratory Dynamics at the warm edge: bird conservation under climate Species interactions vs. species change, Ilona Naujokaitis-Lewis distributions, Anna Hargreaves Migratory salmon usage of estuary Evolutionary rescue comes of age: nursery habitat, Ciara E. Sharpe An account of the growth in our understanding through theory and experiments, Andrew Gonzalez What is the nature of the interaction between a flower weevil and a leaf beetle, two biocontrol agents of purple loosestrife: Competitive, complementary, or neutral?, Marina Torreblanca Host mycorrhizal association and soil fertility Influence plant-soil feedback in a Dipterocarp rainforest, Max Segnitz Effects of shellfish farming on invertebrate and finfish communities, Sarah Dudas Harnessing ecological networks to understand anticancer immunity in the tumor microenvironment, Phineas Hamilton Evaluating differences in plant Inherited Spiroplasma symbionts community composition and stand are common in the ant genus structure caused by road Myrmica , Matthew J. Ballinger fragmentation in forested wetlands, Caitlin Willier Biotic and abiotic constraints on treelines globally, Carissa Brown 14:45 Discussion Cross-scale resilience from theory to practice: Results from a synthesis collaboration, Shana Sundstrom Integrating community assembly into biodiversity-ecosystem function relationships: The CAFE approach, Katherine H. BannarMartin Coffee Break 15:00 - 15:30 Landscape community genomics in the mountain pine beetle outbreak system, Patrick James Tue Room: 15:30 Living in the ecoevolutionary theatre: research guided and inspired by intensive field observations symposium Anthropogenic Species interactions in Coral reef ecology influences on habitat a warming world selection symposium | Effects of climate change Landscapes Forest ecology | Fish Marine ecology ecology Genetic structure of populations level 2: Colwood Invasive species Theatre Saanich Oak Bay 1 Oak Bay 2 Esquimalt West Coast Newcombe RBCM level 2: Sidney Spawning Pacific herring: ecological consequences and insights into the past , Caroline Fox Anthropogenic disturbance affects energetic trade-offs with predation risk in white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus ), Siobhan Darlington *Species interactions in a warming world* Functional trait distance predicts carbon flux shifts across a globally replicated removal experiment in mountains, Chelsea Chisholm A methodology for evaluating the resilience of ecosystem services: A coral reef case study, Bruno Carturan Dynamics of collapse and recovery in a marine community: insights from multivariate dynamic statistical approaches, Eric Pedersen Building a continuous adaptive management system in SpaDES: Using historical landscape variation for the LandWeb project, Eliot McIntire Should I stay or should I go? Range stasis versus range shifts of plants in the North Cascades, Rachel Wilson The value of ancient habitat Immune gene functional modifications: Macrofaunal heterozygosity affects survival in communities of First Nations' clam caribou, Marianne Gagnon gardens, Morgan Black Human activity at oil and gas well sites influences avoidance response and habitat use by caribou, Doug MacNearney The impacts of climate change on Fish movement drives spatial and fungal communities in boreal temporal patterns of nitrogen peatlands, Asma Asemaninejad availability on coral reefs, Fiona T. Francis Making ecosystem science matter: Stakeholder-engaged research through co-design and integ..., Roxane Maranger Rapid evolution accelerates the expansion of plant populations in fragmented experimental landscapes., Jennifer Williams Determining abundance of forage Global marine protected areas to Genomic patterns of parallel lichens for boreal woodland prevent extinctions, Lindsay N. K. ecological speciation in Littorina caribou in a fire-prone region of Davidson saxatilis ecotype pairs, Tony Kess the Boreal Shield Ecozone, Ruth J. Greuel New house, new rules: Life-history strategies can enhance invasion success of introduced species, Danielle Denley Are plants able to utilize nitrogen released from thawing permafrost? Implications for feedbacks with the climate system, Lucas J. Albano If you cease it, will they come back? How exposure to and release from a pollution disturbance shapes rocky intertidal communities in British Columbia, Aaron M. Eger Comparative genomics of historic marine invaders: Neutral and selective processes influencing the success of the amphipod Corophium volutator and polychaete Hediste... , Anthony Einfeldt A novel approach to estimating fish densities using underwater cameras, Rowshyra Castañeda Variation in intimacy between sea Genetic rescue of a wild population Using geographically weighted stars and their associated bacteria, of bighorn sheep, Marc-Antoine logistic regression to evaluate Andrew Loudon Poirier invasive species presence in the Adirondack Park Region, USA, Jelena Grbic 15:45 16:00 Emergent properties from a fledgling project with long-term vision: Bear-salmon-human systems in coastal British Columbia, Chris Darimont Habitat heterogeneity and functional responses explain seasonal and behaviour-based selection of regenerating seismic lines for a social predator, Karine Pigeon Spatial and temporal patterns of bobcat and lynx distributions in British Columbia, TJ Gooliaff 16:15 Are camouflaged flounder hiding from predators or prey?, John Taylor Large mammal responses to seismic line restoration, Erin Tattersall Fasting season length determines The unseen world of coral reefs: temporal limits for global polar Impacts of local and global bear persistence, Péter Molnár stressors on the coral microbiome, Jamie McDevitt-Irwin 16:30 Stability and change in the evolutionary dynamics of colorpattern loci, Patrik Nosil Patch occupancy of two boreal mammals in response to salvage logging, Julie Thomas Loss of early-winter snow threatens alpine butterfly populations, Jens Roland 16:45 The architecture of adaptation: A master mutation or a mass of mutations?, Catherine Peichel Understanding predation and energy limitations on woodland caribou recruitment through habitat selection, Rebecca Viejou Effects of gene flow on performance at the northern range margin of Clarkia pulchella, Megan Gene Bontrager 17:15 A decade of spatial variation in Darwin's finches, Andrew Hendry 17:30 Fishing for the secrets of evolutionary change in vertebrates, David Kingsley 18:00 Ecological, evolutionary and environmental synthesis in the 21st century symposium Quantifying changes in the 3D Integrating stress ecology to structural complexity of coral reefs illuminate biodiversity-ecosystem around Kiritimati following El Niño- function research, Donald Baird induced mass coral bleaching, Jennifer M. T. Magel Redundancy in system-indicators reveals exploitation impacts in coral reef fisheries, James Robinson The ultimate challenge: Synthesizing theory and data to understand ecological change, Mary O'Connor Sharp reduction in genetic diversity of the coastal tailed frog (Ascaphus truei ): A phylogeographic study using multiple methods, Cherie Mosher Lowering the detection threshold: Taxonomic turnover across salinity eDNA detection of low density gradients, Melissa Chen juvenile salmon in a controlled experiment, Jeffrey C. MacAdams Analyses of American mink (Neovison vison ) haplotypes in Ontario and Nova Scotia, Krista Shofstall Non-native freshwater macroinvertebrates have densityand resource-dependent effects on ecosystem functioning, Chelsea J. Little Sockeye it to me! Landscape controls on population carrying capacity in data limited populations, William I. Atlas Exploring the genetic basis of autoimmune disease through the differential expression of foxp3 in zebrafish (Danio rerio ) follow..., Russell Easy The diversity-invasibility relationship: Does spatial scale really explain the invasion paradox?, Nicola S. Smith Emergent consumption and ecosystem impacts of invasive Chinook salmon in Patagonia, Nicolas Munoz Poster Session B: Tuesday 16:00 - 18:15 18:00 - 20:00 Oak Bay: CTSWS Annual General Meeting level 2: View Royal How do mountain pine beetle attacks impact understory vegetation in lodgepole pine forests in a novel area in westcentral Alberta?, Julie Steinke 19:00 - 22:00 Garricks Head pub Strategies for success: Student and postdoc workshop series Wed Using experimental NSERC Updates evolution to reveal the eco-evolutionary impacts of global change symposium Sensory and Behavioural Movement, activity, Ecology symposium wildlife management Habitat selection and use Theatre Saanich Oak Bay 1 Esquimalt 08:00 Evolutionary rescue comes of age: An account of the growth in our understanding through theory and experiments, Andrew Gonzalez NSERC Update Marine visual ecology: Insights from John Reynolds, Opening the Black Box flatfish and decapod shrimp, Tom of NSERC’s Discovery Grant Iwanicki Evaluations 08:15 Fisheries-induced evolution: Insights from experimental populations of guppies, Beatriz Diaz Pauli Visual ecology of the starry flounder, Ilaria Savelli 08:30 An experimental test of the effects of rapid evolution on species coexistence in the field, Martin Turcotte Reconstructing ancient whale Scale dependent behavioral responses House Hunters: Petrel edition, Rielle rhodopsin: Dim-light vision over a major of snowshoe hare in western conifer Hoeg evolutionary transition, Sarah Dungan forests post-fire, Jenna Hutchen Preliminary results and predictions from a beyond-range field planting experiment of four northern temperate tree species in Newfoundland, Piers Evans 08:45 Experimental evolution in the wild using long-term ecological experiments to study the evolution of mutualism, Jen Lau Rapid evolution in silence: Adaptation to the loss of a sexual signal, Marlene Zuk Where the rubber meets the road: The Human shields mediate sexual conflict influence of roads on grizzly bear in a top predator, Martin Leclerc density, Clayton T. Lamb Arctic willow: Probing polar deserts for pockets of nutrients?, Amanda L. Guy Canada's crossroads for sustainable development and the environment, Aerin Jacob 09:00 Ocean change, phenotypic plasticity and assisted evolution, Gloria Massamba N'Siala Aggression and the evolution of color signals in stomatopod crustaceans, Megan Porter Endangered endemic cyprinid minnow Land-use change and species exhibits different spatial and temporal occupancy in tropical bird communities, patterns to native and invasive species Leithen M'Gonigle in a perennial desert stream, Carolyn Trombley Impacts of deciduous and coniferous canopies on moss associated Nfixation: Implications for boreal Ncycling, Melanie Jean How Haida law embraces traditional and scientific knowledge, Terri-Lynn Williams Davidson 09:15 Experimental evolution in ecological communities: Predators mediate rapid evolution of herbivores and resources to warming, Michelle Tseng The impact of mountain pine beetle and mountain pine beetle management on caribou and grizzly bear food supply, Barry R. Nobert Determining factors affecting dragonfly emergence, including a species-at-risk (skillet clubtail: Gomphus ventricosus ) in the lower St John river and Grand Lake meadows area, Zoe O'Malley Plant functional groups, hydrological Watershed connections in conditions and climate interact to affect environmental decision-making, Jill carbon accumulation in peatlands, Terri Weitz Lacourse 09:30 Evolutionary rescue of complex NSERC Update phytoplankton communities exposed to Brenda MacMurrey, How to apply for a a widespread herbicide, Vincent Fugère Discovery Grant, and DG results. Why are train strikes on grizzly bears increasing in the mountain parks and what can we do about it?, Colleen Cassady St. Clair Density-dependent habitat selection Boreal peat properties link to plant predicts fitness and abundance of tree functional traits of ecosystem lizards (Urosaurus ornatus ), James E. engineers, Julia E. Palozzi Paterson Should courts be 'Academies of Science'? Lessons From the misapplication of "Adaptive Management" under the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, Martin Olszynski 09:45 Eco-evolutionary simulation models as a way of experimenting evolution, Anna Kuparinen Tracing the origin of migratory pest species European starling (Sturnus vulgaris ): Application of geochemical fingerprinting in south central British Columbia, Canada, K C Upama Characterizing Dakota skipper (Hesperia dacotae ) habitat and distribution in southeastern Saskatchewan, Kelsey M. Seidle From fishing gears to fish habitat: Canada's fisheries future depends on evidence-based decision-making, Brett Favaro Room: Oak Bay 2 Forest ecology Linking Environmental Law and Science Symposium West Coast Newcombe RBCM Evaluating a movement-based method Evaluating habitat specialization of for inferring calving and calf survival, North American birds using a spatial Maegwin Bonar null model, Carmen Chelick Responses of boreal forests to warming- Watershed connections in induced permafrost thaw, Jennifer environmental decision-making, Baltzer Jonathan Moore Natural regeneration on seismic lines influences movement behaviour of wolves and grizzly bears, Laura Finnegan Influence of moisture and nutrient Burden of proof, standard of proof: availability on Alnus viridis function Revealing the chasm between science across topographic gradients on the low and law, Lynda Collins arctic tundra, NWT, Katherine Black First assessment of hybrid poplar plantations as a suitable habitat for small mammal species in Quebec, Justine Fontaine-Topaloff Coffee Break 10:00 - 10:30 Forest understory changes over 30 years following tephra disturbance at Mount St. Helens, Joseph A. Antos Wed NSERC Cont. | Invasive species Bee ecology and behaviour Theatre Saanich Oak Bay 1 10:30 Dispersal limitation, climate change, and practical tools for conservation in intensively used landscapes, Laura E. Coristine NSERC Update The at-risk yellow-banded bumblebee Brenda MacMurrey, How to apply for a (Bombus terricola ) shows signs of Discovery Grant, and DG results. inbreeding and selection for pathogen resistance: Results from population genomics, Clement F. Kent 10:45 Gene expression associated with dispersal ability under different temperature conditions in the alpine butterfly, Parnassius smintheus , Maryam Jangjoo The spatial distribution of central place You're the one: Parasite infectious foraging pollinators in mass-flowering stages choose the most susceptible crops, Samuel V. J. Robinson host individuals, Janet Koprivnikar Whole Canadian boreal shield lake food Post-fire soil fungal communities and Metabolic performance and fitnesswebs flex in response to warming, ecosystem function in Canada's boreal related responses of a tropical Timothy J. Bartley forest, Nicola J. Day freshwater fish (Nile perch; Lates niloticus ) to elevated temperatures, Elizabeth Nyboer 11:00 Dispersive bird species are at greater risk than sedentary species when human-caused landscape change is rapid, Amanda E. Martin An approach to the managed relocation Epidemiological dynamics disrupt Red of declining North American bumblebee Queen cycles, Ailene MacPherson species under climate change, Catherine Sirois-Delisle River networks dampen long-term Changes in soil carbon stock quantity hydrological signals of climate change, and stability in response to wildfire Kyle Chezik events in the southern boreal forest, Catherine M. Dieleman 11:15 Ecology, genetics and conservation units despite gene flow in highly-vagile terrestrial mammals (caribou and wolves), Marco Musiani Flower depth links tongue length and Parasitic wasp Sudoku: Field studies of wing morphology through wing use in a host-parasitoid interactions in an urban community of prairie bumble bees, forest, Caitlin Mader Ralph Cartar Using a space-for-time substitution approach to predict implications of climate change on tropical stream ecosystem function, Therese C. Frauendorf Assessing the relative utility of It's not the heat, it's the humidity: mesostigmatid versus oribatid mites as Environmental effects on insect-plant bioindicators of disturbance in forested interactions, Mary L. Reid areas of Alberta, Canada, Matthew Meehan 11:30 How did the chick(adee) cross the Agent-based scenario models of Mass-flowering canola crops: road? Mapping arboreal connectivity in invasion and movement of the orchard Implications for prairie pollinators, Paul urban landscapes, Dee L. Patriquin pest Rhagoletis pomonella (Diptera: Galpern Tephritidae) within the southern interior of British Columbia, Brian Muselle The relative contribution of direct and environmental transmission in a hostpathogen avian flu model, May Anne Mata Thermokarst expansion rates and the effects on long-term soil carbon storage in interior Alaska, Natalie J. Zwanenburg Effects of wildfires on tree establishment in conifer-dominated boreal forests in southern Northwest Territories, Kirsten Reid 11:45 Morphology and gene expression associated with dispersal capability in mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae ), Victor Shegelski The importance of dyadic social ties for Temperature dependence of consumer- Shore morphology and nearshore forest Temperature modulation of biological pathogen dynamics in a gregarious resource dynamics is constrained by structure on Islands of BCs Central clock gene expression in a reef building ungulate, Quinn Webber nutrient limitation, Joey R. Bernhardt Coast, Wiebe Nijland coral, Daniel M. Wuitchik Room: Dispersal When outbreaks collide: Interactions between an invasive beetle and a native defoliator on red spruce, Mallory MacDonnell Parasites, parasitoids, pathogens When two invasive species meet: Past floral resources as a predictor of Potential interactions between Asian present bee visits to crops, Jessica jumping worms and common buckthorn, Guezen Carly Ziter Aquatic ecology Forest ecology Physiological ecology, temperature Oak Bay 2 Esquimalt West Coast Newcombe RBCM Mosquito community ecology and malaria transmission, Amber Gigi Hoi *Linking Environmental Law and Hierarchical demography in a Burning in SpaDES: Automated cooperative breeder, Andrew Bateman parameter estimation for landscape fire Science* Accelerating the creation of effective marine protected areas in models, Steve Cumming Canada: scientific advice and the federal Oceans Act, Linda Nowlan Lunch 12:00 - 13:30 (on your own) To eat or thermoregulate? Determinants of home range size and density in Sceloporus jarrovii lizards, Lucy D. Patterson Heat wave intensity exacerbates fitness trade-offs in the splash pool copepod, Tigriopus californicus , Matthew R. Siegle Wed Room: Theatre Saanich Oak Bay 1 13:30 PRESIDENT'S INTRO, CSEE 14:00 CSEE Early Career Award Lecture, Emily Darling 14:30 CSEE Early Career Award Lecture, Sean Anderson Oak Bay 2 Coffee Break 15:00 - 15:30 Room: Theatre 15:30 17:00 CSEE Annual General Meeting 19:00 20:30 Saanich Oak Bay 1 Oak Bay 2 Banquet Posters up 08:00 - 18:30 Monday & Tuesday Poster Session A: Monday 16:00 - 18:15 Poster Session B: Tuesday 16:00 - 18:15 Abstracts Stress,Antipredatorbehaviour MONDAY10:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Systemic stress levels in Vancouver Island marmots may correlate to human intervention: Implications for the management of a critically endangered mammal MADISONJ.ACKER,LAURENTIANUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ALBRECHTI.SCHULTE-HOSTEDDE,LAURENTIANUNIVERSITY;GABRIELAF.MASTROMONACO,TORONTOZOO TheVancouverIslandmarmotisanendangeredspeciesofgroundsquirrel,endemictoBritishColumbia,Canada.Despite 20yearsofintensivemanagementthespeciesrecoveryremainsuncertain;intheabsenceofcaptivebreeding,itislikely thatthespecieswouldnotpersist.Keepingmarmotsincaptivity,releasingindividualsintothewild,andbringing individualsintocaptivitymaybesourcesofstressthatcontributetopoorsurvivorshipandreproduction.Hormonal analysiswasusedtoinvestigatesystemicstresslevelsamongVancouverIslandmarmotsoverasixyearperiod.Hair samplesfromcaptiveandfree-rangingmarmots,includingthosewhichhavebeentranslocatedbetweenpopulations, wereassayedforcortisol.Studiesonavarietyofmammalianspecies,includinggroundsquirrels,haveshownthathair cortisollevelsareavalidmeasureofsystemiccortisoloveranextendedperiodoftime.Agenerallinearmodelwasused toidentifyinterventionsbywildlifemanagersthatcorrelatedtoasignificantdifferenceincortisollevelwhencompared toindividualsborninthewildandsubjecttominimalinterventions.ResultsofthisstudywillassisttheVancouverIsland marmotrecoveryteamtomodifytheirstandardoperatingproceduresandmayofferinsightintothemanagementof relatedspecies. Keywords:Smallmammals,Management,Speciesatrisk,Hormonalanalysis. SeagrassecologyandconservationalongPacificandAtlanticcoastssymposium TUESDAY13:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Identifying human impacts on eelgrass faunal biodiversity in Barkley Sound, Vancouver Island EMILYM.ADAMCZYK,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] MARCUSL.CAMPBELL,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;ZANDERCHILA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;GWENDOLYNK. GRIFFITHS,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;MARYI.O'CONNOR,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Eelgrass(Zosteramarina)meadowsaredecliningworldwideduetobothnaturalandhuman-mediateddisturbances. AlongtheeastcoastofNorthAmerica,eutrophicationevents,nearshoredevelopment,andoverfishingcandestroy valuableeelgrasshabitat.Theseactivitiescanaffectthefaunalcommunitythatreliesoneelgrassforhabitatand protectionagainstpredators.However,littleworkhasbeendoneonthewestcoastofNorthAmericatoquantifythe effectsofhumanactivitiesoneelgrassfaunalbiodiversity,andsincethespeciespoolsaredifferentbetweeneachcoast,it wouldbeusefultoidentifyspeciesthatmightserveasindicatorspeciesofimpactandrecovery.Toaddressthis,we investigatedeelgrassfaunalbiodiversityinmeadowswithlowandhighintensityofproximatehumanactivities.During June2016,wesampled8eelgrassmeadowsinBarkleySound,BC,4ofwhichwerelikelytobeconferringpollutionand habitatdestruction,and4thatwerenot.Wecomparedeelgrassbiomassanddensity,epiphyticalgaebiomass,fishand epifaunalinvertebrates(diversityandabundance),andwaterquality(nitrogen,phosphorous,temperature,salinity,and conductivity)betweeneacheelgrassmeadow.Whileproximitytohumandevelopmentswasnotassociatedwith significantdifferencesineelgrassandepiphyticalgaebiomass,wewereabletodetectdifferencesineelgrassfaunal communityassemblages.Thisinformationsuggeststhatfaunaldiversitymaybeamoresensitiveindicatorofecosystem healththaneelgrassplantattributesandcouldserveasamonitoringtoolforothereelgrassmeadows. Thetensionbetweenscienceandadvocacyinecology,evolution,andconservationbiologysymposium TUESDAY08:15,ROOM:SAANICH Getting out of the ivory tower: Informing policies for reforestation, conservation and climate change SALLYAITKEN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Iwillreflectonmyexperienceswithrecommendingchangestopoliciesandpracticesforreforestation,conservationand climatechange,andthelessonsIhavelearnedindealingwithlandmanagersandpolicymakers.First,youneedto developapositiverelationshipwithmanagersanddecisionmakersthatincludesrespectfullylisteningandlearningas wellassharingyourscience.Ifyoudon’tspeakthesamelanguage,e.g.,scienceversusmanagementorpolicy,youwon’t beabletocommunicateeffectively.Secondly,youneedtorecognizethatpolicydecisionsarenotonlydrivenbyscience, andthatasascientistyouarelikelynotanexpertintheotherareasinvolved.Thereareamyriadofsocio-economic, political,jurisdictionalandotherfactorsatplay.Whileyoumayhaveopinionsonthese,acknowledgethatyoudonothave expertise.Beclearwhenyouarespeakingasanexpert,andwhenyouareexpressingopinioninareasthatarenotyour expertise.Third,ratherthanbeingnegativeaboutthestatusquo,offerpolicymakersproductive,practicalsolutionsand tools.Maketherelevantscienceeasytoaccessandeasytounderstandbynon-specialists.Thismeansdeveloping communicationtoolsthatarenotpeer-reviewedpapers.Fourth,becarefulwhenadvocacyisself-servingintermsof researchfundingorotherbenefits.Forexample,climatechangedeniersoftenaccusescientistsofhypingtherisksof climatechangefortheirownbenefit.Finally,bepatient.Ittakesanextraordinarilylongtimeforcomplexchangesto policytobeimplemented,withstagesofconsultationandreviewtakingyears.Ifyouwanttoreallymakeadifference,you needtobethereforthelongtermasthereisnoeasyfix. Forestecology TUESDAY16:00,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Are plants able to utilize nitrogen released from thawing permafrost? Implications for feedbacks with the climate system LUCASJ.ALBANO,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] MERRITTR.TURETSKY,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH Climatewarminginnorthernhigh-latituderegionsistriggeringwidespreadpermafrostthaw,wherebymassiveamounts ofsoilcarbonandnitrogenthatwerepreviouslyfrozeninorganicmatteratdepthbecomepotentiallyavailablefor biologicaluptake.Microbialactivityduringpermafrostthawalsostimulatessoilcarbonmineralizationandthereleaseof greenhousegases,contributingtofurtherwarming,whichisknownasthepermafrost-carbonfeedback.Todate,theissue ofclimatewarminghasmotivatedextensiveresearchonpermafrostcarbonreleasetotheatmosphere.However,few studieshaveaddressedwhetherplantscanaccessnewnitrogensourcesmadeavailablebypermafrostthaw,increasing primaryproductivityandpotentiallyoffsettingpermafrostcarbonlosses.Inthisstudy,tworesearchquestionswere addressedinsitesexperiencingthawandthermokarstininteriorAlaska,usingthewatersedge(Carexaquatilis)asthe targetspecies:1)howdoC.aquatilisrootcharacteristics,namelydrybiomass,maximumrootingdepth,andlevelsof ammoniumuptake,varywithdepthandtime-since-thaw;and2)doesvariationinC.aquatilisrootcharacteristicsand ammoniumuptakecorrelatewithabovegroundplantperformanceandproductivity?Preliminarydatashowthatboth rootandshootdrybiomassisgreaterinlocationswithgreatertime-since-thaw,indirectlydemonstratingapotential relationshipbetweeninorganicnitrogenavailabilityandplantproductivity.Together,thisworkwillcontributetoa mechanisticunderstandingofhowsubarcticplantsrespondtowarming,andwillsupplementinformationonthe permafrost-carbonfeedbackwithanunderstandingofhowecosystemsmighthelpstabilizefuturewarmingthrough enhancedcarbonsequestration. Keywords:plants,climatechange,nutrientuptake,productivity,permafrost. Phylogenetics MONDAY08:00,ROOM:WCOAST Introduced common reed (Phragmites australis) in western Canada: A future problem or not? GERALDINEA.ALLEN,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] LAURIEJ.MCCORMICK,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;JOHANNAR.JANTZEN,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;KENDRICKL.MARR,ROYALBRITISH COLUMBIAMUSEUM;BECKYN.BROWN,LANDSANDNATURALRESOURCEOPERATIONS Phragmitesaustralis(commonreed)isawidespreadperennialgrassofwetlandhabitats,withcrypticnativeand introducedsubspeciesinNorthAmerica.IntroducedplantsfromEurope,firstdocumentedintheeasternUSaround1870, arenowwidespreadovermuchofthecontinent.TherapidspreadofintroducedP.australishasledtoactivecontrol programsinbothCanadaandtheUSA.Weusedmolecularmarkers(plastidDNAhaplotypes)toassignspecimensfrom westernCanadatosubspecies.Weusedtheseplantsofknownhaplotypetoassessthemorphologicaltraitsdistinguishing nativeandintroducedspecimensinthisgeographicregion.Of203plantssampled,onlynineweretheintroducedform; allothersampleswerethenativessp.americanus.Althoughtheintroducedformofcommonreedhasdisplacedother speciesoverlargeareasofwetlandhabitatineasternNorthAmerica,itremainsuncommoninthewest.Thismayreflect i)gradualbutstillcontinuingwestwarddispersal,ii)decreasedavailabilityorsuitabilityofhabitatinsummer-dry climatesofthewest,oriii)somecombinationofthese.Afurtherconsiderationiswhetherthetwosubspeciesofcommon reedcouldpotentiallyhybridize,whichhasrarelybeenreportedbutoffersthepotentialforinvasivetraitstobe transferredintothenativesubspecies.Wefoundthetwoformsco-occurringatonlyonelocality.Inourstudy,the introducedformwasgenerallyrestrictedtosmallpopulationsinpocketsofdisturbedhabitat.Thisgrass,though potentiallyinvasive,ispresentlylessproblematicinwesternCanadathanelsewhereinNorthAmerica. Keywords:Plants,Hybridization,Wetlands,Populationgenetics,Invasion. Plasticsintheenvironment MONDAY15:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Plastic pollution in the total environment: A review of marine plastic contamination in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada JUSTINEAMMENDOLIA,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY,[email protected] FRANCELIBOIRON,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY;HILLARYBRADSHAW,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY;NATALYADAWE,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY; JESSICAMELVIN,UNIVERSITYOFAKUREYRI;MELISSANOVACEFSKI,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY;JACQUELYNSATURNO;E.WELLS,MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY;MAXLIBOIRON,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY Overthepast50years,plasticdebrishasbecomeoneofthemostabundantandpersistentformsofcontaminationin coastalregionsandmarineecosystems.Todate,therehasnotbeenasystematicreviewofplasticpollutionfor NewfoundlandandLabrador(NL),despitethefactthatitisalmostthesizeofCalifornia,anditspopulationheavilyrelies onsubsistenceforagingfromtheocean.Plasticpollutionistypicallynotresearchedfromaperspectivethatexaminesits occurrencewithinthecontextofgeographicregionsandmultiplephyla.Therefore,ourcomprehensionofplastic pollutioninabroadenvironmentalframeworkislimitedinsamplingtechniques.Thisisthefirstreviewoftheavailable knowledgeregardingplasticpollutioninthetotalenvironmentofNL.Herewesummarize:(1)studymethodsand(2) typesandquantitiesofplasticdebrisidentifiedacrosstheprovince.Ourdataincludes36investigativereportsdating from1968topresentthatusedthefollowingtechniques:biomonitoring,divingsurveys,surfacetrawls,andcitizen scienceshorelineidentification.Ourresultsshowthereisregionalbiasassociatedwiththegeographiclocationssampled aswellasthemethodsusedforstudyingplastics(e.g.,birdingestionstudiesoverfishingestionstudies).Thereisalsoa regionalandculturalspecificityforthetypeofplasticspresentintheregion(e.g.,fishinggear).Asthereisnoprovincial monitoringprogramforplasticpollution,thisresearchnotonlyestablishesthegroundworkforfuturemonitoring programs,butalsoprovidesamethodologyforotherregionstosynthesizediverseandunevenmonitoringeffects. Keywords:Marine,Plastic,Pollution,Literaturereview. Aquaticecology TUESDAY14:45,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Drought causes shift in functional role of aquatic macroinvertebrate from shredder to predator SARAHAMUNDRUD,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] DIANESRIVASTAVA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Speciesinteractionscanbeimportantmediatorsofcommunityandecosystemresponsestoclimatechange.Climate changecanalterspeciesinteractionsbyaffectingthedistribution,abundance,orbehaviourofcertainspecies.Although theindirecteffectsofclimatechangemediatedbyalteredspeciesdistributionsandabundancesarenowrelativelywell understood,westillonlyknowverylittleabouthowclimatechangeaffectsthefeedingbehaviourofcertainspecies,and thusthepotentialofclimatechangetoaltertrophicinteractionsbetweenvariouscomponentsofthefoodweb.Inthe aquaticfoodwebsfoundinwater-filledbromeliadtanks,tipulidlarvaeareimportantshreddersofdetritus.However, recentobservationssuggestthattipulidscanfeedopportunisticallyonotherinsectswhentheyencounterthem,suchas whenplacedtogetherinsmallcontainers.Here,wepresenttheresultsoftwoindependentmicrocosmexperimentsthat bothtestedtheeffectsofdroughtontheconsumptionofthelarvaeofchironomidsandculicidsbytipulidlarvae.While Experiment1examinedtheeffectsofacompletedrought(i.e.,nowater),Experiment2examinedtheeffectsofareduced waterlevelonconsumptionofpreybytipulids.Inbothexperiments,tipulidsconsumedculicidandchironomidslarvae, butonlyunderdrought.Thus,droughtledtotipulids,previouslyconsideredobligateshredders,tobecomeimportant predators.Thisdroughtinducedswitchingofthetipulidsfunctionalrolelikelyresultedfromincreasedencounterrates withconcentratedpreyunderdrought.Theseexperimentsshednewlightonthevariouswaysinwhichclimatechange canindirectlyaffectecosystemsbyaffectingspeciesinteractions. Keywords:Climatechange,Behaviouralecology,Tipulidlarvae,Experiment,Predation. Matechoice,hybridization MONDAY13:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Do mate choice errors slow the spread of the invasive brown spruce longhorn beetle? JENNIFERANDERSON,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK,[email protected] DEEPAS.PURESWARAN,NATURALRESOURCESCANADA;STEPHENB.HEARD,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK;JONSWEENEY, NATURALRESOURCESCANADA TheBrownSpruceLonghornBeetle(BSLB,TetropiumfuscumFabricius;Coleoptera:Cerambycidae)isaEuropeanbeetle thatfirstinvadedCanadathroughPointPleasantPark(NovaScotia)inthelate1990s.Sinceitsentry,BSLBhasexpanded itsrangetoapproximately130kmfromitspointofentry,astarkcontrasttothe~1200kmCanadianrangeexpansion seenbytheinvasiveEmeraldAshBorer(EAB,AgrilusplanipennisFarimaire;Coleoptera:Buprestide)inthesame approximatetimeframe.TetropiumcinnamopterumKirby(Coleoptera:Cerambycidae)isnativetoEasternCanadaandis acongenertoT.fuscum,sharingsimilarmorphology,matingbehaviour,andmale-producedmating/aggregation pheromoneblends.ThesesimilaritiesledtothequestionofwhetherthereissomeinteractiontakingplacebetweenT. fuscumandT.cinnamopterumthatcouldhelpexplainT.fuscum'sslowspreadinCanada.Pilotno-choicematingdata suggestthatthereisnosignificantdifferenceinhowT.fuscummalesmatewitheitherT.fuscumorT.cinnamopterum females.Thissuggeststhatmate-choiceerrorsmayreducefemalefecundity,andcontributetotheslowspreadofthis invasive.ChoicematingexperimentsandgenerationofaSNPpaneltosurveyforhybridsinthefield,whichmaygivea moreaccurateportrayaloftheinteractionsbetweenthesetwospecies,arecurrentlyinprogress. Keywords:Invasion,Interactions,Reproduction,Experiment,Insects. Pollution TUESDAY11:45,ROOM:SAANICH Calcified herbivore loss may disproportionately drive responses to ocean acidification in natural communities. KATHRYNM.ANDERSON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Oceanacidification(OA)isexpectedtobeoneofthelargestchallengesfacingmarinebiodiversity.Whileweare continuallycatalogingthenegativeeffectsofOAonmultiplespecies,therehasbeenarecentshiftintheliterature towardstryingtounderstandOAinacommunitycontextand,wheneverpossible,inthefield.Here,wefocusonthe impactofgastropodgrazers,whichhavepreviouslybeenshowntobothhaveanimpactontidepoolcommunity structure,andbevulnerabletoOA.WelookathowareductioninherbivorepressuremayaltertheimpactsofOAontide poolcommunities.Usinglong-termartificialtidepoolsandafullyfactorialdesign,wemanipulatedgastropodherbivore density(highandlow)andairmixture(highCO2air,ambientCO2air,andanobubblingcontrol)inthefield.After15 months,PERMANOVAsshowedsignificant,additiveeffectsofherbivoredensityandairmixtureoncommunitystructure, withtheeffectofairmixturebeingprimarilydrivenbythenobubblingcontrolratherthanCO2concentration.Further investigationintoindividualspeciesaddedexceptions.Musselswerepositivelyaffectedbyherbivoreabundancebut negativelyaffectedbyCO2addition.Conversely,invasivetunicateswerefoundalmostexclusivelyinhighCO2tidepools regardlessofherbivorepressure.BymanipulatingCO2innaturalcommunities,webegintounderstandthatthelossof keyinteractionsduetoenvironmentalchangemayhaveimpactslargerthanthedirecteffectsonabundanceanddiversity. Keywords:Marine,Oceanacidification,Interactions,Intertidal,Experiment,Herbivore. Foraging TUESDAY10:30,ROOM:SIDNEY Habitat-mediated predation and selective consumption of spawning salmon by bears LUKEANDERSSON,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] JOHNREYNOLDS,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Predator-preyinteractionsarekeyelementsofecosystemfunctioningandcanbemediatedbyphysicalcharacteristicsof theenvironment.Iaimedtoquantifytheeffectsofstreamcharacteristicsonbiasesinthesizesofspawningchum (Oncorhynchusketa)andpink(O.gorbuscha)salmoncaughtbybears,aswellas,selectiveconsumptionexhibitedbybears onthecentralcoastofBritishColumbia.Ifirstshowhowsize-biasedpredationismediatedbystreamcharacteristicsthat providerefugeforprey,withimplicationsforsize-selectivepressuresactingonsalmonindifferentstreams.Bearscaught larger-than-averagesalmonastheseasonprogressedandinstreamswithfewerrefugia(i.e.,woodandundercutbanks) forthefish.Ithentestedforhowsuchsize-biasesinturntranslateintodifferencesamongpopulationsinthesizesofthe fish.Salmonweremarginallysmallerinstreamswithmorepronouncedsize-biasedpredationbutthispredictorwasless reliablethanphysicalcharacteristicsofstreams,withlargerfishinwider,deeperstreams.Furthermore,bearsfeed selectivelyonenergy-richpartsofsalmon,dependingoncharacteristicsofthestream,withconsequencesforterrestrial nutrienttransferviauneatensalmonbiomass.Overall,Ifoundthatbearsfedmoreselectivelyandkilledmorefishin streamswithmorewoodandundercutbanks.Thissuggeststhathabitatcharacteristicsplayaroleinmediatingpredator behaviourand,therefore,haveimplicationsfortheselectivepressuresfacedbysalmon,andnutrientsubsidiesto surroundinghabitats. Keywords:Salmon,Bears,Predation,Freshwater,Streamcharacteristics. LifeOntheEdge:MechanismsofAdaptingtoClimateChangeSymposium TUESDAY10:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Demographic compensation and climatic tipping points in monkeyflowers AMYANGERT,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] SEEMASHETH,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIABERKELEY Asclimatechangeshiftsspecies’climaticenvelopesacrossthelandscape,equilibriumbetweengeographicrangesand nichesislikelydiminishingduetotimelagsindemographyanddispersal.Ifaspecies’rangeandnichearein disequilibrium,thenpopulationperformanceshoulddecreasefromcool,“leading”rangeedges,wherepopulationsare expandingintorecentlyamelioratedhabitats,towarm,“trailing”rangeedges,wherepopulationsarecontractingfrom newlyunsuitableareas.Populationcontractionsignalsthatcompensatorychangesinvitalratesareinsufficienttobuffer populationgrowthfromdeterioratingenvironments.Lifehistorytheorypredictstradeoffsbetweenfastdevelopment, highreproduction,andshortlongevityatlowlatitudesandslowdevelopment,lessfrequentbutmultipleboutsof reproduction,andlonglifespanathighlatitudes.Ifdemographiccompensationisdrivenbylifehistoryevolution,there maybecompensatorynegativecorrelationsinvitalratesthatareassociatedwiththisfast-slowcontinuum.An outstandingquestioniswhetherrangeandnichelimitsreflectinadequatecompensatorylifehistoryevolutionalong environmentalgradients,causingpopulationgrowthratestofallbelowreplacementatrangeedges.Wesurveyed demographyof32populationsofthescarletmonkeyflower(Erythranthecardinalis)spanning11degreeslatitudein westernNorthAmericaandusedintegralprojectionmodelstoinferpopulationdynamics.Populationgrowthrates increasedfromlowtohighlatitudes,consistentwithleading-trailingdynamics.Differencesingrowth,survival,and recruitmentdrovespatialvariationinpopulationgrowthrates,withgrowthandrecruitmentprobabilitiesincreasing withlatitudeandsurvivalprobabilitiesdecreasingfrommidlatitudestowardsthenorthernandsouthernedges.The presenceofstatisticallysignificantdemographiccompensationamongvitalratesindicatesthatvitalratesmayrespond individualisticallytothesameenvironmentalgradientandthatsinglevitalratesmayfailtopredictpopulation performance.Althoughtherewasdemographiccompensation,thesmall,positiveeffectsofahigherprobabilityof floweringandgreaterfruitnumberdidnotbuffersouthern,low-latitudepopulationsfromthelarge,negativeeffectsof lowsurvival,growth,andrecruitment.Thus,demographiccompensationmaynotbesufficienttorescuepopulationsat thetrailingedgefromagainstextinction. Forestecology WEDNESDAY09:45,ROOM:WCOAST Forest understory changes over 30 years following tephra disturbance at Mount St. Helens JOSEPHA.ANTOS,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] DONALDB.ZOBEL,OREGONSTATEUNIVERSITY The1980volcaniceruptionofMountSt.Helensproducedarangeofdisturbances,includingwidespreadtephradeposits thatalteredtheforestunderstorybuthadminimaleffectsonthetreecanopy.Weusedpermanentplotsatfoursites representingtwotephradepthsanddisturbanceintensitiesinold-growthforeststoevaluatevegetationchangeover30 years.Deepertephra(>12cm)largelyobliteratedtheherbandmosslayerswhereas4.5cmtephrahadlimitedeffectson mostherbaceousspecies.Shrubsandsmalltreeswereoftenkilledwheretephrafellonplantsflattenedbeneatha snowpack,butnotbytephraalone.Thevegetationchangeddramaticallyduringthesubsequent30years,althoughmoss coverstillremainedgreatlyreduced.Byevaluatingcompositionalchangesusingordinations,alongwithchangesin growthformcover,weshowthatmostvasculargrowthformsatmostsitesareconvergingon,andoftenwithintherange of,pre-disturbanceconditions(asindicatedusingplotsclearedoftephraduringsummer1980).However,trajectoriesof compositionalchangeasindicatedbyordinationsshowsomeinstanceswherespeciescompositionisdivergingfrompredisturbanceestimates.Thus,after30years,recoveryfromthisdisturbancehasbeenpronouncedinmanyinstances,but somechangesinspeciescompositionremainandthereareindicationsofdivergenceratherthanfurtherconvergencein somesituations.Inaddition,ourlong-termstudiesusingpermanentplotsemphasizetheimportanceofinitialconditions, subsequentevents,speciescharacteristics,andalongtimeframefordevelopingathoroughunderstandingofpostdisturbancesuccessionalchanges. Keywords:Tephra,Disturbance,Plants,Forest,Permanentplots. Marineecology TUESDAY14:15,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Preferred prey hotspots for juvenile salmon in the Skeena estuary MICHAELARBEIDER,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] CHARMAINECARR-HARRIS,SKEENAFISHERIESCOMMISSION,CIARASHARPE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;JONATHANW.MOORE,SIMON FRASERUNIVERSITY Foodwebinteractionscancontrolthedynamicsofsalmon(Oncorhynchusspp.)populations.Estuaryfoodwebsand habitatprovidenurseriesformanyfishes,includingjuvenilesalmon,whosepopulationdynamicsandhabitatpreferences maybecontrolledbypreyabundanceanddistribution.Forexample,juvenilesalmoncanrearforextendedperiodsin estuarieswheretheyfeedandgrowduringtheirresidency.On-goingcollaborativeresearchbetweenFirstNations fisheriesprogramsandSFUhavebeeninvestigatingjuvenilesalmonfoodwebsandhabitatuseintheestuaryofthe Skeenariver.TheSkeenaisthesecond-largestsalmonwatershedinCanadaanditsestuaryispoisedformajorindustrial developmentsthatcoincidewithareasofhighjuvenilesalmonabundance.Wesurveyedzooplanktonandfish communitiesandanalyzedsalmondietsacrossthelowerSkeenaestuary.Cohosalmonselectedforlarvalfishthemost butbothgastropodlarvaeandlarvalfishhadhighIndexofRelativeImportance(IRI)scores.Sockeyesalmonweremore generalistbutharpacticoidcopepod'sIRIscorewas2.5timeshigherthanaverage.Welinkedthisinformationwith zooplanktonabundanceacrosstimethroughouttheestuarytomaplocationsofpreyhotspots.Therewassubstantial variationacrosstheestuaryintermsoftheabundanceofpreferredpreybutabundancehotspotsdidnotcorrelate predictablywithanycombinationofabioticorhabitatvariables.Thisresearchisasteptowardsunderstandingthefoodwebcomponentofjuvenilesalmonhabitatuseinanestuaryatakeypointinitsplanninganddevelopmenttrajectory. Keywords:Estuary,Salmon,Foraging,Habitatselection,Foodweb. Selection MONDAY14:00,ROOM:WCOAST Life history trade-offs, sexual conflict, and the maintenance of variation in Drosophila melanogaster DEVINARBUTHNOTT,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Understandinghowgeneticvariationismaintainedinthefaceofstrongnaturalandsexualselectionisafundamental challengetoevolutionarytheory.Severalalternativeandoverlappingmechanismshavebeenproposed,withvarying levelsofsupport,buttherearefewempiricalteststhatevaluateseveralalternativemechanismswithinasinglesystem.I previouslyobservedthatisogenicfemalelinesofthefruitflyDrosophilamelanogasterformtransitivehierarchieswith respecttoattractiveness,andthatfemalesuccessinmatecompetitionsiscorrelatedwithpotentialoffspringproduction. Thesefemalegenotypesthereforedisplaysubstantialvariationincomponentsofbothsexualandnon-sexualfitness, makingthemanidealsystemtoevaluatepotentiallifehistorytrade-offsexplainingtheexistenceandpersistenceofthis geneticvariation.Imeasuredvariouscomponentsoflifehistoryamong40isogeniclines,includinglife-span,offspring production,senescencerates,maleandfemaleattractiveness,condition-dependence,andsexualconflict.Whiletherewas significantgeneticvariationamonglinesinseverallife-historycomponents,fewwerecorrelatedwithfemale attractivenessoroffspringproduction.However,Ifoundthatthecostsofsexualconflictreducethedifferencesin offspringproductionamonggenotypeswhentheyinteractinamoresociallycomplexenvironment.Myresultstherefore suggestthatsexualconflictcontributestothepersistenceofsupposedlyless-fitgenotypesinpopulations. Keywords:Selection,Geneticvariation,Socialbehaviour,Evolution,Reproduction. Communityecology TUESDAY13:45,ROOM:WCOAST Forest fragmentation differentially affects the movement behavior of the main pollinator and seed disperser of a tropical understory herb LUISA.ARIAS-MEDELLIN,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] ADAMS.HADLEY,OREGONSTATEUNIVERSITY;SARAHJ.K.FREY,OREGONSTATEUNIVERSITY;NOELIAL.VOLPE,CENTRODEECOLOGIÁ APLICADADELLITORAL;MATTHEWG.BETTS,OREGONSTATEUNIVERSITY;HELENEWAGNER,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Theeffectofhabitatlossandfragmentationonanimalmovementbehaviorcandifferbetweenspecies,alteringplantanimalinteractionsandtherebyplantpopulationsindifferentways.Wetestediftropicalforestfragmentation differentiallyaffectshomerangesizeandhabitatutilizationofboththeprimarypollinator(greenhermithummingbird Phaethornisguy)andtheprimaryseeddisperser(claycoloredthrushTurdusgrayi)oftheunderstoryherbHeliconia tortuosaatLasCrucesBiologicalStation,CostaRica.Weusedradiotransmitterstotrackmovementpatternsof20 individualsofP.guyand25individualsofT.grayicapturedinforestpatcheswithvaryingpatchsizeandconnectivity. GeneralizedLinearMixedModelsshowedthatP.guymovedmorefrequentlythroughforestwhileT.grayifrequently movedthroughnon-forestedareasoflandscapes.Increasedfragmentationandreducedconnectivitydecreasedhome rangesizeofP.guy,whilehomerangesizeofT.grayiwasnotaffectedbyfragmentationandconnectivity.Avoidanceof non-forestedareasbyP.guybutnotbyT.grayisuggeststhatlandscapefragmentationmightprimarilylimitpollination butnotseeddispersal.Therefore,seeddispersalcouldhelpcounteractthenegativeeffectsthatreducedpollinationcould haveonplantpopulations.Ourresultsemphasizetheimportanceofsimultaneouslyconsideringvariousecological functionswhenexamininglandscapeeffectsonplantpopulationdynamics. Keywords:Forest,Pollinators,Fragmentation,Homerange,Behaviouralecology. Effectsofclimatechange TUESDAY15:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 The impacts of climate change on fungal communities in boreal peatlands ASMAASEMANINEJAD,UNIVERSITYOFWESTERNONTARIO,[email protected] GREGTHORN,UNIVERSITYOFWESTERNONTARIO;ZOLINDO,UNIVERSITYOFWESTERNONTARIO PeatlandshaveanimportantroleinglobalclimatechangethroughsequestrationofatmosphericCO2.Fungal communitiesinborealpeatlandshavepivotalrolesinecosystem-levelfunctioningsuchasdecomposition.Climatechange isalreadyaffectingtheseecosystems,includingbothabove-andbelow-groundcommunitiesandtheirfunctions.Thereis concernthatalteredfungalcommunityfunctionaffectedbyclimatechangemayturnpeatlandsfromcarbonsinksto carbonsources,greatlyexacerbatingtheimpactsofclimatechangeworldwide.Togainabetterinsightintotheeffectsof climatechangeonthestructureandfunctionofthesecrucialcarbonsequesteringecosystems,weusedIlluminaMiSeq sequencingofrDNAtomonitorresponsesoffungalcommunitiesover18monthsin84intactpeatlandmesocosms subjectedtoafullfactorialdesignofconditionsassociatedwithCanada’sfutureclimate:increasedtemperature,elevated atmosphericCO2andloweredwatertable.Theexperimentalfindingsindicatethattheeffectsofwatertabledrawdown aremostlikelytoappearasashort-termeffect.Whilefungalgroupsaremainlyaffectedbyincreasedtemperaturesovera longerperiodoftime,suchthatincreasedtemperaturesof4and8degreesCaboveambientconditionsprovokea compositionalshiftincommunitiesoffungitowardsdifferentgroupsofdecomposers,supportingthepatternof degradativesuccessionoffungiinvolvedintheprocessofdecomposition.Increasedtemperaturetreatmentsalsoleadto increasedabundanceofvascularplantroot-associates.Thesefindingsarevaluableinprovidingabroaderconceptual contextofclimatechangeanditsconsequencesforcarbondynamicsofborealpeatlands. Keywords:Peatland,Carbonstorage,Climatechange,Experiment,Fungus,Decomposition,Genomicsequencing. Fishecology TUESDAY16:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Sockeye it to me! Landscape controls on population carrying capacity in data limited populations WILLIAMI.ATLAS,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] DANIELT.SELBIE,DEPARTMENTOFFISHERIESANDOCEANS;STEVECOX-ROGERS,DEPARTMENTOFFISHERIESANDOCEANS;JONATHAN W.MOORE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Managementofdatalimitedpopulationsisacentralchallengeforfisheriesbiologistsaroundtheworld.ForFirstNations communitiesontheNorthandCentralCoastofBritishColumbia,wildsalmon—particularlysockeye—areaprincipalfood source,andmanagingthesefisheriesforsustainablebenefitsiscentraltothelong-termwellbeingofthesecommunities. Forsockeye,whichhaveanobligatelakerearingphaseduringtheirjuvenilelifehistory,lakeproductivitycancontrol populationsize.Toprovideinsightintothecarryingcapacityoflakeswithlittleornostock-recruitdataweused structuralequationmodelstotestasuiteofhypothesesaboutthelinksbetweenlakesize,location,watershedelevation, andlakeproductivityforsockeyesalmon.Modelsrevealedpatternsoflandscape-scalecontrolonlakecommunity structure,productivityandsockeyepopulationsize,withstrongspatialcoherenceinlakeproductivity.Estimatesoflake productivitywerethenusedaspriorsforcarryingcapacityinahierarchical-Bayesianstock-recruitmodel,whichusedall availablestock-recruitdataacrosstheNorthandCentralcoasttoproduceestimatesofpopulationparametersfor120 sockeyepopulations.Estimatesofpopulationparameterscanbeusedtosetconservationbenchmarksandevaluate alternativemanagementscenariosforsockeyefoodfisheries. Keywords:Salmon,Fisheries,Management,Modeling,Productivity. Socialsystems MONDAY16:45,ROOM:THEATRE How did egg-laying and work behaviours decouple from solitary antecedents to eusocial castes? DAVIDN.AWDE,BROCKUNIVERSITY,[email protected] MIRIAMH.RICHARDS,BROCKUNIVERSITY Theevolutionofeusocialitycanbeconceptualisedastheevolutionarydecouplingofsolitarymaternalbehavioursinto queensandworkers.Insolitarybees,mothersthatworkmorealsolaymoreeggs,butinhighlyeusocialbees,queensonly layeggsandworkersonlywork.Decouplingcouldhaveevolvedasaprogressivelymorenegativecorrelationbetween thesetwosetsofbehaviour.Ifso,thenthebehaviourofprimitivelyeusocialspeciesshouldrepresentanintermediate stage,withaweakerbutstillnegativecorrelationbetweenegg-layingandwork.InthesweatbeeL.laevissimum,allnewly eclosedfemalesarecapableofbehavingasqueensorworkers.Wepredictedthategg-layingandworkbehaviourswould benegativelycorrelatedwithinL.laevissimumfemales.However,wefoundthatovariandevelopmentwaspositively correlatedwithmandibularwear(ameasureofnestbuildingactivity),notnegativelycorrelatedaspredicted. Furthermore,workerswithsubstantialovariandevelopmenthadmoremandibularwearthansterileworkers.This meansthattheevolutionarydecouplingofegg-layingandworkbehaviourlikelywasnotacontinuousprocessthatbegan withsolitaryancestorsandcontinuedprogressivelythroughprimitivelyeusocialandhighlyeusocialdescendants.More likely,thenegativecorrelationbetweenegg-layingandworkbehaviourevolvedaftertheevolutionofprimitive eusociality. Keywords:Insects,Behaviouralecology,Evolution,Socialbehaviour. Populationdynamics TUESDAY08:15,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Are populations of migratory tree-roosting bats declining? ERINBAERWALD,AMERICANWINDWILDLIFEINSTITUTE,[email protected] ROBERTM.R.BARCLAY,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY Asconcernsoverenvironmentalimpactsoffossilfuelsgrow,windenergyisincreasinglypopular.However,large numbersofbatsarekilledatsomewindenergyfacilitiesandthisraisesconcernsaboutcumulativeimpactsonbat populations.Anestimated0.84and1.7millionbatshavebeenkilledintheU.S.andCanadafrom2000-2011,andthis increasesbyover500,000fatalitiesannually,78%ofwhichareof3speciesofmigratorytree-roostingbats.Giventhese estimates,andthegrowthofwindenergy,thereareworriesthatthismortalitymaythreatenthepopulationviabilityof bats.Althoughpopulationestimatesarelackingforbats,especiallyformigratorytree-roostingspecies,recentpopulation modellingderivedfromexpertelicitationsuggeststhatforhoarybatpopulationstopersist,themeanannualpopulation growthratemustbesubstantiallyhigherthanwhatappearsmostlikelyandthatcurrentfatalitylevelscouldcausea91% decreaseinthecontinentalpopulationsizeofhoarybatswithin50years.Weexaminedhowacousticdetections,capture rates,rabiessubmissionrates,andwind-energyrelatedfatalityratesofmigratorytree-roostingbatschangethroughtime tolookforevidenceofrecentpopulationdeclines.Ifallthesemetricsconsistentlyshowdeclines,thenthismayindicate declinesinpopulationsizes.Wefoundmultiplesignsofpopulationdeclinesinallthreespeciesofmigratorytree-roosting bats,includingsignificantdeclinesinfatalityratesatwindenergysites.Ouranalyseshighlighttheneedforeffective policyandmitigationstrategiesthatembraceadaptiveandflexiblemanagementandaddresscumulativeimpacts Keywords:Landusechanges,Animalmovement,Populationdeclines,Bats,Management. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY14:15,ROOM:SAANICH Experimental and natural nutrient subsidies alter steelhead life history COLINJ.BAILEY,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] DOUGLASC.BRAUN,INSTREAMFISHERIESRESEARCHINC.;DONJ.F.MCCUBBING,INSTREAMFISHERIESRESEARCHINC.;JOHND. REYNOLDS,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;JONATHANW.MOORE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Thetransitionfromfreshtosaltwaterisanimportantlifeeventforanadromousfishessuchassteelheadduringsmolting. Juvenilesteelheadentertheoceanassmoltsacrossarangeofagesandsizes,whichhavebeenshowntoaffectthe probabilityofsurvivingtospawn.Consequently,managementactionsandenvironmentalfactorsimpactingsmoltageand juvenilegrowthmayaffectsmoltmarinesurvival.Hereweinvestigatedwhetheradultpinksalmonabundanceand artificialnutrientsubsidiesaltersteelheadsmoltsize,age,andabundanceatoutmigrationacross4decadesintheKeogh River,BritishColumbia,Canada.Theage,size,andnumbersofsteelheadsmoltswereinfluencedbyacombinationofpink salmonabundance,artificialnutrientsubsidies,anddensity-dependentprocesses.Moreadultpinksalmonwere associatedwithgreaterproportionsoftwo-year-oldsmolts(insteadofthree-year-olds),andlargerthree-year-olds,but nothighertotalsmoltabundance.Similarly,artificialnutrientsubsidiesalsoincreasedsmoltsizeandincreasedthe proportionoftwo-year-oldsmolts,buthadnosignificanteffectonsmoltabundance.Usingasimplesimulationmodelthat predictssmoltsize,ageandmarinesurvival,wepredictthatmeantohighpinksalmonescapementsorartificialnutrient subsidiescouldbeassociatedwithsmallincreases(=10%)inreturningsteelheadabundance.However,theKeoghRiver steelheadpopulationremainsdepressedduetoextremelypoormarinesurvival.Thus,speciesinteractionsandpotential restorationactionscaninfluencesteelheadsmoltcharacteristics. Keywords:Marinesubsidies,Densitydependence,Salmon,Agestructure,Growth. ECOLOGICAL,EVOLUTIONARYANDENVIRONMENTALSYNTHESISINTHE21STCENTURYSYMPOSIUM TUESDAY16:00,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Integrating stress ecology to illuminate biodiversity-ecosystem function (B-EF) research DONALDJ.BAIRD,ENVIRONMENTANDCLIMATECHANGECANADA,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK,[email protected] FREDERIKDELAENDER,UNIVERSITYOFNAMUR;JASONR.ROHR,UNIVERSITYOFSOUTHFLORIDA;ROMANASHAUER,UNIVERSITYOF YORK;DONALDJ.BAIRD,ENVIRONMENTANDCLIMATECHANGECANADAANDUNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK;UTABERGER, TECHNISCHEUNIVERSITÄTDRESDEN;NICOEISENHAUER,LEIPZIGUNIVERSITYANDGERMANCENTREFORINTEGRATIVEBIODIVERSITY RESEARCH(IDIV)HALLE-JENA-LEIPZIG;VOLKERGRIMM,GERMANCENTREFORINTEGRATIVEBIODIVERSITYRESEARCH(IDIV)HALLE-JENALEIPZIGANDHELMHOLTZCENTREFORENVIRONMENTALRESEARCHUFZ;UDOHOMMEN,FRAUNHOFERINSTITUTEFORMOLECULAR BIOLOGYANDAPPLIEDECOLOGY;LORRAINEMALTBY,UNIVERSITYOFSHEFFIELD;CARLOSJ.MELIAN,SWISSFEDERALINSTITUTEOF AQUATICSCIENCEANDTECHNOLOGY;FRANCESCOPOMATI,SWISSFEDERALINSTITUTEOFAQUATICSCIENCEANDTECHNOLOGY;IVO ROESSINK,WAGENINGENUNIVERSITYANDRESEARCHCENTRE;VIKTORIIARADCHUK,GERMANCENTREFORINTEGRATIVEBIODIVERSITY RESEARCHHALLE-JENA-LEIPZIGANDLEIBNIZINSTITUTEFORZOOANDWILDLIFERESEARCH;PAULJ.VANDENBRINK,WAGENINGEN UNIVERSITYANDRESEARCHCENTRE Overthepast30years,biodiversityandecosystemfunctioning(B-EF)researchhasbeensilentontheunderlyingroleof environmentalstressorsininfluencingB-EFrelationships.Weidentifytworeasonswhysuchare-introductionof stressorsintoB-EFstudiesisimportant:(1)thefunctioningofecosystemsthatlosespeciescannotbepredictedfrom specieslossratesalone,butrequiresarealisticaccountofhowunderlyingenvironmentalchangedriver(s)areoperating; (2)usingwell-studiedenvironmentalchangedriverssuchaschemicalstressorsinB-EFexperimentscanenhance mechanisticunderstandingofB-EFrelationships.Weusepreviouslypublisheddatafromfood-webstudieswithchemical stressorsandsimulationswithanexistingfood-webmodeltoillustratethesetwopoints.Wealsodiscussnoveltypesof analysesandnovelexperimentaldesignsthatcouldconnectourframeworktoclassicalB-EFresearch,whichmostly ignoresenvironmentalchangedrivers.Thesedesignscanaidinunderstandinghowbiodiversityeffectsonecosystem functioningcontributetofuturechangesinthefunctioningofhuman-dominatedecosystems.Theideasandmodels discussedinthispresentationwereconceivedduringaworkshopatthesDiv,theSynthesisCentreofiDiv(GermanCentre forIntegrativeBiodiversityResearch,Leipzig)inDecember2014 Stress,Antipredatorbehaviour MONDAY10:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Maternal stress and predator odour effects on juvenile cuttlefish antipredator responses to ink and alarm cue KEVINR.BAIROS-NOVAK,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN,[email protected] LUDOVICDICKEL,UNIVERSITYOFCAENNORMANDY;MAUDC.O.FERRARI,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN Prenatalstressexperiencedbyjuvenilesdirectlyinovoorviabroodingmothersisknowntohavelife-longimpactsonthe offspring’sstressandbehaviouralresponsestowardspredators.However,thewaydifferentdevelopmentstressorsshape theantipredatorphenotypeoftheoffspringremainsunclear.Inthecaseofthecommoncuttlefish(Sepiaofficinalis),ink andinjuredconspecificcues(alarmcues)mayelicitantipredatorresponsesinconspecifics,yetpreyrelianceonthese cuesmaybeshapedbyearlierdevelopmentalexperiences,asbothmaternalstressandinnatepredatorodoursareknown toalterthedevelopmentaltrajectoryofprey.Theaimofourstudywastocharacterizetheantipredatorbehavioursof juvenilecuttlefishtoconspecificinkandalarmcues,andexaminethedifferentialresponsesofjuvenilesbornfrom stressedmothersaswellasfromeggsincubatedinanenvironmentwithanativepredatoryfishodour.Weexposed gravidmotherstoahandlingstresspriortobrooding(maternalstress),exposednewly-laideggsfromunstressedgravid motherstoanativefishpredator(predatorodour),orneither(control).Wethentestedtheresponsesofjuvenilesfrom eachtreatmenttooneofthreeconspecificcues:freshconspecificinkreleasedafteradisturbance,alarmcues,ora seawatercontroltakenfromthetankofundisturbedconspecifics.Ourresultsprovideinsightintothecomplex neuroplasticityofcephalopoddecision-makinginthecontextofpredation. Keywords:Cuttlefish,Marine,Experiment,Behaviouralecology,Prenatalstress. Evolutionarytheory MONDAY11:45,ROOM:WCOAST The genomics of purging inbreeding depression SARAHJ.BALDWIN,MCGILLUNIVERSITY,[email protected] DANIELJ.SCHOEN,MCGILLUNIVERSITY Inbreedingdepression,thereductioninfitnessininbredoffspring,isusuallyhigherinoutcrossingspeciesthantheir inbreedingrelatives.Thetransitionfromoutcrossingtoinbreedingiscommoninplantspecies,butfewexperiments addressthequestionofhowinbreedingdepressioncanbepurgedfromnaturalpopulations.Populationgenomicstudies canbeusedtotrackchangesingenotypeandallelefrequencyduringpurgingexperimentstodeterminethenumber, dominance,andstrengthofselectionagainstallelescausingorpreventingthepurgingofinbreedingdepression.Weused restriction-siteassociatedmarkerstoscanthegenomesofpopulationsforthegeneticcausesofinbreedingdepressionin theannualself-incompatibleplant,Leavenworthiaalabamica.Populationswerecreatedbyforcingself-incompatible plantstoself-fertilizeandproduce~90offspringeach.DeviationsfromexpectedMendeliangenotyperatiosinprogeny generationindicatethegenomiclocationsofinbreedingdepressionloci;e.g.,thedeficiencyofonehomozygotegenotype atalocusisevidenceofadeleteriousrecessivemutationoflargeeffect,whichisacauseofinbreedingdepressionthatcan bepurged,whileanexcessoftheheterozygotegenotypeisevidenceofoverdominanceorpseudooverdominance. Keywords:Genomesequencing,Inbreeding,Populationgenetics,Experiment,Plants,Evolution. Parasitismandsymbiosis TUESDAY14:45,ROOM:SIDNEY Inherited Spiroplasma symbionts are common in the ant genus Myrmica MATTHEWJ.BALLINGER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] LOGAND.MOORE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;STEVEJ.PERLMAN,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Maternally-transmittedbacterialsymbiontsarewidespreadinarthropodsandoftenhaveimportanteffectsonhost evolutionandecology.Spiroplasmabacteriaarecommonlyharbouredbyinsects,sometimesasparasites,manipulating thehostreproductivesystemtofavortheircontinuedtransmission,orasdefensivesymbionts,conferringprotection againstnaturalenemiesofthehost.WedescribeandinvestigatetheoccurrenceofSpiroplasmainantspeciesbelongingto thegenusMyrmica.Wefindthatcongenicantscollectedfromapproximately30Spiroplasma-positivecoloniesatashared siteineasternFranceharbourSpiroplasmasystemicallyandatveryhighprevalence.SpiroplasmaftsZgenesequences definethreedistinctsymbiontstrainswhichformamonophyleticcladeofMyrmica-associatedSpiroplasma.Interestingly, thesestrainssegregateperfectlywiththethreehostspecies,supportingthehypothesisofverticaltransmission.Insight intothetimescaleofMyrmica-Spiroplasmasymbiosesandthemechanismbywhichsymbionttransmissionhasbeen promotedmaybeavailablethroughcontinuedtaxonomicsamplinginthehostgenusandexplorationofsymbiontgenome content. Keywords:Symbiosis,Ants,Bacteria,Populationgenetics. Forestecology WEDNESDAY08:00,ROOM:WCOAST Responses of boreal forests to warming-induced permafrost thaw JENNIFERBALTZER,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] WILLIAMQUINTON,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY;ANASTASIASNIDERHAN,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY;OLIVERSONNENTAG, UNIVERSITYOFMONTREAL;REBECCAWARREN,UNIVERSITYOFMONTREAL Borealforestsoccupylatitudesthatareexpectedtowarmmostdramaticallyoverthecomingdecades,andevidence indicatesthatchangesarealreadyunderwayinthesesystems.Muchoftheborealisunderlainbypermafrost,whichcan beexpectedhaveimportantconsequencesforborealforestsastheclimatewarms.Thesouthernmarginofpermafrostis especiallysusceptibletowarming,sinceinthisregion,thepermafrostisdiscontinuous,relativelythin,warmandice-rich. Inthezoneofdiscontinuouspermafrost,permafrostoftenformsthephysicalfoundationonwhichtreesdevelop,forming tree-coveredpeatplateaus;forestsarerestrictedtopeatplateauswhilewetlandcommunitiescharacterizethe permafrost-freeareas.Theextentanddistributionofeachlandcovertypeisanimportantdeterminantofecosystem function.Evidencesuggeststhatwarmingisleadingtorapidpermafrostthawandgroundsurfacesubsidence,which decreasesforestcoverandproductivitywhileincreasingwetlandextentandconnectivity.Inthispresentation,wewill useanintegrativeframeworktodemonstratethechangesinthesesensitiveboreallandscapes. Keywords:Climatechange,Forest,Boreal,Permafrost,Peatland. ECOLOGICAL,EVOLUTIONARYANDENVIRONMENTALSYNTHESISINTHE21STCENTURYSYMPOSIUM TUESDAY14:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Integrating community assembly into biodiversity-ecosystem function relationships: The CAFE approach KATHERINEH.BANNAR-MARTIN,FISHERIESANDOCEANSCANADA,[email protected] COLINT.KREMER,YALEUNIVERSITY;S.K.MORGANERNEST,UNIVERSITYOFFLORIDA;MATHEWA.LEIBOLD,UNIVERSITYOFTEXAS AUSTIN;SCAFEWORKINGGROUP,SYNTHESISCENTRE,GERMANCENTREFORINTEGRATIVEBIODIVERSITYRESEARCH Overthepasttwodecades,thebiodiversity-ecosystem-function(BEF)researchprogramhasproliferated,linkingchanges inbiodiversitytochangesinecosystemfunctionsandservices.TheBEFrelationshipismostoftenexaminedby controllingspeciesrichnessandrandomizingcommunitycomposition.However,innaturalsystemsbiodiversitychanges occuraspartofmetacommunityassemblyprocesses.Focusingoncommunityassemblyandthefunctioningof ecosystems(CAFE),byintegratingbothspeciesrichnessandcompositionchangesthroughspeciesgains,losses,and changesinabundance,willbetterrevealhowchangestocommunitieswillimpactecosystemfunction.Wesynthesizethe BEFandCAFEperspectivesusinganecologicalapplicationofthePriceequation,whichpartitionsthecontributionsof richnessandcompositiontoecosystemfunction.Wedemonstratetheutilityofthismethodwithanovelgraphical approachandempiricalexamplesofenvironmentalperturbationsinterrestrialandmarineecosystemsaffectingplant andmammalcommunities.TheCAFEapproachrevealsimportantcontributionsofcomposition,overandabovespecies richnesschanges,toecosystemfunction.Examplesofspeciesinvasionsshowedthatchangesinspeciesrichnessand compositioncanworkinconcerttomagnifyecosystemfunctionchangesorantagonisticallytominimizeecosystem functionimpacts.Furthermore,theCAFEapproachcanhighlight,throughtime,thecompositionalandabundance-based changesthatallowfortherecoveryofpre-disturbancelevelsofecosystemfunctioninsmallrodentcommunities. Consideringhowcommunitieschangeinanintegrativefashion,ratherthanfocusingononeaxisofcommunitystructure, willimproveourabilitytoanticipateandpredictchangesinecosystemfunction. AcceleratingurbanecologyinCanada:Identifyingcurrentresearchapproaches,gaps,andneedsinCanadiancities symposium MONDAY09:00,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Strategic planning for urban forestry in Canada: Sharing knowledge and engaging communities across disciplines ADRINAC.BARDEKJIAN,TREECANADA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] DespitethegrowinginterestinurbanforestryacrossCanada,andthemanyeffortsensuingacrossthecountry,thereisa lackoftransdisciplinarityandknowledgesharingnationwide.Bybuildingpartnershipswithotherorganizationsand corporatesponsors,TreeCanadaisworkingtoengageandeducatecommunitiesaboutthebenefitsoftreesandforests throughtheCanadianUrbanForestNetwork(CUFN)andStrategy(CUFS).TheNetwork(CUFN),comprisedofadiversity ofstakeholders,isapan-CanadianactiongroupwhospeaksforCanada’surbanforestsandhelpsdirectthefiveworking groupsoftheCanadianUrbanForestStrategy(CUFS).Prioritiesoverthepastyearhavebeentonurtureregionalurban forestryactionplansandimplementaresearchinitiativebyfirstconductinganeedsassessmentofCanadian municipalitiesandthensupportingvariousprojectstofosterstewardshipthroughscholarlyengagement.This presentationwillsharerecentprogressonthecurrentnationalstrategyandresearchdevelopmentinitiativeaswellas discussfuturedirections. Aquaticecology TUESDAY14:30,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Factors affecting decomposers and decomposition dynamics differ in boreal peatlands CARLOSBARRETO,UNIVERSITYOFWESTERNONTARIO,[email protected] ZOLINDO,UNIVERSITYOFWESTERNONTARIO Inborealpeatlands,lowdecompositionrateistheunderlyingcauseofcarbonsequestration.Decompositionoflittercan beaffectedbymicrotopographicfactorsrelatingtosoilmoistureandtemperature,thequalityoftheplantlitter,andby thebioticdecomposercommunity.Exploringhowthesedriversofdecompositioninteractwillgiveusbetter understandingofcarbondynamicsinborealpeatlands.Imeasuredthedecomposition(massloss)ofthreecommon peatlandplantfunctionaltypes(Sphagnummoss,Carexsedge,Chamaedaphneshrub),andthemicroarthropod communitiesassociatedwithdecompositionusinglitterbagsplacedinhollows(wetdepressions)andhummocks(dry, raisedareas)ofaborealpeatlandnearWhiteRiver,Ontario.Decompositionwassignificantlydifferentbetweenallplant littertypes,andgreatestinCarex,followedbyChamaedaphneandSphagnumlitters.Decompositionrateswerenot significantlydifferentbetweenhummockandhollowmicrohabitats.Thedecomposercommunityhowever,displayedthe oppositepatternbeingsignificantlyaffectedbymicrohabitat,whererichnessandabundanceofmicroarthropodswas greaterinwethollowsthandryhummocks.Overall,29oribatidmitespecieswereidentifiedfromthestudyarea;16of whichwereuniquetothehollowmicrohabitat,andsixofwhichwereuniquetothehummocks.Takentogether,these resultssuggestthatabioticenvironmentalconditionsarethemaindriversofcommunitystructurefordecomposers, whileplantlitterqualityisabiggerdeterminantofdecompositiondynamicsinborealpeatlands. Keywords:Invertebrates,Peatland,Mites,Decomposition,Carbonstorage,Experiment. Sticklebackecologyandevolution MONDAY09:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Lab versus wild: Phenotypic covariation in threespine stickleback TEGANBARRY,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] HEATHERJAMNICZKY,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;SEANROGERS,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY Theintegratednatureofformandfunctiondictatesthatsuitesofphenotypictraitsoftenvarytogetherinresponseto selectivepressures.Thiscorrelationbetweentraits,orphenotypiccovariation,alongwithitsunderlyinggenetic architecture,allowsfortheinvestigationofhoworganismsrespondandadapttonovelenvironmentsandchallenges.The threespinestickleback(Gasterosteusaculeatus;stickleback)areanidealmodeltocharacterizephenotypiccovariationdue totheirrepeatedparallelcolonizationsoffreshwaterlakesfromthemarineenvironment.Examinationofthisradiation alongwithitscharacteristicphenotypicchangesallowsfortheinvestigationofthechangesinphenotypeandphenotypic covariationbetweentheputativeancestral,marineformandderivedfreshwaterform;however,whetherthese differencesarecausedbyplasticphenotypicchangesinducedbyvariedenvironmentsorgeneticmechanismsremainsa questionofgreatinterest.Usingmicro-computedtomographyandthreedimensional(3D)geometricmorphometrics, skeletalphenotypesofbothwild-caughtparentalandlab-rearedF1sticklebackwerequantifiedandcomparedto determineifthephenotypiccovariationpatternsseeninwildpopulationspersistinacommon-gardenenvironment. Investigationintothephenotypiccovariationpatternsseeninwild-caughtfishhaveservedasastartingpointfor comparisonofbothpureandmarine-freshwaterhybridF1stoexamineifthesepatternsareconservedbetweenparent andoffspring,andtodeterminetheextenttowhichthesepatternsarealteredinhybridfish.Theresultsfromthisstudy willhelpusunderstandtheinfluenceofbothenvironmentalandgeneticfactorsonthenatureofphenotypiccovariation. Keywords:Stickleback,Selection,Evolution,Morphology. Aquaticecology WEDNESDAY10:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Whole Canadian boreal shield lake food webs flex in response to warming TIMOTHYJ.BARTLEY,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] NIGELP.LESTER,ONTARIOMINISTRYOFNATURALRESOURCES;BRIANJ.SHUTER,ONTARIOMINISTRYOFNATURALRESOURCES, UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;TYLERD.TUNNEY,UNIVERSITYOFWISCONSIN-MADISON;ROBERTH.HANNER,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH; KEVINS.MCCANN,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH BoreallakesareiconicCanadianecosystemsthatareunderthethreatofclimatechange.Foodwebsareapromisingway forecologiststostudyborealshieldlakeresponsestochangebecausefoodwebstructureoftheselakesisknowntoflex inresponsetochangingenvironmentalconditions,alteringtheflowofenergyandnutrientsthroughecosystems.Here, weseektounderstandandpredicttheresponseofthewholelakefoodwebsacrossclimategradients.Byusingan unprecedentedfishcommunitydatabaseofCanadianlakesmonitoredincollaborationwiththeOntarioMinistryof NaturalResourcesandForestry,weemploynovelspatialcatch-per-unit-effortdatatoinferspecies-levelandguild-level behaviouralresponsestotemperature.Wealsousedietarydatafromstableisotopeanalysistostudyhowthekeyspecies reshapefoodwebstructureintheselakeswithwarming.Weshowthatwholefishcommunitiesinborealshieldlakes respondtowarming,producingflexiblefoodwebstructuredrivenbyrapidbehavioralandfeedingresponsesofmany species.Takentogether,thiscomprehensivesetofdietaryandbehaviouraldatarevealsamazinglyconsistentresponses ofspeciesthroughoutborealshieldlakefoodwebsthatproducewholethermalguildresponsestowarming.More importantly,thesebehavioralandfeedingresponsespredictablyaltermajorflowsincarbonandnutrientsflowwith changesintemperature,highlightingthatCanadianboreallakescontainhighlyadaptivefoodwebsthatpromotestability. Overall,ourresearchsupportsthenotionthatCanadianboreallakeecosystemsareprototypicalexamplesofcomplex adaptivesystemsthathavetheadaptivecapacitytorespondtohuman-inducedenvironmentalchange. Keywords:Freshwater,Foodweb,Temperaturemodulation,Climatechange,Foraging. Policyandplanning MONDAY13:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Assessing biodiversity response to land-use and climate change in Nova Scotia: A proposed ecosystem framework SEANBASQUILL,NOVASCOTIADEPARTMENTOFNATURALRESOURCES,[email protected] Thelossofbiodiversityoriginatingfromland-usepracticesandclimatechangehasdirectandindirectoutcomesfor humanwell-beingandposessignificantchallengesforeffectivenaturalresourcemanagement.Tohelpmeetthese challenges,andtobetteraddresscomplexitiesinherenttothenaturalresourcesector,anecosystem-basedframeworkis proposedforassessingandmonitoringbiodiversityresponsetolanduseandclimatechangeinNovaScotia.The frameworkincludesresearchto:defineandmodelthedistributionofecosystemmanagementunits;assessandpredict theoutcomesofecologicalchange;andemployresearchfindingsinastandardizedvulnerabilityassessment.Analysesto determinetheefficacyofusingecosystemunitstoreflectconstituentbiologicaldiversityandecologicalservicesare proposedtorationalizethestudy'sexplicitapplicationoftheecosystemasafocalvalueandanorganizingprinciple.This researchwillprovideabaselineforsummarizingcurrentconditionsandincreasepredictivecapacityformakingdecisions aboutthedriversandoutcomesofecologicalchange.Itisintendedtohelpprioritizeresponsevariablesforecological monitoring,conservationplanning,andclimatechangeadaptation.Theproposedresearchoffersnaturalresource managersascientificallydefensiblemechanismformaintainingresilienceandmanagingvulnerabilityforNovaScotia's biodiversityinanuncertainfuture. Keywords:Climatechange,Landusechange,Monitoring,Conservationpractitioners,Methods,Management. Selection MONDAY14:15,ROOM:WCOAST Variation in symbiont preference drives symbiont evolution REBECCAT.BATSTONE,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] MEGANE.FREDERICKSON,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Symbiontpreferencetraitssuchashostsanctionsandpartnerchoicehavebeenshowntoselectforcooperationin symbiontstheoreticallybutnotempirically.Variationinthestrengthofselectionforcooperationcouldallowlower qualitysymbiontstopersistinapopulation,contributingtothevariationinsymbiontqualityobservedinnature.Here, weexperimentallyevolvedrhizobiapairedwithfiveM.truncatulalinesthatvariedinsymbiontpreferencelevel,ranging fromstrongtoweak,acrossfourgenerationslastingtwomonthseach.Wequantifiedtheproportionoftworhizobia strains,onebeingagoodN-fixerandtheotherapoorN-fixer,associatingwitheachlineacrosseachgeneration,andfound thattheplantlineexhibitingthestrongestpreferenceincreasedthefrequencyofthegoodstrainatamorerapidratethan theplantlineexhibitingtheweakestpreference.Sucharesultallowsustounderstandhowvariationinsymbiont preferencemightaffectselectionforcooperationonthesymbiontpopulation. Keywords:Plants,Bacteria,Selection,Experiment,Symbiosis. Phylogenetics MONDAY09:30,ROOM:WCOAST Characterizing fitness landscapes in Darwin’s finches with a hierarchical model MARC-OLIVIERBEAUSOLEIL,MCGILLUNIVERSITY,[email protected] LUKEO.FRISHKOFF,STANFORDUNIVERSITY;LEITHENM’GONIGLE,FLORIDASTATEUNIVERSITY;ANDREWHENDRY,MCGILLUNIVERSITY; ROWANBARRETT,MCGILLUNIVERSITY Adaptiveradiationisakeyprocessthatdrivestheemergenceofnovelbiodiversity.Investigatingthisprocessallows evolutionaryecologiststodescribepreciselyhowbiologicaldiversitychangesthroughspaceandtime.Quantifying phenotypicandgeneticdifferencesamongrelatedspecieswithinparticularecologicalcontextscanprovidecrucial informationabouttheroleofnaturalselectionduringadaptiveradiation.Here,wedescribethegeneticbasisoffitness landscapesduringspeciationandhybridizationinawildcommunityofDarwin’sfinchesusingagenotype-phenotypefitnessmap.Wefirstestablishthelinkbetweenphenotypicmeasurementsandsurvival.Inthiscase,survival,thefitness proxycomputedbyamark-recaptureBayesianhierarchicalmodel,representstheheightofthelandscape.Individuals withsimilarphenotypeslieclosetoeachotheronatopographic-likemap.Weinvestigatedfourdifferentgroundfinch species(Geospiza)andfoundthattheyhavedifferentfitnessvaluesinthesamemorphospace.Wearealsoabletousethis modeltopredictthefitnessvaluesofindividualfinchesbasedontheirphenotypicvalues.Thenextstepinthisresearchis tofocusontherelationshipbetweengenotypeandphenotypethroughassociationmappingoftraitswithsingle nucleotidepolymorphisms(SNPs).Finally,wewillinvestigatetheassociationoffitnessandgenotypeusingagenomewidescantouncoverhistoricalsignaturesofselection.Understandingtheseissueswillaidinageneralunderstandingof thegeneticbasisoftheoriginofspecies. Keywords:Evolution,Hybridization,Speciation,Selection,Genomesequencing,Phenotypicvariation. EcologicalandEvolutionaryDynamicsinFluctuatingEnvironmentsSymposium MONDAY09:00,ROOM:THEATRE Dynamics of seasonal adaptation in Drosophila melanogaster EMILYBEHRMAN,UNIVERSITYOFPENNSYLVANIA,[email protected] ALANO.BERGLAND,UNIVERSITYOFVIRGINIA;DMITRIA.PETROV,STANFORDUNIVERSITY;PAULS.SCHMIDT,UNIVERSITYOF PENNSYLVANIA Therateandtempoatwhichpopulationsrespondtoenvironmentalchangeisfundamentalinunderstandingtheadaptive process.Annualseasonalrhythmsproducerapid,predictableenvironmentalchangesthatmayresultinrapidadaptation. WeshowthatDrosophilamelanogasteradaptrapidlyandpredictablytoseasonalenvironmentalchangesacrossfiveyears andmultiplelocations.Suitesofcomplexfitnesstraitschangeinapredictablewayoverthe10-15generationsfrom springtofall.ParallelchangesinG-matricesindicatethatselectionactsrapidlytoalterthegeneticarchitectureofa population.Functionalanalysisincandidategenesshowsthatepistaticinteractionsamongseasonallyoscillatingalleles facilitaterapidadaptationbyproducingemergentfitnessphenotypes.Together,ourfindingsdemonstraterapid, repeatableadaptationtoabioticandbioticenvironmentalparametersthatcycleasafunctionofseasonaltime.Weshow thatepistaticinteractionswithinandamonggenesfacilitatetherapidevolutionarychangethatisoccurringover timescalesthatwerepreviouslyconsideredstatic. Livingintheeco-evolutionarytheatre:researchguidedandinspiredbyintensivefieldobservationssymposium TUESDAY13:30,ROOM:THEATRE Variation of lateral plate phenotypes in threespine stickleback fish: Adaptation, developmental constraint, or both MICHAELA.BELL,STONYBROOKUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Thelateralplatesofthreespinestickleback(G.aculeatus)fishformasinglerowalongeachsideofthebody.Lowmorph platesarerestrictedtotheanteriorthirdofthebodybetweenthepelvisanddorsalspines,andvaryfromzeroto10. Lateralplatesdevelopafterfryhatch.Thefirstplateappearsabovethepelvis,andadditionalplatesdevelopanteriorand posteriorinsequenceawayfromthefirstplate.Adultspecimenswithfewplates(i.e.,<4)haveonlytheplatesthat developearly(i.e.,firstdeveloped,lastlostinevolution),suggestingthatevolutionofplatereductionreflects developmentalconstraint.However,Reimchenshowedthattheplatesofadultspecimenswithfewplateslinkthepelvis anddorsalspinesmechanically,stabilizingthespinesagainstlateraldeflectionbyvertebratepredators.Thus,theorderof platelossduringevolutionisadaptive,andnotnecessarilyconstrainedbydevelopment.Similarly,theorderofplategain duringdevelopmentmaybeanadaptationtobuttressthedorsalspinesasearlyinlifeaspossible.Thus,presenceof specificplatesduringevolutionaryplatereductionanddevelopmentofplatesmaybeseparateadaptationstostabilizethe dorsalspineswhenadultordevelopingsticklebackhaveonlyafewplates.Manyputativecasesofdevelopmental constraintinvolvejuveniletraits,buttheirfunctionisunknown.Theinverseorderofeventsduringdevelopmentand evolutioninmanyofthesecasesmaybeduetofunctionduringdevelopmentinsteadofdevelopmentalconstraint. Livingintheeco-evolutionarytheatre:researchguidedandinspiredbyintensivefieldobservationssymposium TUESDAY14:15,ROOM:THEATRE A gillnet fishery considered as an experiment in artificial selection GRAHAMBELL,MCGILLUNIVERSITY,[email protected] IworkedwithTomReimchenandPaulHandfordonthewhitefishpopulationofLesserSlaveLakeinthemid-1970s.We usedhistoricaldatatoshowthatthephenotypeofthefishhadbeenmodifiedbytheselectiveeffectsofgillnets.Since then,asubstantialliteraturehasdescribedtheevolutionaryresponseoffishpopulationstoexploitation.Ishallreview thisworkandourearlycontributiontoit. Biodiversity TUESDAY11:15,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Using plant traits to understand plant-soil feedback in temperate forests JONATHANA.BENNETT,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN,[email protected] Plantsinteractwithawidevarietyoforganismsinthesoil.Theaccumulationofbeneficialorantagonisticsoilorganisms beneathadultplantscanhavestrongpositiveornegativeeffectsontherecruitmentofnewindividualsintothe population(i.e.,plant-soilfeedback;PSF).PSFisanimportantregulatorofbiodiversityinmanyecosystems;however,our understandingofthedeterminantsofPSFremainsincomplete.Wecollectedseedandsoilfrom550populations belongingto55NorthAmericantemperateforesttreespeciesandgrewseedlingsfromeachpopulationinsoilfrom beneathconspecificandheterospecifictrees.Wefoundthatdifferenttypesofmycorrhizas,anearlyubiquitousplantfungussymbiosis,stronglyaffectthedirectionofPSF.Treesthatformedarbuscularmycorrhizasexperiencednegative PSF,whiletreesthatformedectomycorrhizaesexperiencedpositivePSF,likelyduetodifferencesbetweenthe mycorrhizatypesintheirabilitytoprotecttheirhostsfrompathogens.However,withinmycorrhizatypes,muchvariation inPSFremainsunexplained.NewdatasuggeststhatPSFalsodependsonotherplantfunctionaltraits.Droughttolerance, growthrates,andwhethertheplantproducestoxinsallinfluencethestrengthofPSFanddosodifferentlydependingon themycorrhizatypeofthetree.Consequently,theinteractionsbetweenthesefewkeyfunctionaltraitsmaybecritical determinantsoftreepopulationdynamicsandultimatelyforestbiodiversity. Keywords:Plants,Fungus,Experiment,Populationdynamics. Stress,Antipredatorbehaviour MONDAY11:00,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Effects of local predation pressure on prey fish behaviour and evasion of an invasive predator ADRIENNEE.BERCHTOLD,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ISABELLECÔTÉ,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY TheIndo-Pacificlionfish(Pteroisvolitans)isaninvasivemarinepredatorestablishedintheCaribbeanoveradecadeago thatwillpotentiallycauseongoinglargedeclinestonativecoralreeffishabundance.Onekeyquestionforpredictingthe long-termeffectofinvasivelionfishiswhetherornotnativepreycanbecomebetteratavoidinglionfishpredationover time,therebyreducingthenegativeimpactsofthisinvasion.Onefactorlikelytoinfluencetheoccurrenceofsuchanantipredatorresponseinpreyfishisthelevelofpredationpressureintheirlocalenvironment.Weinvestigatedtheeffectof localpredationpressureontheanti-predatorresponseofjuvenilestripedparrotfish(Scarusisersi).Parrotfishwere collectedfromreefpatchescontainingeitherhighorlowdensitiesofbothlionfishandnativepredators.Parrotfish evasionbehaviours(feeding,activity,colouration,andproximitytopredator)andsurvivorshipwerethenmeasuredin thelaboratorywhenexposedtolionfish.Wefoundthatparrotfishfromhighpredationenvironmentsweremorelikelyto surviveanencounterwithalionfishthanparrotfishfromlowpredationenvironments.Inthistalk,Iwillpresentthese survivorshipresultsalongwithrelationshipsweobservedbetweenparrotfishbehaviourandtheirsurvival.Iwillalso discussinsightthisresearchprovidesregardinganti-predatorbehaviourasaformofbioticresistance. Keywords:Coralreef,Fish,Predation,Invasion. Populationdynamics TUESDAY08:00,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Eco-evolutionary dynamics in a contemporary human population PATRICKBERGERON,BISHOPSUNIVERSITY,[email protected] FANIEPELLETIER,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE;GABRIELPIGEON,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE;FRANCINEMAYER,UNIVERSITÉDU QUÉBECMONTRÉAL;MIREILLEBOISVERT,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECMONTRÉAL;DENISRALE,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECMONTRÉAL; EMMANUELMILOT,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECTROIS-RIVIÈRES Recentstudiesofthejointdynamicofecologicalandevolutionaryprocessesshowthatchangesingenotypeorphenotype distributionscanaffectpopulation,communityandecosystemprocesses.Therealizationthatevolutionarychangescan occuroveranecologicaltimescalehasmotivatedbiologiststoidentifythecircumstancesunderwhichevolutionislikely toaffectecologyoftennamedeco-evolutionarydynamics.Althoughtheseinteractionsarelikelytooccurinmodern humans,consideringtheevolutionarypotentialdetectedinseveralpopulations,nostudyhasyetquantifiedthem.Our studyonindividualcontributionstopopulationgrowthfromdetailedgenealogicalrecordsofacontemporaryhuman populationrevealsthatevolutionarychangesinwomenreproductioncanaffectpopulationgrowth:about15%of variationinindividualcontributiontopopulationgrowthovermorethan100yearswasexplainedbymeanageatfirst reproduction.Atleastonethirdofthisvariationcouldbeattributedtothegeneticbasisofthistraitthatshowedan evolutionaryresponsetoselectionduringtheperiodstudied.Theobservedpopulationgrowthrateofthepopulationwas significantlyhigherthanthatexpectedassumingnoevolution.Ourstudysuggeststhateco-evolutionaryprocesseshave modulatedgrowthofcontemporaryhumanpopulations. Keywords:Human,Evolution,Selection,Reproduction,Populationdynamics. Livingintheeco-evolutionarytheatre:researchguidedandinspiredbyintensivefieldobservationssymposium TUESDAY14:30,ROOM:THEATRE Adaptive Polymorphism in Flatfishes CAROLYNA.BERGSTROM,UNIVERSITYOFALASKASOUTHEAST,[email protected] Polymorphismsarecommonacrosstaxaandareevidentasdiscrete,sympatricmorphswithinaspecies.Polymorphism oftenresultsfromintraspecificexpansionintounoccupiednichespace,followedbymorphsegregationandspecialization thatismaintainedbyspatiallyvaryingorfrequencydependentselection.Whileexamplesaboundinterrestrialand freshwaterhabitats,therearerelativelyfewdocumentedexamplesinmarinehabitats,especiallyinfishes.HereIshow rareevidenceofecologicallyrelevantpolymorphismwithinamarinepleuronectidflatfishspeciesthatisassociatedwith thedirectionofwholebodyasymmetry,anddiscusspossibleadaptivesignificanceofbodyshapevariationacrossthe Pleuronectiformesorder(~715species).Wholebodyasymmetryisasynapomorphyforallflatfishspeciesbutonlyseven exhibitpolymorphisminasymmetrydirection.Oneofthese,starryflounder(Platichthysstellatus)wasinvestigatedfor evidenceofadaptiveecologicalsegregation.Left-andright-sidedmorphsdifferintheirheadandtailshape,swimming performance,stableisotopesignatures,andrestingmetabolicrates.Comparisonswillbemadewithotherpolymorphic flatfishspeciesanddiscussedinthecontextofitsadaptivesignificance.Understandingifandunderwhatconditions ecologicalnichesegregationhasoccurredasaresultofvariationinnovelwholebodyasymmetrywillinformtowhat degreeithasbeenresponsibleforthewidesuccessanddiversificationofthisorderofmarinefishes. Keywords:Marine,Polymorphism,Fish,Evolution,Flatfish. Aquaticecology WEDNESDAY11:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Temperature dependence of consumer-resource dynamics is constrained by nutrient limitation JOEYR.BERNHARDT,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] MARYJ.O'CONNOR,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Metabolicscalingtheorypredictshowtemperatureaffectsconsumer-resourcedynamics.However,amajorassumptionof metabolicscalingtheoryisthatnutrientsupplyisnon-limiting.Yetinnature,changesinnutrientsupplytoprimary producersoftenoccursimultaneouslywithwarming.Westilldonotknowhowvariablenutrientsupplymodifiesthe temperaturedependencesofconsumer-resourcedynamics.UsinganexperimentalDaphnia-phytoplanktonmesocosm system,weasked:Doesphosphoruslimitationchangethetemperaturedependenceofconsumerandresourcepopulation growthratesandabundances,relativetopredictionsthatassumenonutrientlimitation?Wefoundthatnutrient limitationincreasesthetemperaturedependenceofresourcegrowthrates,causingdeviationsfrompredictionsbasedon theactivationenergyofphotosynthesis.Aspredictedbymetabolicscalingtheory,carryingcapacityoftheresource declinedwithincreasingtemperatureundernon-limitingnutrientconditions.Thistemperatureeffectwasmagnifiedby nutrientlimitation.Further,consistentwiththeory,innutrientrepletesystemsconsumersreducetemperature dependenceofresourcegrowthrates,alteringoutcomesrelativetopredictionsbasedonconsumer-freesystems.In contrast,temperaturedependenceofconsumerabundanceswereconsistentwhennutrientswerereducedequallyacross alltemperatures.However,theabsoluteabundancesofconsumerswereconsistentlylowerundernutrientlimitation, implyingthatiftemperatureandnutrientsupplycovary,thenettemperaturedependencesofconsumerabundanceswill beincreased.Thismeansthatatthecommunitylevel,theeffectsoftemperaturemaybegreaterthanexpectedinnutrient limitedecosystems. Keywords:Temperaturemodulation,Experiment,Metabolism,Carryingcapacity,Resourcelimitation. Sticklebackecologyandevolution MONDAY09:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Effects of ecological context on the phenotypic divergence of stickleback ecotypes REBECCAJ.BEST,UNIVERSITYOFNORTHERNARIZONA,[email protected] MIGUELC.LEAL,SWISSFEDERALINSTITUTEOFAQUATICSCIENCEANDTECHNOLOGY;MORITZD.LRIG,SWISSFEDERALINSTITUTEOF AQUATICSCIENCEANDTECHNOLOGY;MAREKSVITOK,ZVOLENTECHNICALUNIVERSITY;PHILINEG.D.FEULNER,SWISSFEDERAL INSTITUTEOFAQUATICSCIENCEANDTECHNOLOGY;OLESEEHAUSEN,SWISSFEDERALINSTITUTEOFAQUATICSCIENCEANDTECHNOLOGY; BLAKEMATTHEWS,SWISSFEDERALINSTITUTEOFAQUATICSCIENCEANDTECHNOLOGY Ecologistsincreasinglyacknowledgethepotentialimpactofrapidandfine-scaleevolutiononecologicalprocesses. However,theimpactofecologicalcontextonthepaceanddirectionofcontemporaryevolutionremainsunclear.To investigateecologicalconstraintsontherapiddivergenceofsticklebackecotypesincentralEurope,weuseda combinationoflarge-scalemesocosms,morphologicaltraits,andgenomicdata.Specifically,wetestedwhetherhabitat complexityandcompetitionintensitypromoteorconstraindietdifferentiationamongecotypesusingreplicated mesocosmscrossingmacrophytedensitywithsticklebackdensity.Allfishwerelab-raised,andeitheramixtureofwildtypelakeandstreamfishorsecondgeneration(F2)lake-streamhybrids.Wemeasureddifferencesindietand performanceamongjuvenilesusingstableisotopesandbodycondition,relatingthesetomorphologyandgenomicsof individualfish.Wethenassessedthemagnitudeofthesedifferencesacrossecologicaltreatments.Wefoundthathabitat complexityandfishdensityinteractivelyaffectedthepotentialstrengthofselectionandwithin-mesocosmvariancein individualstableisotopesignatures(d13Candd15N)evenafteraccountingfordifferencesinsurvivalandgrowth.This indicatesimpactsofecologicalcontextonrealizedvariationindietaryniche.Thesefindingsdemonstratetheimportance ofecologicalcontextinpromotingandconstrainingnichedivergence,andprovideanoveltestoftheroleofecological selectioningeneratingdivergencepatternsobservedinthewild. Keywords:Fish,Phenotypicvariation,Evolution,Experiment,Genomesequencing,Habitatcomplexity,Densitydependence. EcologicalandEvolutionaryDynamicsinFluctuatingEnvironmentsSymposium MONDAY08:30,ROOM:THEATRE A fitness trade-off between seasons causes multigenerational cycles in phenotype and population size GUSTAVOS.BETINI,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] Althoughseasonalityiswidespreadandcancausefluctuationsintheintensityanddirectionofnaturalselection,wehave littleinformationabouttheconsequencesofseasonalfitnesstrade-offsforpopulationdynamics.Hereweexposed populationsofDrosophilamelanogastertorepeatedseasonalchangesinresourcesacross58generationsandused experimentalandmathematicalapproachestoinvestigatehowviabilityselectiononbodysizeinthenon-breedingseason couldaffectdemography.Weshowthatopposingseasonalepisodesofnaturalselectiononbodysizeinteractedwithboth directanddelayeddensitydependencetocausepopulationstoundergopredictablemultigenerationaldensitycycles.Our resultsprovideevidencethatseasonalitycansettheconditionsforlife-historytrade-offsanddensitydependence,which can,inturn,interacttocausemultigenerationalpopulationcycles. Reproductiveecologyandbehaviour MONDAY15:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Identifying correlates of captive breeding success in amphibians ALANNAHBIEGA,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ARNEMOOERS,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Whileamphibianshavebeengenerallybeenconsideredidealcandidatesforexsitumanagementduetotheirsmallsize andrelativelylowcostforhusbandry,manythreatenedamphibiansfailtomeetthecriteriathatarecitedasreasonswhy theyaresuitableforbreedingprograms.Infact,approximatelyhalfofthespeciesbroughtintocaptivityforconservation focusedbreedingprogramsarefailingtoreproduceincaptivity(AArk,2016).Bycomparingthebiologicaltraitsofspecies thathavesuccessfullyproducedoffspringincaptivitytothosethat,despiteefforts,havefailedtoreproduce,thisstudy aimedtoidentifytraitsassociatedwithamenabilitytocaptivityinamphibians.InthistalkIwillpresentboththe biologicaltraitsandexternalfactorsassociatedwithsuccessfulamphibianbreedingprograms.Thisknowledgecouldbe incorporatedintocurrent(orfuture)prioritizationschemesinordertoassessaspecies'suitabilityforacaptivebreeding program,ensuringthatlimitedfundsaredirectedtowardsprogramswiththegreatestchanceofconservationsuccess. Keywords:Amphibians,Captivebreeding,Speciesatrisk,Reproduction. Metabolicscaling TUESDAY11:45,ROOM:WCOAST Vertebrate-wide scaling of metabolic rate and respiratory surface area JENNIFERS.BIGMAN,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] NICHOLASK.DULVY,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Understandingthevulnerabilityofaspeciestodeclineinachangingworldisofutmostimportance.Lifehistorytraits, suchassomaticandpopulationgrowth,arerelatedtotheintrinsicsensitivityofaspeciestodecline,andcanbeusedto understandvulnerability.Althoughlifehistorytraitsareknowntoberelatedtoaspeciesvulnerabilities,these relationshipsandunderlyingmechanismsarestillunclear.Asmetabolicrateunderpinstheavailableenergyforlife historyprocesses,itmayunderlielifehistorytraitsandultimately,vulnerability.Unfortunately,metabolicrateisdifficult tomeasureinmanylarge-bodied,rare,andthreatenedspecies.Here,weanalyzetheutilityofamorphologicaland physiologicaltrait,respiratorysurfacearea,asaproxyformetabolicrateusingthetheoreticalframeworkofthe MetabolicTheoryofEcology.WefirsttestthepredictionsoftheMetabolicTheoryofEcologybyexaminingthebody-mass scalingofmetabolicrateinvertebrates.Then,wecomparethebody-massscalingofrespiratorysurfaceareain vertebratestothatoftheMetabolicTheoryofEcologypredictions.Wefinallyassesshowrespiratorysurfaceareafitsinto theMetabolicTheoryofEcologyframework.Theresultsofthisanalysiswillbepresentedalongwiththeimplicationsof thisstudy. Keywords:Morphology,Physiology,Metabolism,Prediction,Vertebrate. Marineecology TUESDAY15:30,ROOM:SIDNEY The value of ancient habitat modifications: Macrofaunal communities of First Nations clam gardens MORGANBLACK,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;VANCOUVERISLANDUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ANNESALOMON,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;FRANCISJUANES,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;SARAHDUDAS,VANCOUVERISLAND UNIVERSITY,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA AncientFirstNationsclamgardensprovideauniqueexampleofaverylong-standinganthropogenichabitatmodification thatincreaseshabitatcomplexityinthenearshoremarineenvironment.Clamgardenconstructionchangesthebeach slope,sedimentcomposition,increaseshabitatcomplexity,andbufferswaveaction.Thesebeachesweredesignedto supportclampopulations;however,theireffectsonotherorganismsisunknown.Weareassessingthefishandmobile invertebratediversityanditsrelationshiptothesehabitatmodifications.Wehypothesizedthatthebiological communitiesofwalled(clamgarden)andnon-walledbeachesaredifferent,andthatincreasedhabitatcomplexity correlateswithhigherabundance,richness,diversity.WehavesampledtwelvebeachesonQuadraIslandusingtraps, cores,quadratsandhighresolutionaerialphotography.Preliminaryresultssuggestthatrichnessanddiversityis significantlyhigherinclamgardensversusreferencesites.Thisresearchservestoexpandourunderstandingofdriversof diversityincludinghabitatcomplexity.Italsoinformsonpotentialforharmonybetweenindigenouspeopleslanduse rightsandconservationgoals.Morebroadlyitcanshedlightontheimpacts,andpotentialrestoration,ofmodified coastlines. Keywords:clamgardens,intertidal,fish,biodiversity,FirstNations,habitatcomplexity,fykenets. Forestecology WEDNESDAY08:15,ROOM:WCOAST Influence of moisture and nutrient availability on Alnus viridis function across topographic gradients on the low arctic tundra, NWT KATHERINEBLACK,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] JENNIFERBALTZER,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY Climatewarmingisdrivingtheexpansionofshrubsacrossthetundrabiomewithimplicationsforenergybalance, hydrology,nutrientcycling,andtundrabiodiversity.Changesintundraplantwateruseattributabletoshrubexpansion arepredictedtoincreaseevapotranspirativewaterlosswhichmayamplifylocalwarmingandreducerunoff.However, littleisknownabouttheextenttowhichshrubexpansioncouldenhanceevapotranspirativewaterlossintundrasystems. Tomakepredictionsabouttheconsequencesofshrubexpansion,itisnecessarytounderstandtheabioticfactorsthat constrainshrubdistribution.Studieshaveshownthatshrubsarepreferentiallyexpandinginareasthathaveahigher potentialofaccumulatingmoisture,suchasdrainagechannels.Thus,wepredictshrubexpansionislimitedbythe movementofwaterandnutrientsacrosstopographicgradients.Nevertheless,theassociationsbetweenshrubexpansion, tundrahydrology,andabioticlimitationsremainunderstudied.WeaddresstheseknowledgegapsbycharacterizingAlnus viridiswateruseonthelowarctictundraoftheNorthwestTerritoriesandinvestigatingtheinfluenceofmoistureand nutrientavailabilityonA.viridisphysiologicalfunctionacrossplateaus,hillslopes,andchannels.Weprovideevidence thatdifferencesinthawdepthareimportantdriversofshrubfunctionandseemtobelinkedwithwaterlimitations.We willinvestigatenutrientlimitationasadriverofshrubfunctionandtheroleofN-fixingsymbiontsinthisrelationship.A. viridisisexpandingrapidlyacrossthelowarctictundraoftheNorthwestTerritoriesandunderstandingthedriversofits expansionisessentialforpredictingfuturetundraconditions. Keywords:Plants,Statechange,Climatechange,Tundra,Populationrange,Woodyexpansion. Canadianprotectedareasinachangingclimate:Across-ecosystemapproachsymposium TUESDAY13:45,ROOM:SAANICH Protected areas: How to design resilient networks using connectivity CHRISTOPHERBLACKFORD,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] CASSIDYDALOIA,WOODSHOLEOCEANOGRAPHICINSTITUTION;JACKIEAWAD-DORSEN,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;MARIE-JOSEE FORTIN,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO. Existingprotectedareas(PAs)inCanadacoverfarlessareathantheAichiBiodiversityTargetsof17%(terrestrial)and 10%(marine)thatshouldbemetby2020.Toachievebiodiversitygoals,newPAsneedtobeselectedbasedonseveral criteria,oneofwhichistoensureconnectivityamongprotectedareastoformcohesiveprotectedareanetworks.To explicitlyincludeconnectivityinthespatialdesignofPAnetworks,oneneedstoconsiderspecieshabitatandspatial requirementsintermsofhomerangesizeanddispersalability.Here,weshowtwoexampleswhereconnectivityand specieshabitatrequirementshelpeddetermineappropriatesizingandspacingofaPAnetworkinterrestrialandmarine ecosystems.InOntario,connectivityofexistingterrestrialparkswasevaluatedfortheirabilitytomaintainmoose dispersal.ItwasfoundthatexistingPAsweretoodistanttoensuremoosemovement.Usingleast-costconnectivity analysis,locationstoaddPAsthatfavourmoosemovementweredetermined.Then,inBritishColumbia,invertebrateand fishdatadescribinghomerangesizes,pelagiclarvaldispersal,andanoceanographiccurrentmodelwasusedto determinepotentiallocationsandspacingforanetworkofmarinereserves.Candidateareaswereidentifiedfor protectionbasedonthelocationofmulti-speciesconnectivityhubsandhomerangesizeconstraints.Collectively,these resultssuggestthatprotectingbasedonaportfolioofmovementtraitsmaybolsterspeciespersistence.Conservation effortsaimedatdesigningecologicallyconnectednetworksofPAsshouldthereforeexplicitlyintegratespeciesmovement datatoensureeffectivemulti-speciesprotection. Linkingecologicaltheoryanddata MONDAY11:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 From ecological theory to empirical data, the missing statistical link F.GUILLAUMEBLANCHET,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,[email protected] DOMINIQUEGRAVEL,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE Understandinghowspeciesdistributeinspaceandthroughtimeisatthecoreofecology.Nowadays,akeyquestionfor biogeographersiswhetherlocalprocesses,suchasbioticinteractions,scaleupregionallytoinfluencespecies distribution.Inthefield,thisproblemmanifestsitselfbyaweakrelationshipbetweenthedistributionofspecies abundanceslocallyandoccurrencesregionally.MechanisticmodelssuchastheLotka-Volteraequationscanbeusedto quantifytheabundanceofspeciesatlocally(withinahabitatpatch),whilemetapopulationmodelscanbeusedtoassess theprobabilityofoccurrenceofindividualsofaspeciesataregionally(amongasetofhabitatpatches).Thesemodels havebeenusedtodeveloptheoriesonthemechanismsdrivingspeciesdistribution,buthaverarelybeenstudieddirectly withempiricaldata.Conversely,phenomenologicalmodelsembracethecomplexityofnatureinthedata.Jointspecies distributionmodels(JSDM),anewgenerationofstatisticaltoolsallowtoextractthefullpotentialofthedatabyexplicit considerationofco-distribution.However,JSDMdonotmapontotheory,therebylimitingtheirinterpretation.Herewe willintegratetheLotka-Volteraandthemetapopulationmodelstobetterunderstandtherelationshipbetweenthe distributionofoccurrenceandabundanceacrossspatialscales.Wewillthenshowhowtheorycanbelinkedtoempirical datathroughanextensionofJSDMspecificallydesignedtomodelecologicalcommunities.Wewillillustrateourfindings withsimulatedandrealecologicaldatatoshowhowmuchcanbegainedfromstrongerlinksbetweentheoryanddata. Keywords:Statistics,Methods,Speciesdistribution,Modeling,Metapopulation. Pollinationsystems TUESDAY10:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Understanding multiyear variability in the yield of pollinator dependent highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum) KYLEBOBIWASH,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ELIZABETHELLE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Highbushblueberry(Vacciniumcorymbosum)productionisdependentuponinsectpollinationforfruityield.Toensure maximumfruitproduction,farmersuniversallystockhoneybeecoloniesatrelativelysimilarratestosupplement pollinationbywildpollinators.Despitestandardizedstockingofhoneybees,yielddeficitsareubiquitousacrosstheLower MainlandofBritishColumbia.Ayielddeficitrepresentstheadditionalvaluethatpollinationcanaddtoyieldbutisnot currentlybeingachievedwithcurrentpollination.Wecandeterminethevalueoftheyielddeficitwithinfarmsby comparingfruitresultingfromsupplemental(i.e.human)pollinatedflowerstothosepollinatedbythelocalpollinator community.Thedifferencesseeninyielddeficitsbetweenfarmsandovermultipleseasonsarelikelyattributabletothe variabilityinthequalityofthepollinationreceivedbyhighbushblueberry.Ourresearchaimstobetterunderstandthe factorsassociatedwithvariabilityinyielddeficits.Bysamplingpollinatorcommunities,trackingvisitrates,tracking weatherandevaluatinglandscapeelements(semi-naturalhabitatandnon-cropfloralresources)associatedwithour studyfarms,wecanbegintolinkcharacteristicsinpollinatorcommunitiesandpollinationqualitytoyielddeficits. Throughthesedeterministicfactors,wecanforecastpotentialyielddeficitmitigationstrategiesthatfarmerscanemploy tooptimizetheircroppollinationandmaximizefruitproduction.Ourresearchdemonstratestheimportanceofmultiple factorsinthedeliveryofagriculturalpollination.Byattributingpollinationvariabilitytospecificelementsinthe agroecosystemwecandevelopmethodstobettermitigateyielddeficitsinhighbushblueberry. Keywords:Plants,Pollinators,Agriculture,Pollination,Management. Exploringtherolesofmechanisticandphenomenologicalmodelsinecologysymposium MONDAY11:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Prediction: What is it, why do we do it and how to do it better KORRYNBODNER,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] MARIE-JOSEFORTIN,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;PÉTERK.MOLNÁR,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Predictingthefutureisnotasimpletaskbutthishasnotdissuadedscientistsfromattemptingtodoso.Researchersuse predictionstotesttheoryandinformpolicybuttherehasnotbeenasynthesisofgeneralstrategiesonhowtoformulate andchooseappropriatepredictivemodelsacrossabroadrangeoftopics.Hereweprovidegeneralguidelinesforhowto defineaprediction,howtocreateapredictionandhowtoovercomesomecommoncomplicationsthatarisewhentrying topredict.Whilethedefinitionofpredictioncanvary,inapredictivemodelingcapacity,predictionsaresimplytheoutput ofthemodel.Embracingthisideacouldcreategreatertransparencyregardingtheassumptionsandcharacteristicsofthe prediction.Thereasonwhywepredict,stemsfromtheneedtotestourunderstandingoftheoryandtoplayanimportant roleinecosystemmanagement.Howtopredictisaniterativeprocessrequiringaconsistentevaluationofthequestion, thedataandthemodel.Twocommoncomplicationsthatcanarisewhiletryingtopredictare:thedataquality/quantity andnon-linearity.Weproposevariousphenomenologicalandmechanisticmodellingtechniquesthatcanbeusedtohelp alleviatetheseissues.Finally,guidelinesforhowtogenerateapredictioncannotbecompletewithoutdiscussing uncertainty.Allpredictionscontainuncertaintiesbutagoodpredictionacknowledges,quantifiesandtriestominimize them.Whilecreatinganaccuratepredictionisdifficult,adoptingkeystepsintheformulationandimplementationofa modelcancreatethebestpredictionpossible. Keywords:Prediction,Statistics,Methods,Modeling. Exploringtherolesofmechanisticandphenomenologicalmodelsinecologysymposium MONDAY11:15,ROOM:OAKBAY2 How do different modelling techniques compare to predict species and communities patterns? BENJAMINBOLKER,MCMASTERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Understandingandpredictinghowandwhyspeciesaredistributedacrosstheirhabitatisinterestingtoecologistsboth forfundamentalandappliedreasons.Recentstudieshavepointedoutthatecologistscangainmuchmoreinformationby modelingthedistributionsofmultiplespeciessimultaneously,ratherthanoneatatime.Therearemanywaystomodel multivariatespeciesdistributions.Onthephenomenologicalendofthespectrumarethetoolsfromnumericalecology suchasordinationsandclusteranalyses.Atthemechanisticendaremodelsthattakespeciesdynamicsintoaccount: multivariatestate-spacemodelsandmodelsbasedonordinarydifferentialequations.Inbetweenarejointspecies distributionmodels,neuralnetworks,andclassificationandregressiontrees.Whichofthispanoplyofmethodsisbestfor describingandpredictingspeciesdistributions?Usingecologicaldataondiversegroupoforganisms(birds,butterflies, diatoms,fungi,vascularplantsandtrees)thatarecontrastingwithregardtospatialscales,thenumbersofspeciesandthe fractionofrarespecieswecomparedtheseapproachesandevaluateboththeirperformanceintermsofquantitative predictiveaccuracyandthelighttheycanshedonfundamentalmechanismsstructuringcommunities.Ourresultssuggest thatalthoughnoneofthemodellingtechniquescomparedperformedbestforalldataconsideredsomeapproachoverall, jointspeciesdistributionmodelsshowedthehighestpotential. Movement,activity,wildlifemanagement WEDNESDAY08:00,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Evaluating a movement-based method for inferring calving and calf survival MAEGWINBONAR,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ERICVANDERWAL,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY;KEITHP.LEWIS,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY;E.HANCEELLINGTON,OHIOSTATEUNIVERSITY Inungulates,parturitioniscorrelatedwithareductioninmovement.Withadvancesinmovement-basedtechnologies animalmovementscanbetrackedalmostcontinuously,providinginformationtotestfine-scalebehaviouralandspatial hypothesesaboutwildlifepopulations.Thesemovement-basedtechnologiesrepresentanopportunitytodevelopnew techniquestoassessreproductioninwildungulatesthatarelessinvasiveandreducebiases.DeMarsetal.proposedan elegantandpromisingnewmethodthatusesGPSinter-fixsteplengthofadultfemalesandmaximumlikelihood estimationtoinferparturitionandneonatesurvival.OurobjectivesweretoempiricallytestwhetherDeMarsetal.’s modelcouldbeappliedtootherdatasetsforretrospectiveanalysisofparturitionandcalfsurvival.Wecompared woodlandcaribou(Rangifertarandus)calfsurvivalpredictionswithobserveddatacollectedfrom19collaredadult femaleswhosecalfstatuswasknown,andcomparedthedistributionsofpredictedbirthdatesandmortalitydateswith herd-wideestimatesfrom(n=134)calvesfittedwithVHFcollars.Wewilladdressthevariationinmodelresultsand theirimplicationsforapplyingtheDeMarsetal.’smodeltodifferentungulatepopulations.Givenourresults,we recommendthatusersevaluatethemodelwithintheirsystembeforeapplyingittoresearch,management,or conservationobjectives. Keywords:Caribou,Animalmovement,Mammals,GPS,Reproduction,Modeling. Effectsofclimatechange TUESDAY16:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Effects of gene flow on performance at the northern range margin of Clarkia pulchella MEGANGENEBONTRAGER,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] AMYL.ANGERT,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Apersistentquestioninthefieldsofbiogeographyandevolutioniswhatprocesseslimitspecies'adaptationtoconditions beyondtheirgeographicdistribution.Boththeoreticalandempiricalstudiessuggestthatasymmetricgeneflowbetween populationsmaydisruptlocaladaptationandplayaroleinshapingdistributionboundaries.Inthecontextofrangelimits, modelssuggestthatgeneflowfromabundantpopulationsnearthecenteroftherangemaypreventrange-edge populationsfromadaptingtolocalconditions.However,thepredictionsofthesemodelsaredifficulttotranslateto organismslivingonheterogeneousnaturallandscapes.Speciesabundancepatternsoftendeviatefromthoseunderlying thishypothesisandenvironmentaldifferencesbetweenpopulationsmaynotcorrelatepreciselywiththeirgeographic distance.Weconductedafieldtransplantexperimenttoexaminetheeffectsofgeneflowfromdifferentclimaticand geographicdistancesonindividualperformanceatthenorthernrangemarginofClarkiapulchella.Germinationratesand seedlingsizesinourexperimentarecorrelatedwiththeaveragefalltemperaturesofsourcepopulationsites.Populations thathistoricallyexperiencetemperaturessimilartothoseduringthetransplantperformbest.Performanceatthe northernrangemarginisnotrelatedtothesourcepopulation'sdistancefromthenorthernrangeedge. Keywords:Plants,Experiment,Transplant,Populationrange,Selection. EcologicalEpigeneticsSymposium TUESDAY09:00,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Epigenetic changes in natural populations: Its role in the demography of cyclic mammals RUDYBOONSTRA,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTOSCARBOROUGH,[email protected] Severelifeexperiencesmaycreatepermanentmemories,actingbothdirectlyontheindividual,butalso,through maternaleffects,onfuturegenerations.Thepotentialroleofnaturalstressorsasanexplanatorymechanismsdriving populationdemographyofmammalswaspostulatedover60yearsago.Thestressaxisiskeyinpermittingmammalsto copewithbothpredictableandunpredictablechallengesoftheirenvironment.Thepredictableonesareintimatelytiedto thelifehistoryoftheanimalsandthenormalseasonalprogressionofyearlyevents.Theunpredictableonesare unpredictableonlyinarelativeimmediatesense.Theresponsestostressesassociatedwithvariablepredationrisk, intensesocialcompetition,andvariablefoodsupplyareallnestedwithintheevolutionaryhistoryoftheanimalandthus theirresponsesareexpectedtobeadaptive.Akeyquestioninunderstandingindividualresponseiswhetherthese stressescauseorganizationalchangesinthememoryofananimalsothatanimalisnolongerthesameasitwasbefore. OneofthebestexplanationsforthismemoryisthattheyresultfromepigeneticchangestotheDNA.Ifsuchmemory changesaffectvirtuallyallmembersofthepopulation,itmaychangethecourseofthedemographyoftheentire population.Iwillreviewtheevidencethatsuchchangesareplausibleexplanationsforthelowphasesofthe3-4year vole/lemmingcycleandthe10-yearsnowshoeharecycle. Reproductiveecologyandbehaviour MONDAY15:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Parent-offspring cannibalism in the plainfin midshipman fish ANEESHP.H.BOSE,MCMASTERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] SIGALBALSHINE,MCMASTERUNIVERSITY Cannibalismofoffspringisacommonyetseeminglyparadoxicalphenomenonobservedacrossawidevarietyoftaxa. Behaviouralecologistshavebeenparticularlyinterestedinunderstandingthisbehaviourwithinthecontextofparental carebecauseofthecostlinessofparentalcareandthehighputativecostsofterminatingownoffspring.Usingaseriesof fieldandlabexperimentsontheplainfinmidshipmanfish,Porichthysnotatus,weinvestigatedwhetheroffspring cannibalismservestoreplenishdwindlingenergyreserves,and/oroccurswhenparentageofabroodisloworuncertain. Weshowthatalthoughplainfinmidshipmanmalesendurealongandenergeticallytaxingparentalcareperiod,males withthelowestenergyreserveswereactuallytheleastlikelytocannibalizeoffspring.Offspringcannibalismisactually mostprevalentatthetimeoftheseasonwhenmalesareintheirbestconditionandmale-malecompetitionisatitspeak. Furthermore,thehighestlevelsofcannibalismoccurredinmalesthathadverylowpaternityovertheiroffspringintheir nests.Wealsoshowthatplainfinmidshipmannestsarehighlyspace-limitedandsuggestthatmalescannibalizeoffspring forwhichpaternityisloworuncertaininordertoclearupvaluablerealestateforfutureandmorecertainreproduction. Theseresultsservetoemphasizethatthefactorsinfluencingparentaldecisionsarecomplex,andthatoffspring cannibalisminthissystemoccurswhenthebenefitsofprovidingcarearelow(i.e.lowparentageinaspace-limitednest) andnotnecessarilywhenthesupposedcostsarehigh(i.e.depletingenergyreserves). Keywords:Cannibalism,Reproduction,Marine,Behaviouralecology,Experiment. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY14:30,ROOM:SAANICH Genome wide association and signatures of selection studies for sea age in North American Atlantic salmon populations using Next Generation Resequencing and the new North American 50K SNP chip ELIZABETHG.BOULDING,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] KENGPEEANG,COOKEAQUACULTUREINC.;J.A.K.ELLIOT,COOKEAQUACULTUREINC.;HARALDGROVE,NORWEGIANUNIVERSITYOF LIFESCIENCES;MATTHEWP.KENT,NORWEGIANUNIVERSITYOFLIFESCIENCES;SIGBJØRNLIEN,NORWEGIANUNIVERSITYOFLIFE SCIENCES;THOMASMOEN,AQUAGEN;FRANKPOWELL,COOKEAQUACULTUREINC.;LAWRENCER.SCHAEFFER,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH Atlanticsalmonpopulationsvaryintheproportionofindividualsthatspendoneyear(grilse)atseaandthosethatspend twoyearsatsea(salmon)beforereturningtospawnintheirnatalriver.Grilsedivertenergyintoearlyreproductionand thereaftergrowmoreslowlywhichisundesirableinaquaculture.Consequently,theSaintJohnRiverAquacultureStrain (SJRAS)thatmustbeusedinnetcageaquaculturewithintheBayofFundy,hashistoricallybeenselectedforalow proportionofgrilse.Singlenucleotidepolymorphisms(SNPs)associatedwithseaagehavepreviouslybeenreportedin EuropeanAtlanticsalmonnearcandidategenesonchromosomes9andofchromosome25.Wedetectedsharedand uniqueSNPsnearthesamecandidategeneswithinaNorthAmericansalmonnextgenerationresequencingdatasets. SamplesofSJRASadultsmaturingasgrilseandthosematuringassalmonalongwithindividualsfromfounderandnonfounderwildpopulationsweregenotypedonournewNA_Ssa_50KSNPchip.Signaturesofselectiononchromosomes9 and25weredetectedbetweenpairsofpopulationsthatdifferedintheproportionofgrilse.Genomewideassociation methodswereusedwithintheSJRASpopulationtoidentifySNPsassociatedwithageatmaturityafteraccountingforfish pedigree,bodysize,andcomplexpopulationstructure.SNPssignificantlyassociatedwithseaagewerefoundonlyfor malessuggestingmarker-assistedselectiontoreducegrilseintheSJRAScouldspecificallytargetmales.Theimportance ofusingastockwiththecorrectratioofgrilsetosalmontorestorewildAtlanticsalmoninaparticularriverwillbe discussed. Keywords:Populationgenetics,Grilse,Marine,Salmon. Applicationinecologyandevolution MONDAY14:45,ROOM:THEATRE Ecology vs. evolution: Comparing applications of research fields JEFFBOWMAN,ONTARIOMINISTRYOFNATURALRESOURCESANDFORESTRY,TRENTUNIVERSITY,[email protected] JANETE.GREENHORN,TRENTUNIVERSITY;ROBBYR.MARROTTE,TRENTUNIVERSITY;MICHELLEM.MCKAY,TRENTUNIVERSITY; KIMBERLEYY.MORRIS,TRENTUNIVERSITY;MELANIEB.PRENTICE,TRENTUNIVERSITY;MORGANWEHTJE,TRENTUNIVERSITY Recentsuggestionsintheliteraturethatgeneticandgenomicresearchapproacheshavebeeninfrequentlyappliedby conservationpractitionersaredifficulttoassessbecauseapplicationsmaynotbedetectablethroughsearchesofpeerreviewedliterature.Producingpublicationsmaynotbeagoalofpractitioners.Wedevelopedamethodtosearchthe internetforevidenceofresearchapplicationsandevaluated25differentresearchfieldsinecologyandevolutionary biology.Wefoundthatfieldswithmorepublicationsalsohadmoreapplications,butgeneticresearchwaslessapplied thanexpectedbasedonthenumberofpeer-reviewedpublications.Forexample,onlyabout4%oflandscapegenetics articleswereapplied.Infact,allresearchfieldsthathadamolecularbiologybasiswereunder-appliedcomparedtowhole organism,ecologicalresearchfields.Thisresultsuggeststhelackofapplicationsinevolutionarybiologymaybeduetoa systemicunder-applicationofmolecularresearch,perhapsrelatedtoalackofunderstandingofgeneticsbypractitioners. Keywords:Literaturesynthesis,Ecology,Evolution,Conservationpractitioners. EcologicalandEvolutionaryDynamicsinFluctuatingEnvironmentsSymposium MONDAY09:45,ROOM:THEATRE Natural selection for life histories in seasonal environments MARKS.BOYCE,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] Muchofthetheoryoflifehistoryevolutionisbasedondemographictrade-offsbetweenreproductiveeffortandsurvival. Yetinmanyorganismsweseecorrelatedcomponentsoffitnessmeaningthatindividualswithhigherenergybudgetscan havehigherreproductiveoutputwhilstalsoenjoyinggrowthtolargersize.Mostorganismsexperienceconsiderable environmentalseasonalityconsistingofaperiodofresourceshortagethatimposeshighermortalityrisk,andaperiodof growthandreproductionwhenresourceabundanceishigh.Lifehistoriesmustrepresentabalanceagainsttheseseasonal fluctuations.Duringthegrowthseason,naturalselectionfavoursindividualsthatassimilatenutrientsrapidlyallocatingto bothreproductionandsomaticgrowth,andthesesomaticallocationscanenhancesurvivalduringtheoncomingperiodof resourceshortage.Forexample,growthtolargesizecanenhancefastingenduranceduringtheupcomingwinteror droughtseason.Thusgeographicvariationinbodysizeishighlycorrelatedwithseasonalityinresourceavailability, requiringabundantresourcesduringthegrowthseasontosupportthisgrowthandstrongselectionfavouringsurvival duringwinterordrought.Similarly,seasonalitycanfavourlargerreproductiveoutputsuchasincreasedclutchorlitter sizesupportedbytheseasonalflushofresourcesduringspringandsummer.Orthesameseasonalpatternoccursduring therainyseasoninthetropics.IuseJensen’sInequalitytoexplainsuchadaptationstoseasonalityinlifehistoriesby integratingnonlinearfitnessfunctionsacrossseasons. Communication MONDAY16:00,ROOM:WCOAST The quantifiable value of outreach to herpetofaunal conservation SEANP.BOYLE,LAURENTIANUNIVERSITY,[email protected] CHANTALBARRIAULT,LAURENTIANUNIVERSITY;JACQUELINED.LITZGUS,LAURENTIANUNIVERSITY;DAVIDLESBARRÈRES,LAURENTIAN UNIVERSITY Citizensciencehasprovenitsabilitytoproduceenormousdatasetsthatcanguidepolicyandconservation.Outreach programsareoftenconsideredvaluabletoolsforattractingcitizenscientists,butalsoforengagingageneralinterestin conservation.Amixed-methodsapproachwasusedtoevaluatethesuccessofoutreachprogramstoyouthsandtoidentify specificcuesthatelicitedpositiveresponsesfromparticipants.Gradeninestudents(n=175)wereaskedtoself-evaluate theirlikelihoodofparticipatinginconservationdirectly(i.e.helpingaturtleacrosstheroad)andindirectly(i.e. participationinherpcitizenscienceprograms)beforeandafteroutreachpresentations.Next,studentswereaskedto identifyspecificpartsofthepresentationwhichaffectedtheirself-evaluationthemost,regardlessofiftheyconsidered themselvesmoreorlesslikely.Thesecuesweregroupedintosimilarthemesforqualitativeanalysis.Outreach significantlyincreasedstudents'perceptionoftheirownlikelihoodtoparticipateinherpetofaunaconservation,both directlyandindirectly.Severalthemeshadamajorimpactonstudentwillingnesstoparticipateinconservation; specifically,factsaboutdecliningspecies,andrealizinghowtheycouldbepersonallyimpacted.Integrationofthesecore themesandspecificcuesintofutureoutreachpresentationsoptimizeoutreacheffectiveness.Effectiveoutreachplaysa vitalroleinengagementandadvocacyforconservationaction.Thisisparticularlysignificantbecausetheperceived importanceofconservationactionplaysacriticalroleinthecreationandexecutionofconservationpolicy. Keywords:Conservationpractitioners,Survey,Scienceoutreach,Amphibians,Reptiles. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY16:15,ROOM:SAANICH A test of parallelism in the axes of morphological divergence in Icelandic arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus) MATTHEWBRACHMANN,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] KEVINPARSONS,UNIVERSITYOFGLASGOW;SKÚLISKÚLASON,HÓLARUNIVERSITYCOLLEGE;MOIRAFERGUSON,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH Intraspecificdiversityplaysalargeroleinshapingbiodiversityofecosystems.Arcticcharr(Salvelinusalpinus)invaded Icelandroughly10,000yearsagofromasingleglacialrefugium.Likemostnorthernsystems,Icelandicpostglaciallakes havefewspeciesandhighecologicalopportunityleadingtoecologicalspecializationintobenthicandpelagicphenotypes acrossdifferentlakes.Phenotypicvariationwithinlakesishighlyvariablerangingfrommonomorphic(onemorph)to highlypolymorphic(multiplemorphs)populations.Themagnitudeofresourcespecializationalongthebenthic-pelagic continuumvariesacrosslakes.Wetestthehypothesisthatrepeatedpatternsofmorphologicaldivergenceinlake populationsofIcelandicarcticcharraretheresultofparalleladaptationtocontemporaryecologicalconditions.Charr weresampledfromfiveIcelandiclakesandarivercontainingananadromouspopulation.Weusedgeometric morphometricstoevaluatethepredictionthattheaxesofmorphologicaldivergencewithinpopulationswillbeparallel acrosslakesduetoadaptationtosimilarecologicalconditions.Wealsopredictedthatthemagnitudeofmorphological divergencewithinlakeswillbepositivelyassociatedwiththeamountofgeneticdifferentiationatneutralgeneticmarkers giventhatdivergentselectionisexpectedtoreducegeneticconnectivity.Thisworkprovidesinsightintotheprocessof adaptivediversificationandhowselectionactsonmultipleindependentlydivergingpopulationstoincreaseintraspecific biodiversity. Keywords:Evolution,Selection,Arcticcharr,Freshwater,Lakes,Europe. ECOLOGICAL,EVOLUTIONARYANDENVIRONMENTALSYNTHESISINTHE21STCENTURYSYMPOSIUM TUESDAY14:00,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Maladaptation STEVENP.BRADY,DARTMOUTHCOLLEGE,[email protected] Throughoutthehistoryofevolutionarybiology,scientistshavetrainedtheirsightsonadaptation,askinghownatural selectionshapestheevolutionoffitnessbenefits.Bycontrast,theprocessesandoccurrencesofmaladaptation(the evolutionoffitnessdeclines)havereceivedlittleattention.Yet,whenweconsiderthatthemajorityofspeciesthathave everexistedarenowextinct,itisclearthatmaladaptationisinescapable.Inaddition,literaturereviewsindicatethat, evenincontextswherelocaladaptationisexpected,maladaptationispresentinabout1/3ofcases.Maladaptation,it seems,isasmuchaproductofevolutionarydynamicsasisadaptation.Yetweunderstandverylittleaboutthedynamics anddistributionofmaladaptation,andwelackaframeworkforitsstudy.Thisknowledgegapisnowmorecriticalthan everbecausemaladaptiveoutcomesappeartobeincreasingwithhuman-inducedenvironmentalchange.Inshort,we urgentlyneedtodevelopathoroughunderstandingofmaladaptation.Here,wepresentnewtheoreticalinsightsintothe processofmaladaptation.Wediscusstheprevalenceofmaladaptationacrossdiverseecologicalcontexts.Finally,we provideaconceptualframeworkforthestudyofmaladaptationandintroduceanovelmetricforassessingthemagnitude ofmaladaptationinreciprocaltransplantstudies.Wehopethatbydemonstratingthatmaladaptationiscommonand potentiallyincreasing,futureresearchinevolutionwilltakeamorebalancedviewoftheadaptiveandmaladaptive dynamics.Weexpectthattheresultingbalancedapproachtoadaptiveandmaladaptiveinquirieswillrevealnovel insightsandfosterourcapacitytopredictresponsestochangingenvironments. Forestecology TUESDAY13:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM The role of disturbance on treeline establishment and range expansion from a seed’s perspective LUCASBREHAUT,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ANDREWTRANT,UNIVERSITYOFWATERLOO;CARISSABROWN,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY Understandingwhereandunderwhatconditionsindividualsestablishisamajorquestioninecologyfromtheperspective ofpopulationdynamics(i.e.,changesindensity,replacement)andspeciesrangedynamics(i.e.,expansioninto uncolonizedhabitats).Forplants,thisislargelymediatedbywhereaseeddispersestoandtheecologicaland environmentalcharacteristicsofthislocation,henceforthseedbed.Attreeline,seedbedcharacteristicsareoften unfavorableforgerminationlargelyduetothestructureofexistingvegetation,resultinginslowerrangeexpansionrates thanwhatwewouldexpectfromtemperature-basedmodels.Evenasclimatebecomesmoresuitablefortreegrowth,for rangeexpansiontooccuradisturbanceisoftenneededtoalterseedbedcharacteristics.Acrossthecircumpolarnorth, large-scaledisturbance(i.e.,wildfire,insectoutbreak)andmorelocalizedevents(i.e.,herbivory,windthrows)have showntoimpactbothplantpopulationsandrangedynamics.Weconductedasynthesisofnortherndisturbanceresearch acrossspatialscalestoidentifytheprocessesbywhichdisturbancealtersseedbedsandsubsequentimpactsonseedling establishment.Welinkpost-disturbanceseedbedqualitytotheprevalence,spatialextent,andmagnitudeofeach disturbancetodefinedisturbancecontributiontotreelinerangeexpansion.Resultssuggestthatwhilemorelocalized disturbance(ungulateherbivory,trampling)iscloselytiedtotreelinerangeexpansion,landscapedisturbances(wildfires) mayhaveindirecteffectslimiting,orfacilitating,treegrowthaboverangeedgesdependingonvegetationlegacyandfire characteristics.Resultsfromthissynthesiswillprovidecrucialinformationonhowchangingdisturbanceregimeswithin arapidlywarmingclimatewillimpactnorthernlandscapes. Keywords:Plants,Disturbance,Populationrange,Climatechange. StudentSymposium MONDAY10:45,ROOM:THEATRE Altered competition under ocean acidification influences species- but not community-level response to food supply NORAHE.M.BROWN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] JOEYRBERNHARDT,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;CHRISTOPHERD.G.HARLEY,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Physiologicalresponsestooceanacidificationarelikelytheresultofenergetictrade-offs.Anumberofstudiespropose thatnegativeresponsetohighCO2couldbeminimizedinsituationswhereresourcesaremorereadilyavailable.We conductedastudyinfield-deployedmesocosmstotestthepotentialforfoodavailabilityanddiettomodifytheeffectsof acidificationondevelopingmarinefoulingcommunities.Wesupplementednaturalfoodsupplywithoneoftwospeciesof phytoplankton,differinginconcentrationoffattyacids.Aftertwelveweeks,CO2hadconsistentnegativeeffectsacross mostabundantspecies,exceptforinvasiveascidiansthatincreasedinabundanceinresponsetoCO2acrossallfood treatments.Neitherdiethadaconsistenteffectinmagnitudenordirectionacrossallspecies.Overall,species-level responsestendedtobeadditivetothetwostressors,withsomeimportantexceptions.ThenegativeeffectsofCO2onan invasivebryozoanweremitigatedbyfoodaddition.Mostinterestingly,foodsupplyexacerbatedthenegativeeffectsof CO2onsomespecies.Weobservedcompellingevidencethatresponsetofoodadditionandacidificationwasmoderated bycompetition:onlyunderambientCO2couldhydroidsusehigh-qualityfoodtoresisttheinvasionofbotryllids. Communitystructureandrichnessseeastrongsignificanteffectofacidificationbutnoeffectoffoodnortheirinteraction. Thisindicates,first,thatfoodandacidificationcombineadditivelyand,second,thatacidificationhasstrongercommunitywideeffectsthanfoodaddition.Overall,acidificationposesasignificantrisktomarinecommunitiesandspecies interactionsarekeytounderstandingcomplexitiesinresponses. Keywords:Oceanacidification,Plants,Experiment,Foraging,Speciesdistribution,Marine. Pollinationsystems TUESDAY10:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Pollinator-mediated facilitation explains asymmetric rarity advantages in experimental plant communities KATIEBROWN,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] BENJAMINGILBERT,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Outcrossingplantsthatarelocallyrarefaceuniquechallengesforsuccessfulpollination.Localraritymayresultfrom smallfragmentsizeor,alternatively,fromlowrelativeabundancewithinlargerfragments.Whenaspeciesislocallyrare butsurroundedbyheterospecifics,pollinationmaybereducedifpollinatorsmaximizeforagingefficiencybyvisitingonly commonspeciesinapatch.However,commonspeciesmayfacilitaterarespeciesvisitationbyattractingpollinatorstoa patch,whichhasthepotentialtoincreasepollinationsuccess.Weexperimentallyseparatedtheeffectsoffragmentsize andrelativeabundancebycreatingtwo-speciespatchesthatwereseparatedbyover60m,variedinsize(1-40 individuals),andrelativeabundance(0.2-1.0).Weusedannualwildflowersthatwereotherwiseabsentfromourstudy area,ChamaecristafasciculataandPolanisiadodecandra,andcomparedpollinatorvisitationratesandseedsetperfruit. Pollinatorvisitationrateincreasedwithpopulationandpatchsize,suggestingthatsmallpopulationsareatgreaterriskof localextinction.However,visitationratewashigherwhenrarepopulationsweresurroundedbyheterospecifics.This facilitativeeffectincreasedseedproductioninonlyonespecies;Chamaecristawasaneffectivemagnetforpollinatorsand facilitatedthereproductivesuccessofPolanisia,buttheoppositewasnottrue.Thisasymmetriceffectofneighbour speciescorrespondedwithpollinatorspecificityoftheplants;Chamaecristaisconsideredabumblebeespecialist,butalso attractedsolitarybees,whereasPolanisiadidnotalterbumblebeevisitation.Ourresultssuggestanintricateinterplay betweenpatchsize,relativeabundanceandpollinatorspecializationthatcreatesspecies-specificconservationchallenges andopportunities. Keywords:Fragmentation,Experiment,Pollination,Biodiversity,Interactions. Speciesinteractionsinawarmingworldsymposium TUESDAY14:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Biotic and abiotic constraints on treelines globally CARISSABROWN,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Itisbecomingincreasinglyapparentthatnon-climaticfactorsplayanimportantroleinaspeciesabilitytorespondto climatechange.Isolatingtheeffectsofnon-climatic(bioticandabiotic)factorsfromclimaticdriversofspeciesrange dynamicsinnaturalsystemsrequiresfieldexperimentation.TheGlobalTreelineRangeExpansionExperiment(G-TREE) isagloballydistributed,collaborativeprojectaimedattestingthegeneralityofmechanismsdrivingtreelineposition.Our structuredexperimentaldesignallowsustoteaseapartmultiplefactorsthatmayconstraintreelineresponsetoclimate change,providingempiricaldataonwhere,andunderwhatcircumstances,treelineexpansioncanoccurglobally.The experimentconsistsofmanipulationsofseedavailability,substratestructure,andpredationthatareimplementedacross treelineinarcticandalpinesystems.Analysesofexperimentalresultsrevealedbothglobalpatternsandregion-specific processes.Overwhelmingly,theavailabilityofviableseedlimitstreelineecosystemsglobally.Inregionswherepredatorexclusioncagesweredeployed,wedetectedseedpredationeffectsonseedlingestablishmentatandbeyondtreeline, indicatingapotentialbioticconstraintontreelineexpansion.Wheretested,wedetecteddifferentialresponsesofseed provenancetoexperimentaltreatments;seedsfromwithinforeststandshadhigheremergencethanseedsfromtherange margin.Substrateeffectswerelessclearthanthoserelatedtoseedsandrequirefurtherinvestigation.Theprogressionof G-TREEwillincreaseourunderstandingofcomplexbioticandabioticinteractionsoccurringatthelimitofforest distributioninarcticandalpinesystems,allowingustoidentifynon-climateconstraintsunderongoingclimatechange. Keywords:Experiment,Plants,Woodyexpansion,Climatechange,Colonization. Museumcollectionssymposium MONDAY08:15,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Working together to mobilise biodiversity collections data in Canada ANNEBRUNEAU,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL,[email protected] JRMYGOIMARD,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL;CAROLESINOU,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL;JEANNETTEWHITTON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISH COLUMBIA;SEANW.GRAHAM,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;WAYNEMADDISON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Biologicalcollectionsarerepletewithtaxonomic,geographic,temporalandhistoricalinformation.Thisinformationis crucialforunderstandingandproperlymanagingbiodiversityandecosystems,forconservingspecies,andforinnovative ecologicalandevolutionaryresearch,butsuchdataareoftendifficulttoaccessandincomplete.Canadensys (www.canadensys.net)isauniquenationalresourcethatunlocksbiodiversityinformationheldinuniversitybiological collectionsacrossthecountryandwhichprovidestoolstomapandanalysedata.Thenetworkinitiallyfocusedon specimendataforplants,insectsandfungi,butnowpublishesdatafromothertaxa,fieldsurveyoccurrencedataand checklists.DesignatedasaGBIFAssociateParticipantin2014becauseofitsroleastheprimaryCanadiannodefor biodiversitydatapublication,Canadensyscurrentlypublishesover3milliongeoreferencedspecimensonitsExplorer. These,however,representjustafractionoftheestimated50millionspecimensinCanadaandwemustcoordinatewith otherdata-holdingnetworkstomaximiseeffortstomakeaccuratebiodiversitydatarapidlyavailableforusersin academia,governmentandindustry.Continuedrapidadvancesininformaticstools,standardsandexpertiseincreasingly provideopportunitiesforinnovativeresearchthatreliesonscientificallyvalidatedprimarybiodiversitydata.Species occurrencedataare,forexample,keytorecentstudiesaddressingbiologicalinvasions,impactsofclimatechange, pollinatordecline,andfuturevirusoutbreaks.BiodiversityaggregatorssuchasCanadensysalsoprovidethefoundation forresearchonparticulartaxonomicgroupsorthebiotaofspecificregionstocoalesceintocountry-orcontinent-wide treatmentsandresourcesinefficient,cost-effectiveandinnovativeways. Keywords:Plants,Museumcollection,Biodiversity,Historicalrecords. EcologicalEpigeneticsSymposium TUESDAY08:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Mercury rising: Epigenetic response to mercury exposure in songbirds KRISTINBRZESKI,PRINCETONUNIVERSITY,[email protected] DANIELCRISTOL,COLLEGEOFWILLIAMANDMARY;BRIDGETTVONHOLDT,PRINCETONUNIVERSITY Wildlifeinhumandominatedlandscapesmustcontendwithincreasedexposuretocontaminantsrelativetopristine environments.Onemechanismthatmayenableindividualresponsetocontaminant-relatedstressisepigeneticchange. DNAmethylation,thebeststudiedepigeneticprocess,canaltergeneexpressionwithoutchangingtheDNAsequenceand isinfluenceddirectlybytheenvironment.Thus,DNAmethylationmaybeanimportantmolecularprocesswhichanimals employtopersistinhumandominatedlandscapes.However,contaminantexposurecouldalsoleadtoDNAmethylation associatedwithreducedfitness.Forinstance,environmentalstressearlyinlifecaninducemethylmarkswhichmakean individualmorevulnerabletostressrelatedsyndromeslaterinlife.Thesamemaybetrueforenvironmentaltoxin exposurewhichcouldinducemethylmarkswithdetrimentalfitnesseffects.Toinvestigateinteractionsbetween contaminantexposureandDNAmethylation,weexaminedhowmethylmercury(MeHg)exposureinfluencedDNA methylationinexperimentallyexposedzebrafinches.MeHgisofparticularinterestbecauseitisknowntocauseasuiteof detrimentalhealtheffectsinvertebrates,includingneurologicalimpairment,physiologicalstress,andreduced reproductivesuccess.Inbirds,MeHgexposurecaninfluencecarotenoid-basedplumagecoloration,animportanthonest signalthataffectsreproductivesuccessandmeasuresoflifetimefitness.Here,wepresenthowMeHgexposureaffects DNAmethylationandcarotenoidcoloration,andifphenotypicdifferencesareassociatedwithdifferentiallymethylated regionsofthegenome.ThenextstepsofthisprojectwilladdresstheepigeneticresponseofMeHgexposureinnatural populationsofurbandwellingNorthernCardinalsandCarolinaWrens. Biodiversity TUESDAY11:30,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Local plant diversity responses to temperature and water availability: Synthesizing evidence from experimental data VÉRONIQUEBOUCHERLALONDE,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,[email protected] Climaticvariablesrelatedtotemperatureandwateravailabilitystandoutasmajorcorrelatesofplantdiversityat regionaltoglobalscales,buttheirrelativeimportanceatthelocal,plot-levelscaleappearsweaker.Wecurrentlylacka synthesizedunderstandingoftheeffectofclimaticvariablesonplantcommunitieswhichhasleadtoverydifferent forecastsofhowdiversitywillrespondtoongoingclimatechange.Numerousexperimentsmanipulatingtheclimatic variablesoflocalplotshavebeencarriedoutworldwideinordertomeasurebiologicalresponsesandthereforeallowing directtestsofcausality.Wesetouttocompiletheseexperimentaldataonplantdiversitythroughtimetodeterminethe overalleffectsizeofwarmingandchangesinwateravailabilityonplantdiversity.Thecompiledsetofresponsesappears tobemainlycharacterizedbyhighvariance;diversityresponsestowarmingandincreasedmoisturecanbeeither positiveornegative.Insomecases,theresponseiscontrastingovertimeanddifferentfunctionalgroupsorco-limiting factorscanhavecompensatoryresponses.Thus,wewilltestwhethermoderatorvariablesrelatedtotheregioninwhich theexperimentwascarriedout(habitattype,climate),theresponsevariable(diversitymetric,lifeforms)orthe experimentaldesignitself(degreeofchange,time,experimentaldesign)canexplainvarianceintheresponse.Explaining howlocal-scaleplantdiversityrespondstoclimateinexperimentalplotswillallowacomparisonwiththepatterns observedatlargespatialscalesandshouldimproveclimatechangepredictionsatlocalscale. Keywords:Literaturesynthesis,Global,Plants,Climatechange. Speciesinteractionsinawarmingworldsymposium TUESDAY13:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Shifts in insect development rate alter phenological overlap and community interactions LAURENBUCKLEY,UNIVERSITYOFWASHINGTON,[email protected] STUARTGRAHAM,UNIVERSITYOFWASHINGTON;RORYTELEMECO,UNIVERSITYOFWASHINGTON,AUBURNUNIVERSITY;CESARNUFIO, NATIONALSCIENCEFOUNDATION Grasshopperpopulationsandspeciesdifferinginlifehistorystrategiesandthermalsensitivityhavedifferentiallyshifted theirphenologiesandabundancesinresponseto50yearsofclimatechangealongamontaneelevationgradientin Colorado.Weintegratecontrolledlaboratoryexperimentswithhistoricandrecentweeklysurveystoinvestigatehow grasshopperpopulationsandspeciesdifferentiallyrespondtoclimatechangeandtheconsequencesforspecies interactionsandcommunitystructure.First,wediscusshowpopulationsfromdifferentelevationsandspecieswith differentseasonaltimingdifferintheextentofdevelopmentalplasticitytheyexhibitinresponsetomeantemperatures, temperaturevariation,anddaylength.Developmentalresponsestoenvironmentalcuesarecomplexandvariableamong populationsandspecies.Fiftyyearsofclimatechangehavedelayeddevelopmentinhigh-elevation,season-limited grasshopperpopulations,butadvanceddevelopmentinpopulationsatlowerelevations.Developmentaldelaysaremost pronouncedforearly-seasonspecies,whichmightbenefitmostfromdelayingdevelopmentwhenreleasedfromseasonal timeconstraints.Second,weexploretheimplicationsforphenologicaloverlapandspeciesinteractions.Phenological overlapdecreasedslightlyorremainedconstantforearly-seasonspecies,buttendedtoincreasesubstantiallyforlateseasonspeciesacrosselevations.Ourfindingshighlighttheimportanceofconsideringpopulationandspeciesdifferences inexposureandsensitivityforunderstandingthecommunityconsequencesofclimatechange. Remotecameranetworkstoscaleupecologicalinsightsandconservationapplicationssymposium TUESDAY09:00,ROOM:THEATRE A comparison of multiple spatial capture-recapture models for estimating carnivore densities using field data JOANNABURGAR,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] FRANCESSTEWART,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;COLEBURTON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;JOHNVOLPE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA; JASONFISHER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,INNOTECHALBERTA Wildlifemanagementisanadaptiveprocessthatrequiresaccurate,precise,andfrequentinformationonanimal populations,yettheinformationcurrentlycollectedinmanyjurisdictionsrarelymeetsthesethreecriteria.Technological advanceshaveledtoincreaseduseofcameratrapstosurveywildlifepopulations,apotentiallycost-effectivenoninvasivealternativetostandardsurveymethods.Withtheadventofspatialcapturerecaptureanalysesasanemerging methodofestimatingpopulationdensityitiscriticaltounderstandhowdifferentmethodscompare,especiallywhenland managersmayonlyhaveaccesstoonesurveymethod.Thisstudyusedconcurrentgenetic,photographicandtelemetry dataofaclosedpopulationoffisherstodeterminehowparameterprecisionvariedwhenusingsingleandmultipledata sourcespatialcapturerecapturemodels.Wefoundthatsex-specificgeneticspatialcapturerecapture(maximum likelihood)modelswerequickandeasytorun,yieldingprecisedensityestimates.Spatialcount(Bayesian)modelsofan unmarkedpopulationwerecomputationallyintensiveandfrequentlydidnotconverge,evenafterhighnumbersofMCMC iterations,makingitdifficulttoproduceareliabledensityestimate.Integratingmultipledatasourcesinspatialcapture recapturemodelsproducedthemostprecisedensityestimatesthatwerealsoinconcordancewithexpectedfisher densities.Thisstudyhighlightsthechallengeofapplyingcomplexmodelstolow-densitycarnivorepopulations,and stressestheneedforcontinuedandevaluationofthemosteffectiveanalyticalapproachesandsurveydesigns,tobetter informecologicalconclusionsandconservationmanagement. Keywords:Methods,Mammals,Capture-recapture(SCR),Populationmodels. Remotecameranetworkstoscaleupecologicalinsightsandconservationapplicationssymposium TUESDAY10:45,ROOM:THEATRE Fish on film in the temperate deep: An underwater method comparison LILYBURKE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] JASONT.FISHER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,INNOTECHALBERTA;JOHNP.VOLPE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Preciseandaccuratespeciesabundanceanddistributiondataareprerequisitetounderstandingtheeffectsofspatialand temporalenvironmentalchangesonbiodiversity.Thesedatacanbechallengingtoobtain,especiallyinmarine environmentswherethelogisticalandtechnicaldifficultiesofworkingunderwatercanlimittheprecisionandaccuracyof detection.Inshallowwaters,themostcommonsurveymethodisUnderwaterVisualCensus(UVC)bydivers.Increasingly popularalternativemethodsinvolvetheuseofvideo-basedtechnologies:active(amobilecameraisdeployedandmoves acrossthestudyarea)orpassive(astationarybaitedcamerarecordsspeciesandindividualsmovingintothefieldof view).Wecomparedthestatisticalpropertiesofthesethreesurveymethodologies(UVC,activevideo,andpassivevideo) fordescribingspeciesassemblagesanddeterminedsourcesofbiasesassociatedwitheachmethod.Surveyswere conductedovertemperaterockyreefsontheBritishColumbiancoastacross85sites.Wecompetedasuiteofgeneralized linearmodelstodeterminethecomplementarityamongmethodsandtheinfluenceofsiteheterogeneityondetectability. Inareasoflowabundance,theattractionofpassivevideosurveysprovedinconsistent,andUVCperformedbetter.In areasofhighabundance,theperformanceofpassivevideoexceededthatofactivevideosurveysinspeciesdetectionand requiredlesssamplingeffort.Resolvingthechallengeofmethodologicalbiasisprerequisitetodefiningtowhatextent managementactionsaremeetingtheirconservationobjectives.Ourresultsindicatelogisticallyandfinanciallymodest surveymethodscanmeetorexceedmoredemandingconventionaltools,butmethodusedisdependentonthebiological system. Remotecameranetworkstoscaleupecologicalinsightsandconservationapplicationssymposium TUESDAY08:00,ROOM:THEATRE Promise and pitfalls of scaling up ecological insights using remote cameras COLEBURTON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Theuseofremotecameras(akacameratraps,CTs)asasurveytoolforterrestrialwildlifehasexplodedinrecentyears. Dataonanimaldistribution,abundanceandbehaviorarebeinggeneratedforanincreasingnumberofspeciesandsites, withgreatpotentialtoimprovewildlifemanagementandconservationacrosslargespatialscales.Currently,however,CT projectsaremostlydisjointed,withvaryingorpoorlydocumentedmethodologiesinhibitingeffectivesynthesisofresults. BetterstandardizationofCTmethodswillfacilitatescalingupinferencesfromindividualprojectstolargerregionsof conservationplanning.SuchstandardizationrequirescarefulaccountingoflinkagesbetweenCTsamplingdataand underlyingecologicalprocesses,andofthesensitivityofinferencestosamplingerror.Ireviewrecenteffortsfromour grouptotesthypothesesontheecologicalprocessesdrivingspatialandtemporalvariabilityinCTdetectionsforseveral largemammalspecies,includingsimulationtestsofcommonapproachestoestimatingabundancefromCTdata(indices ofrelativeabundance,occupancymodels,spatialcapture-recapture).Iconcludewithrecommendationsforadvancing researchonCTmethodologywiththegoalofimprovinglarge-scale,multispeciesmonitoringforbetterwildlife conservation. Ecology&EvolutioninaSocialContextSymposium TUESDAY09:00,ROOM:COLWOOD Root behavioral responses to nutrients and neighbors JAMESCAHILL,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] TANBAO,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;MEGANLJUBOTINA,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Competitionhasbeentraditionallyviewedinadeterministicfashion,leadingtofamiliartermssuchascompetition coefficientsandcompetitivehierarchies.Competitivedeterminismhashadoutsizedinfluenceinecology,andassumes thateitherindividualsareunabletomakebehaviouraladjustmentsinresponsetothespecificsetofencounterstheyface, orthattheseadjustmentsaverageoutwithinapopulation.Awealthofrecentevidenceisdemonstratingthatminute detailsofthesocialenvironmenthavesubstantialimpactsonindividualbehavior,competitivedynamics,andspecies coexistence.Here,Ipresentresultsfromseveralexperimentstestinghowthegeneticcompositionofaplant's neighborhoodimpactscompetitiveoutcomesandinterpretations.UsingArabidopsisthaliana,wefoundreduced competitivestruggleamongkinthanamongunrelatedindividuals.Thiskineffectwascontingentuponresourcelevels, consistentwithsocio-behaviouraltheory.Further,therewasnoevidenceofarobustcompetitivehierarchy,andinstead intransitivitywascommonandprovidesapotentialcoexistencemechanismbaseduponsocialcomplexity.Thisfindingis alsosupportedfromadditionalexperimentsinwhichwearefindingplanttraitexpressionandcompetitiveoutcomesare aresultofcomplexinteractionsamongneighbouridentityandresourcelevels.Combined,wearefindingsubstantial evidencethatseeminglysubtledifferencesinplantneighborhoodshavemeaningfulimpactsontheexpressionoftraits andthenatureofplantinteractions.Viewingcompetingplantsasindividuals,ratherthanaveragerepresentativesofa species,requiresseeingtheminasocialcontext.Suchanapproachallowsforthedevelopmentandtestingofnew questionsinthiswell-wornareaofresearch. Usingexperimentalevolutiontorevealtheeco-evolutionaryimpactsofglobalchangesymposium WEDNESDAY09:00,ROOM:THEATRE Ocean change, phenotypic plasticity and assisted evolution GLORIAMASSAMBAN’SIALA,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECRIMOUSKI,[email protected] PIEROCALOSI,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECRIMOUSKI;EMMAGIBBIN,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECRIMOUSKI,ÉCOLEPOLYTECHNIQUE FÉDÉRALEDELAUSANNE;LEELACHAKRAVARTI,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECRIMOUSKI,JAMESCOOKUNIVERSITY;MIKEJARROLD, UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECRIMOUSKI,JAMESCOOKUNIVERSITY;CYNTHIATHIBAULT,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECRIMOUSKI Assistedevolutionisapromisingtoolforenhancingtoleranceinmarinespeciesthatareatriskfromthenegativeimpacts ofmultipleglobalchangedriversaffectingoceansecosystems.Thisapproachhasbeenadvocatedasatooltopromotethe conservationofEarth'sbiodiversity,throughtransgenerationalconditioningandepigenetics.However,aconsequenceof spendingmultiplegenerationsincontrolledandoftenconstantfutureenvironmentalconditionsisalossintheabilityto respondviaphenotypicplasticitywhenfacedwithnewenvironmentalchallenges.Maintainingasufficientdegreeof phenotypicplasticitywillbeparamounttothelong-termsuccessofassistedevolutionprogrammes,anaspectthathas beenlargelyneglected.Weconductedreciprocal-transplantsonhatchlingsofamarinepolychaetebetweencontroland globalchangescenarios(oceanwarming,oceanacidificationandcombined)overthecourseofamultigenerational exposure(F3-F5)inconstantregimes.Wethenusedreactionnormstodeterminewhethersuchexposureregimesboost theselectionofindividualswithlowerlevelsofphenotypicplasticity,orpromotetheretentionofplasticityupon translocationintonewenvironmentalconditions.Weshowthatworms’phenotypicplasticitywasnotcompromisedover thistimeframe.Ourresultssuggestthatspeciesthatalreadypossesshighlevelsofplasticitymaybeabletoadjustwithingenerationallevelsoffitness,whilstmaintainingadequatebetween-generationalvariation.Thismayreducetheriskof demographicdeclineinconditionedpopulationsofendangeredspeciesthataretransplantedfromexperimentaland aquaculturefacilitiestothenaturalenvironment.Ourresultshaveimportantrepercussionsfordevelopingsuccessful assistedevolutionprograms. Speciesinteractionsinawarmingworldsymposium TUESDAY14:15,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Identifying gaps and priorities in understanding climate change impacts on food webs ERINK.CAMERON,UNIVERSITYOFCOPENHAGEN,UNIVERSITYOFHELSINKI,[email protected] MAJAK.SUNDQVIST,UNIVERSITYOFCOPENHAGEN,UMEUNIVERSITY;PAULJ.CARADONNA,UNIVERSITYOFCOPENHAGEN,CHICAGO BOTANICGARDEN;SALLYA.KEITH,UNIVERSITYOFCOPENHAGEN,LANCASTERUNIVERSITY;ERIKA.MOUSING,UNIVERSITYOF COPENHAGEN;KARINNILSSON,UMEÅUNIVERSITY;DANIELB.METCALFE,LUNDUNIVERSITY;AIMET.CLASSEN,UNIVERSITYOF COPENHAGEN,UNIVERSITYOFVERMONT Recentevidenceindicatesthatindirecteffectsofclimatechangeviaalteredspeciesinteractionscanbeasstrongasdirect effects.However,moststudieshavefocusedonexaminingimpactsonindividualsorspecies,ratherthanonhigherlevels oforganization.Weconductedasystematicreviewtoassessglobalcoverageofstudiesonclimatechangeandfoodwebs andidentifykeygaps.Moststudiesincludedinourreview(269studiesintotal)wereinmarinesystems(50%),followed byterrestrial(28%)andfreshwatersystems(22%).Studieswereunequallydistributedgeographically,withmost occurringinEuropeandNorthAmerica.Terrestrialstudiesweremostcommonintemperateforestand woodland/shrublandbiomes.Relativelyfewstudiesexaminedtheeffectofmorethanoneclimatechangevariable(31%), andtemperaturewasthemostcommonlyinvestigatedmechanism(75%ofstudies).Inaddition,themajorityinvestigated changesinspeciesabundanceorbiomass,ratherthanshiftsindiversity(25%)orfoodwebstructure(17%).Toimprove ourunderstandingofhowspeciesinteractionswillrespondtochangingclimatesinthefuture,additionalresearchis neededinunder-studiedregionsoutsideNorthAmericaandEurope.Furthermore,studiesshouldinvestigateeffectson foodwebstructureanddiversityratherthanonlyabundance. Conservationchallengesassociatedwithaquaticsoundscapessymposium MONDAY15:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Marine vessel movements: Mitigation of noise through data collection, strategic planning, and management support ROSALINECANESSA,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] CASEYHILLIARD,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY;LAURENMCWHINNIE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;PATRICKO’HARA,ENVIRONMENTCANADA; UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;NORMASERRASOGAS,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;LEHSMALLSHAW,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Ship-sourcemarinenoiseisanemergingissuethatisincreasinglyshowntointerferewithmarinespecies.Theexposure toship-basednoiseisexpectedtoincreaseintheSalishSeaasmarinevesselactivityincreasesduetoplannedport expansionsandnewmarineterminalconstructiononCanada'sPacificcoast.Increasingly,governmentandindustryare requiredtotakeoperationalandstrategicmitigationmeasureswithoutreliableandcomprehensivedataandanalysisto informthosedecisions,andintheabsenceofnationalguidelines.Thegoalofthisresearchhasbeentoexploreand improvetheutilityandmodellingofshiptraffic,basedonAISandotherdata,asanindicatorofnoisetoenable government,industryandNGOs,makebetterdecisionstomitigatemarinenoiseimpacts.Specifically,theresearch addressesthefollowingthreequestions:1)Howcanwebuildareliable,comprehensivespatio-temporalmodelofvessel movement?2)Howcanweconfidentlyassociatenoisewithmarinevesselstounderstandcumulativenoiseexposure?3) Howcanweintegratevesseltrafficmodelsandnoiseexposuremodelswithdecisionmakingandoutreach?Hereweshow theresultsofvesseltrafficandacousticmodellingfortheSalishSea,themostheavilytraffickedareasinthewestcoastof Canada,andstillfacingfurtherincreasesinshippinglevelsdueprimarilytoadvancesonthepreviouslyplannedport expansioninVancouver. UncertaintyinEcologyandConservationSymposium MONDAY09:15,ROOM:SAANICH Climate and grazing management contribute to uncertainty about carbon storage and sequestration in the Canadian prairies CAMERONCARLYLE,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] Canadianprairiesareamongtheworld'smost-alteredecosystemsasaresultofoveracenturyofconversiontocropland. Remainingprairieholdslargeamountsofsoilcarbon,30%morethanareasconvertedtocropland,andhavethepotential tosequestermore.MostoftheCanadianprairiesareprivatelyownedandusedforgrazingcattle,andhavenorestrictions topreventconversiontootherlanduses.Landownersandconservationorganizationsalikearelookingtocarbon-offset paymentsasamechanismtoencourageprairieconservation.However,theprairiesarecomposedofdifferentecotypes withdivergentvegetation,itisanticipatedthatfutureclimateswillreducetheamountofcarbontheyholdandtherewill belargevariationincattlemanagementamongproducers.Together,regionalvariation,climatechangeandgrazing managementcreateuncertaintyastowhethertheprairieswillcontinuetostoreandsequestercarbonandthis uncertaintyislikelytobeamajorobstacletotheadoptionofcarbon-offsetpoliciesingrasslands,despitetheexistenceof offsetpoliciesforotherlandusessuchascropland.Iwillreviewrecentresearchthatwehavecompletedhighlighting variationincarbonstorageandcyclingduetocattlemanagementidentifyingbroadgeographicdifferencesinthe Canadianprairies.Futureresearchinvolvesexperimentationandsurveysofexistingsitestounderstandthe consequencesofspecificgrazing-managementdecisionsoncarbonandmodelingofcarbonunderfutureclimate scenarios. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY16:30,ROOM:SAANICH Population genetics of Athabasca River Basin bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus) EMMAK.CARROLL,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] STEVENM.VAMOSI,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY Acrossitsnativerange,bulltrout(Salvelinusconfluentus)extentandabundanceareindeclineduetohistoricoverharvest andhabitatdegradation.Thisthreatenedspeciesisdependentonextensivelyconnected,cold,cleanheadwaterhabitats, sensitivetofragmentationfromlandusechangesandisabletohybridizewithnon-nativebrooktrout(Salvelinus fontinalis).Althoughbulltroutpopulationsareattheforefrontofcold-waterconservationeffortsinAlberta'sEastern SlopesRegion,abaselineunderstandingofpopulationgeneticdiversityanddifferentiationwithintheAthabascaRiver basinarepoorlyunderstood.AcrosstheEasternSlopesRegion,431bulltroutfrom20sitesweresampled,andcompared using10microsatellitelocito(1)characterizewithin-andamong-populationgeneticvariationbetweenneighbouring AthabascaandSaskatchewanRiverbasinsand(2)determinethelevelofhybridizationwithbrooktroutwithinthe AthabascaRiverbasin.BulltroutpopulationsfromtheSaskatchewanandAthabascaRiverbasinscontainedsimilarlevels ofheterozygositybutweredifferentiatedfromoneanother.WithintheAthabascaRiverbasin,fivegenetically differentiatedclusterswerefound.Thesepatternscreateabaselineunderstandingofbulltroutpopulationgenetics withintheupperreachesoftheAthabascaRiverbasinandsuggestthesepopulationsgeneticdifferentiationshouldbe consideredwhendecidinghowandwheretoalterconnectivitybetweenpopulations. Beeecologyandbehaviour WEDNESDAY11:15,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Flower depth links tongue length and wing morphology through wing use in a community of prairie bumble bees RALPHCARTAR,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] CLAYTONMANNING,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Wingshapeshouldreflecttheenvironmentinwhichwingsareused.Bumblebeesmakeextensiveuseoftheirwings, movingbetweenflowersthatdifferintheirhandlingcharacteristics.Tonguelengthofbumblebeesispositively correlatedwithcorolladepth(awellknownrelationship),andbeesflymoreandmorefrequentlyascorolladepth decreases(alesswellknownrelationship).Winguseofbumblebeesthereforedecreaseswithtonguelength.Inthis study,weexaminetwoelementsofwingmorphology-wingloading(bodymass/wingarea)andaspectratio(wing span/wingdepth)-whichweexpecttodifferbetweenshort-tonguedbees(flyingmoreandmorefrequently),andlongtonguedbees(flyinglessandlessfrequently).Wepredictedthatwingloadingandaspectratiowouldincreasewith tonguelength.Wetestedthishypothesisbymeasuringwinguseofbeesrelativetomeancorolladepthofdifferentflower species,andquantifyingthemorphologyofwingsof140bumblebeesof8speciescollectedontheroughfescue grasslandsofSWAlberta.Ourpredictionswereonlypartlysupported.Wefoundthepredictedrelationshipbetween tonguelengthandwingloading,butacontraryrelationshipbetweentonguelengthandaspectratio.Itwouldseemthat selectionfavoursdeliveryoffoodtothecolonyatalowercostoftransport(thewingloadingrelationship),butwitha counter-intuitivelylowflightefficiency(theaspectratiorelationship). Keywords:Bumblebees,Pollinators,Morphology,Animalmovement,Evolution. Coralreefecology TUESDAY15:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 A methodology for evaluating the resilience of ecosystem services: A coral reef case study BRUNOCARTURAN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN,[email protected] LAELPARROTT,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN;JASONPITHER,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN Climatechangeandotheranthropogenicdisturbancesaremodifyingthetaxonomiccompositionofecosystems worldwide.Understandingthefunctionalconsequencesofthesemodifications,includingimpactsonecosystemservices andontheresilienceofsuchservices,isapressingchallenge.Functionaltraitsprovideameanstomechanisticallylink ecosystemresilienceandservicestotaxonomiccomposition.Weproposeamethodologythatconsistsof(1)identifying effecttraits(i.e.,traitscontributingtoecosystemfunctionsandservices),resistanceresponsetraits(i.e.,traitsimplicated inresistanceagainstdisturbances)andrecoveryresponsetraits(i.e.,traitsinfluencingpost-disturbancerecovery)within acommunity,(2)analyzingthenatureandstrengthofassociationsbetweenthesedifferenttypesoftraits,and(3)using theseassociationstoestimatetheresilienceofservicesagainstdisturbances.Weillustratethemethodologywithcoral reefexamplesandshowforinstancethattheservicehabitatprovisioning,whichsupportsbeneficialactivitiessuchas fisheriesandtourism,haslowresistanceto,butfastrecoveryfrom,cyclones.Thecoralspeciescontributingthemostto theservice(i.e.,thosehavinglargeandstructurallycomplexcolonies)areamongthemostfragile,butalsoexhibitthe fastestgrowthrates,allowingtheirremaining(fragmented)coloniestorapidlyovertakefreespace.Ourproposed methodologyalsohighlightsthetraitsandassociationsthatareespeciallyimportantforthemanagementofecosystem services,andconsequently,providesdirectionsforfurtherresearchonfunctionaltraitsandtheirrolesinecosystem functioningandresilience. Keywords:Methods,Coralreef,Resilience,Ecosystemfunction,Ecosystemservices. Fishecology TUESDAY16:15,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM A novel approach to estimating fish densities using underwater cameras ROWSHYRACASTAÑEDA,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] Theuseofunderwatercamerastodetectandmonitorfishesisbecomingincreasinglypopularinfreshwatersystems, especiallyforspeciesatrisk,duetoitspassiveandnon-invasivecharacteristics.However,standardizedmethodsin quantifyingfishpopulationsisdifficultduetothelackofspatialreferenceofcameraimages,theinabilitytorecognize specificindividuals,andthe3-Dandturbidnatureofwater.Therefore,novelapproachesarerequiredtocalculatefish densitiesthattakeintoaccounttheseconfoundingfactors.Inthisstudy,wedevelopedamathematicalmodeltocalculate fishdensitiesusingunderwatercameras.Thismethoddoesnotrequireidentificationofindividualsandallowsforthe estimationofdensities.ThemodelwastestedinmanipulatedtankexperimentsinwhichGoProcameratrialswererun overaturbiditygradientwhereknownspeciesdensitieswereheldconstant.Toestimatehowencounterratesmaybe affectedbyalteredfishbehaviourduetothecamerapresence,thesetrialswererunwithclearandblackoutcases.To understandhowobserveridentificationbiasandturbiditymayaffectencounterrates,thetrialswerealsorunwithred andmagentafiltersforimagecorrection.Theresultsofthisresearchelucidatethestrengthsandlimitationsofusing underwatercamerastoenumeratefishes. Keywords:Fish,Photographs,Experiment,Mathematicalmodel,Individualabundance. SeagrassecologyandconservationalongPacificandAtlanticcoastssymposium TUESDAY11:00,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Evaluating the seasonal use of estuarine habitats by juvenile salmon and resident fish communities LIACHALIFOUR,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] DAVIDSCOTT,WILDSALMONPROGRAM,RAINCOASTCONSERVATIONFOUNDATION;MISTYMACDUFFEE,WILDSALMONPROGRAM, RAINCOASTCONSERVATIONFOUNDATION;JULIABAUM,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA TheFraserRiversupportssomeofthelargestsalmonrunsintheworld,butalsosupportsBritishColumbia'sbiggest urbancentres,industrialactivities,andagriculturalproduction.Todate,70-80%ofhabitatintheFraserRiverestuaryhas beenpermanentlyaltered,andtheremainingnaturalareascontinuetobethreatenedbydevelopmentandsealevelrise. Despiteitsecologicalimportanceandtheseongoingthreats,theFraserRiverestuaryisparticularlyunderstudied,with thelastcomprehensivefishsurveysoccurringnearly40yearsago.Somecriticalquestionsremain,specifically,howdoes estuarinehabitatcontributetotheearlysurvivalofjuvenileChinooksalmon,andhowdofishcommunitiesvaryacross seasonsandhabitatsintheFraserRiverestuary?Wesurveyed17sitesacrosstheestuary,encompassingthreehabitat types:eelgrass,marsh,andsandflat.WeseinedbiweeklyfromMarch-July2016onhightidecycles,repeatingtwicein thefall.Wesampled33,432fishintotal,andretainedasubsampleof254Chinooksalmonforgeneticstockidentification andotolithgrowthanalyses.Allfishabundanceswerelowinearlyspringandlatefall,withpeaktotalabundance occurringinJulyandpeaksalmonabundanceinMay.Eelgrasshabitatsupportedthegreatesttotalfishabundanceand speciesrichness.However,themajorityofsalmonwerecaughtinmarshhabitat,particularlyHarrisonRiverChinook, whichrearintheestuary.Giventhatmanagementpracticescurrentlyemphasizeeelgrassenhancement,wesuggestthat marshisbeingunderpreservedasanimportanthabitatforjuvenileChinooksalmon. Pollinationsystems TUESDAY11:00,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Pollinator-mediated impacts of alien plants on natives: New data provide new insights JULIACHARLEBOIS,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA,[email protected] RISASARGENT,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA Conventionalwisdomsuggeststhatinvasiveplantstendtocompetewithnativesforpollinatorattention.Ontheother hand,invasives,particularlythosethathavelargefloraldisplaysorrewards,mayfacilitatepollinatorattractiontonearby natives.Inameta-analysisofdatafrom57studies,wedeterminedthat,incontradictionofpreviouswork,thepresenceof aninvasivedoesnotpredictcompetitionforpollinatorvisitationwithnativeplants.Moreover,ourresultsindicatethat theoutcomeofthestudyisaffectedbythedistancebetweenthecontrolgroup(nativeplantsonly)andthenearestalien plant:competitionincreaseswithgreaterdistance,suggestingthatalienandnativeplantsmayinteractthrough pollinatorsatlargerspatialscalesthanpreviouslyassumed.Wealsodiscoveredthatnativeplantseedsetissignificantly affectedbythespatialarrangementofneighbourandfocalplantsinthetreatmentcondition;onecommonplant arrangement(interspersion)issignificantlymorelikelytoproduceacompetitiveoutcomethannaturalorclumped arrangements.Ouranalysisrevealsthatcertaintypesofstudiesarelackingfromtheliterature,suchasthosethat explicitlycomparefloraltraitsofalienandnativeneighbourplants.Finally,basedonourfindings,wemake recommendationsforbestpracticestodetectandinterprettheoutcomesofpollinator-mediatedinteractionsamongplant species. Keywords:Pollinators,Meta-analysis,Invasion,Competition,Plants,Scale. Phylogenetics MONDAY08:15,ROOM:WCOAST A comparative analysis of mitochondrial DNA in dioecious (Anodonta anatina) and hermaphroditic (Anodonta cygnea) freshwater mussel species in the context of doubly uniparental vs. strictly maternal inheritance of mtDNA EMILYCHASE,ACADIAUNIVERSITY,[email protected] BRENTROBICHEAU,ACADIAUNIVERSITY;SARAHVEINOT,ACADIAUNIVERSITY;SOPHIEBRETON,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL;DON STEWART,ACADIAUNIVERSITY Undertheunusualsystemofdoublyuniparentalinheritance(DUI)ofmitochondrialDNA(mtDNA)inbivalves,female offspringinheritmaternalorfemale-transmittedmtDNA(F-type)andmaleoffspringinheritbothF-typemtDNA,which endsupintheirsomatictissues,andpaternalormale-transmittedmtDNA(M-type),whichendsupintheirgonadtissue. SeveralspeciescomplexesoffreshwatermusselsoftheorderUnionoidaexhibitbothdioeciousandhermaphroditic reproductivestrategieswithinthesamegenus.MtDNAinheritanceinhermaphroditicspeciesadherestothetypical animalpatternofstrictmaternalinheritance(SMI)ofmtDNA.Incontrast,inthedioeciousspeciesanalyzedtodate,there arebothanFandandM-typemtDNAgenomeandtherearealsonovelopenreadingframes(ORFs),termedtheM-ORF andtheF-ORF,intheM-typeandF-typegenomes,respectively.However,thehermaphroditicspeciesmtDNAgenomes containdivergentversionsoftheirsisterspeciesF-ORFs,whicharereferredtoasH-ORFs.WithintheorderUnionoida, hermaphroditismhasevolvedindependentlymultipletimes.Thisshiftfromdioecytohermaphroditismisaccompanied byalossoftheM-ORF(andindeedtheentireM-typegenome),suggestingapossibleassociationbetweenthesenovel ORFsandsexdetermination.Comparativeanalysisofcloselyrelatedfreshwatermusselspeciesexhibitingadioecious reproductivestrategy(Anodontaanatina)andahermaphroditicstrategy(Anodontacygnea)permitsfurtherexamination ofthepossiblelinkagebetweenM,FandH-ORFsandsexdeterminationintheorderUnionoida.Wecomparethe sequenceofthecompletemtDNAgenomeofA.cygneatothecompleteM-andF-typegenomesoftheconspecificA. anatina(obtainedfromGenBank).Asfoundinseveralotherdioecious/hermaphroditicspeciespairs,wedemonstrate thattheF-ORFofA.anatinaandtheH-ORFofA.cygneaarehighlydivergent,buttheH-ORFisofamuchshorterlength andislackinganarrayofrepetitiveDNA,characteristicstypicallyobservedinotherunionidH-ORFs.Wewilldiscussthe implicationsoftheseobservationsforourunderstandingoftheroleoftheM-,F-,andH-ORFSinsexdeterminationin freshwatermussels. Keywords:Populationgenetics,Freshwater,Invertebrates,Reproduction,Populationgenetics,Genomesequencing. Habitatselectionanduse WEDNESDAY08:00,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Evaluating habitat specialization of North American birds using a spatial null model CARMENCHELICK,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN,[email protected] JASONPITHER,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN Therisksposedtospeciesbyhabitatlossand/ormodificationtendtoincreasewithincreasingdegreeofhabitat specialization.Accurateassessmentsofhabitatspecializationarethereforecrucialtoconservationefforts.Methodsfor quantifyinghabitatspecializationaremanyanddiverse,butfewtakeappropriateaccountofpotentiallyspurious associationsbetweenspeciescommonness(orrarity)andhabitatcommonness(orrarity).HereweuseNorthAmerican BreedingBirdSurveydata,NationalLandCoverdata,andaspatialnullmodelapproachtocalculateacorrectedspecies specializationindex(SSI)for462speciesofbird.Thenullmodelrandomlyre-allocatesindividualsamongstoplocations withinBirdConservationRegions(BCRs),keepingspeciesrichnessatstopsfixedandspeciesabundanceswithinBCRs fixed,andrecalculatingSSIwitheachrandomization.Throughthisprocedure,anulldistributionof1000SSIvaluesis generatedforeachspecies,andthisdistributionisinturnusedtocalculateastandardizedSSI(SSIc).Weshowthat(i)the spatialnullmodelisessentialbecausetheuncorrectedSSIvaluesarehighlycorrelatedwithspeciesoccupancyand speciesabundance;(ii)speciesidentifiedasspecialistsusingtherawSSIdifferedfromthoseidentifiedasspecialistsusing SSIc.TheSSIfiguresprominentlywithinresearchonEuropeanbirds,andisoftenusedtoidentifyspeciesofconservation concern.Ourfindingssuggestthislargebodyofresearchwarrantsre-evaluation,asitdoesnotapplyappropriatenull models. Keywords:Habitatspecialization,Birds,Spatialmodel,Methods. Marineecology TUESDAY16:30,ROOM:SIDNEY Taxonomic turnover across salinity gradients MELISSACHEN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] STILIANLOUCAS,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;FERDOUSNAWAR,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;LAURAPARFREY,UNIVERSITY OFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Thereistremendousturnoverinmicrobialcommunitycompositionalongsalinitygradientsandmanystudieshave observedthatvarioustaxonomicgroupscorrelatewithsalinity.Forexample,inBacteria,Actinobacteriaarecommonly foundinfreshwater,whileAlphaproteobacteriaareassociatedwithmarinewaters.Althoughthesetrendsarewell documentedqualitatively,itisdifficulttoquantitativelydescribegroupsofsalinityspecialists(fresh-,marine-and brackish-waterspecialists)becausebinningOTUsintothesegroupsusuallyrequiresarbitrarythresholdstodefinewhere eachbinbeginsandends.Toaddressthisproblem,wepresentanewbinningmethodinwhichbinboundariesandOTU classificationareobjectivelyestimatedfromthedataandindependentfromeachother.Ourmethodsystematically iteratesthroughbincombinationstofindamodelthatbestfitsthedata,andthenusesthebest-fitmodeltoclassifyeach OTUaseitherafresh-,marine-orbrackish-waterspecialist.Whenappliedtoaglobaldatasetofmicrobialcommunities acrossasalinityrangeof0-36partsperthousand,wefindnotonlyfresh-andmarine-waterspecialists,butalso intermediatesalinity(brackish-water)specialists.Additionally,wefinddifferencesintrendsbetweenbacteria/archaea andeukaryota.Forexample,analysisofbacterialdatasetsyieldstwogroupsofbrackish-waterspecialistswhereas analysisofeukaryoticdatasetsresolvesonlyonegroupofbrackish-waterspecialists.Thismethodcanbeappliedtoa varietyofenvironmentalgradientstodefinemicrobialcommunityturnoveralonggradientsinanobjective,rigorous,and high-throughputmanner. Keywords:Taxonomy,Estuary,Methods,Bacteria. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY10:30,ROOM:COLWOOD A resistance mapping approach to assess landscape effects on genetics and dispersal of the Rocky Mountain Apollo butterfly HELENCHEN,WESTERNUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Theeffectlandcoverhasondispersalisakeyquestioninlandscapeecologyandisoftenassessedindirectlyusing populationgeneticdata.Becauseofthis,itisimportanttounderstandjusthowwellgeneticvariablesanddispersal correspond.Icomparetherelationshipsofdispersalandpopulationgeneticstructuretounderlyinglandscapefeatures usingaresistancemappingapproach,andtestthevalidityofusinggeneticstructureasaproxyfordispersal.Different landcovertypesareassigneddifferentresistancevaluesbasedonhowtheywouldhinderbutterflymovement.Ianalyze geneticanddispersaldatafromanetworkofpopulationsoftheRockyMountainApollobutterfly,Parnassiussmintheus, onJumpingpoundRidgeinKananaskis,Alberta.IusearesistancesurfacemapofthestudyareageneratedinArcGISthat combinesaerialimaging,landclassification,elevationdata,andlocalknowledgeofthestudysite.Thissurfaceisanalyzed inCircuitscapetoderiveresistancedistancesbetweenbutterflyhabitatsthatwillbecorrelatedseparatelywithhistorical mark-recapturedispersalandgeneticdatafromthislandscape.Withabetterunderstandingofhowresistancesurfaces reflectdispersalandgeneticdifferentiation,wecanbetterinterprettheresultsoflandscapegeneticstudies,whichare increasinglyusedtodetermineandmitigatetheeffectsofhabitatfragmentationonspeciesforconservationpurposes. Keywords:Alpineapollobutterfly,Dispersal,Landscapeconfiguration,Resistancemapping. Policyandplanning MONDAY13:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Addressing the potential cumulative impacts of land use and climate change on fish and wildlife in northern Ontario CHERYLCHETKIEWICZ,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA,[email protected] MATTCARLSON,ALCESLANDSCAPEANDLAND-USELTD.;CONNIEO'CONNOR,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA;BRIE EDWARDS,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA;MEGSOUTHEE,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA;MICHAELSULLIVAN, ALBERTAENVIRONMENTANDPARKS Cumulativeeffectsarethesynergistic,interactive,andunpredictableoutcomesofmultipleland-usepracticesthat aggregateoverspaceandtime.Togetherwithclimatechange,theycanhavesignificantimpactsonfishandwildlife. Ongoingdevelopmentofnaturalresourcesandinfrastructuresuggestthatcumulativeeffectsareunlikelytodiminish. Cumulativeeffectscanbeconsideredwithintheregulatorycontextofenvironmentalassessmentprocesses.However, conservingfishandwildliferequiresthatcumulativeeffectsassessmentbecomesanecessaryandintegratedpartofland useplanninganddecisionmaking.Ontario'sFarNorthcontainstheworld'smostintactborealforestandglobally significantwetlands.Theregionisnotonlyastrongholdforspeciesatrisksuchascaribou,wolverine,andlakesturgeon, butisalsohometo41,000FirstNationspeoplewhodependonitsfish,wildlife,andecosystemservicesandhaverightsto continuetodoso.TheOntarioGovernmentiscommittedtoprotectingatleast50%ofOntario'sFarNorth,maintaining ecosystemservices(e.g.,carbonstorage),whileencouragingnewdevelopment(e.g.,mining,roads).Tobeeffective, planningmustconsidertheconsequencesoftoday'sdecisionsondesiredfutures.WedescribetheapplicationofALCES landscapecumulativeeffectssimulationtoolkittosimulateandexploretheoutcomesofpotentiallanduseandclimate changescenariosonkeyspeciesintheFarNorth.Asoneoftheonlyregional-scaleeffortstoconsidercumulativeeffects, wediscusswaysinwhichourworkcanadvancefishandwildlifeconservationoverbusiness-as-usualapproaches. Keywords:Landusechange,Climatechange,Cumulativeeffects,Simulationmodels,Boreal,Spatialplanning. Aquaticecology WEDNESDAY11:00,ROOM:ESQUIMALT River networks dampen long-term hydrological signals of climate change KYLECHEZIK,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] SEANC.ANDERSON,UNIVERSITYOFWASHINGTON;JONATHANW.MOORE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Climatechangeisalteringglobalprecipitationpatternsandsubsequentlyriverflowregimes.Earliersnowmelt,reduced snowpackandshiftsfromsnowtorainhavebeguntoreshapetheannualdistributionofdischargeinmanytemperate rivers.However,rivernetworksmaybufferagainsttheimpactsofclimatechangebyintegratingclimateasynchrony acrossthecontributingbasin.Totestthishypothesis,weestimatedflowtrendsovera38-yearperiodat55hydrometric gaugesitesinBC'sFraserRiverbasinandcalculatedclimatetrendcomplexityovereachsitescontributingbasin.We predictthatlocaldifferencesinweatheraswellasclimatefilteringbythebasinslarge(~217,000squarekm)and topologicallycomplexlandscape,willresultinarichportfolioofclimatetrendsthatattenuateflowtrendvariability.Using anullmodelapproach,wedeterminedthattheFraserbasindampenedflowtrendsoverthis38-yearperiodandthatthe effectwasfivetimesgreaterthanwhatwouldbeexpectedifthebasinwasrespondinghomogeneouslytoclimatechange. Furthermore,therewasgreatvariabilityinmaximumwinterflowsthroughouttheFraserbasin,withnogauge-site exhibitinglessthana15%increaseinflowperdecade.Seasonalshiftssuchasthesearelikelyaresultofchangesin winterprecipitationfromsnowtorainandreducedsummerprecipitation.Importantly,ourworksuggeststhatlargefreeflowingrivers,liketheFraser,havedampenedtheimpactsofclimatechangebyintegratingdynamicallyfilteredclimate overvariedandcomplexlandscapes. Keywords:Climatechange,Freshwater,Landscapeconfiguration,Spatialmodel. Speciesinteractionsinawarmingworldsymposium TUESDAY15:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Functional trait distance predicts carbon flux shifts across a globally replicated removal experiment in mountains CHELSEACHISHOLM,UNIVERSITYOFCOPENHAGEN,[email protected] THOMASW.CROWTHER,NETHERLANDSINSTITUTEOFECOLOGY;QUENTIND.READ,MICHIGANSTATEUNIVERSITY;JEREMIAHA. HENNING,UNIVERSITYOFTENNESSEE;CHRISTIANRIXEN,WSLINSTITUTEFORSNOWANDAVALANCHERESEARCHSLF;SONJAWIPF, WSLINSTITUTEFORSNOWANDAVALANCHERESEARCHSLF;MARKHOVENDEN,UNIVERSITYOFTASMANIA;MAJASUNDQVIST,UMEÅ UNIVERSITY;AIMEET.CLASSEN,UNIVERSITYOFVERMONT;NATHANJ.SANDERS,UNIVERSITYOFVERMONT,UNIVERSITYOF COPENHAGEN Thelossofglobalbiodiversityisoneofthemostconsiderabledriversofglobalchange,withdirectconsequencesforthe functioningofnaturalsystemsandthewellbeingofhumanpopulations.Indeed,agrowingbodyofevidencesuggeststhat theimpactsofchangingbioticcommunitiescanbeequalto,orgreaterthanthedirecteffectsofclimateorland-use change.Inplants,severalimportantfunctionaltraitsrelatetotrade-offsinconservativevs.acquisitivestrategies,andthe lossofthosetraitscanhaveprofoundconsequencesforthefunctioningofecosystems.Hereweusepreliminarydatafrom agloballyreplicatedexperimentinmountainstoassesstheinfluenceofchangingspeciesmembershipinplant communities(viadominantspeciesremoval)andchangingtemperature(viaopen-toppedchambers)oncarbonflux measurementsacrosselevation.Specifically,weexplorehowdifferenttraitassemblagesmightgoverntheeffectof specieslossonterrestrialecosystemfunctioning.Usingfunctionaltraitscollectedfromeachsite,wefoundthattrait distanceoftheneighbouringcommunitytothedominantremovedspeciespredictedchangesincarbonfluxacrossfour alpinesitesinthreecontinents.Mostimportantly,wefoundthatfunctionalredundancymaintainedtheseenvironments ascarbonsinkswhenadominantmemberofthecommunitywasremoved,butthatthispatternwasreversedwhenplots wereartificiallywarmed.Overallthisstudyhighlightstheimportanceofdisentanglingdirectvs.indirecteffectsofclimate changeonecosystemfunctioning. UncertaintyinEcologyandConservationSymposium MONDAY08:30,ROOM:SAANICH Incorporating climate uncertainty into models of spectacled eider survival in Alaska KATHERINES.CHRISTIE,THEALASKASEALIFECENTER,[email protected] TUULAE.HOLLMEN,THEALASKASEALIFECENTER,UNIVERSITYOFALASKAFAIRBANKS Spectacledeider(Somateriafischeri)populationsdeclinedfromthe1970’sto1990’sonwesternAlaskabreedinggrounds, withlownumberspromptingtheirlistingasthreatenedundertheUSEndangeredSpeciesActin1993.Althoughnumbers inwesternAlaskahavebeenincreasinginrecentyears,itisimportanttounderstandthedriversofpopulationchangefor thisspecies.Evidencesuggeststhatsomespeciesofseaducks,includingspectacledeiders,aresensitivetowinter conditionsandoceanicregimeshiftsresultingfromatmosphericanomaliesintheNorthPacific.Spectacledeidersrequire seaiceforresting,butalsosufficientopenwatertoaccesshighqualityforaginggroundsintheircorewinteringarea; therefore,optimalconditionsmayconsistofmoderateseaiceconcentrations.Considerableuncertaintyexistsastohow eiderswillrespondtofutureclimatescenarios.Weestimatedsurvivalandrecaptureprobabilityoffemalespectacled eidersnestingontheYukon-KuskokwimDelta,AlaskausingCormack-Jolly-Sebermodels.Wetestedwhethersurvivalwas afunctionofseaiceconcentrationsinthecorewinteringarea,BeringSearegimeshifts,year,andage.Wealsotestedfor non-linearrelationshipsbetweenicecoverandsurvival.Weobservedconsiderableannualvariationinsurvival,withlow survivalratescorrespondingtohighseaiceconcentrationsincorewinteringareasintheBeringSea.Tounderstandhow differentclimatechangescenarioswillinfluencespectacledeiderpopulationsinthefuture,ournextstepistoexamine howfutureseaiceconditionsintheBeringSeawillinfluencesurvival,andultimatelypopulationtrajectoriesforthis species. Keywords:Speciesatrisk,Birds,Climatechange,Populationmodels. LifeOntheEdge:MechanismsofAdaptingtoClimateChangeSymposium TUESDAY11:15,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Coral symbiosis and survival during the 2015/2016 El Niño event DANIELLEC.CLAAR,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] RUTHD.GATES,HAWAIIINSTITUTEOFMARINEBIOLOGY;KRISTINAL.TIETJEN,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;JULIAK.BAUM,UNIVERSITYOF VICTORIA Theresilienceofcoralreefecosystemsisshapedbyavarietyofdynamiccoral-symbiontinteractions.Coralshosta varietyofsingle-celledalgae(Symbiodinium)cladesandtypes,someofwhicharebettersuitedtosustained environmentalstressthanothers.Determiningthemechanismsbehindchangesincoral-Symbiodiniuminteractionsis essentialtounderstandingtheabilityofthecoralsymbiometoadapttoclimatechangeandotheranthropogenic stressors.Forthisstudy,weevaluatedthedynamicsofSymbiodiniumcommunitieswithincoralcoloniesthroughoutthe courseofthemajor2015/16ElNiñoeventonKiritimatiatoll(ChristmasIsland).Wecollectedcoraltissuesamplesfrom taggedcoralcoloniesthroughouttheElNiñoevent,andanalyzedthemusingMiSeqITS2ampliconsequencingwithan OTUclusteringapproach.Somecoralsshowedaremarkableearlyrecovery,regainingsymbiontsbeforetheheatstress hadsubsided.WefoundassociatedchangesinsymbiontcommunitystructureduringtheElNiño,whichwererelatedto thesurvivalprobabilityofindividualcoralcolonies.BydescribingtherelationshipbetweenElNiñowarmingandcoral symbiontgeneticdiversity,theseresultsassistinelucidatingtheinfluenceofpulseheatstressoncoral-symbiont interactions,withimplicationsforbroad-scalereefecosystemresilience. ConsequencesofRapidEcologicalChangeinMountainEcosystemsSymposium TUESDAY09:15,ROOM:SIDNEY Whitebark pine on the edge? Abiotic and biotic drivers interact to limit species range ALANACLASON,UNIVERSITYOFNORTHERNBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] ELIOTJ.B.MCINTIRE,CANADIANFORESTSERVICE,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Predictingshiftsinspeciesgeographicdistributionswithenvironmentalchangesuchasawarmingclimatewillrequire understandingtheprocessescurrentlyshapingspeciesdistributions.Whilegradientsinabiotichabitatmaydefinemany speciesgeographicranges,bioticinteractionscanalsoplayasignificantroleinshapingdistributions.Whitebarkpine (Pinusalbicaulis)isanendangeredtreefoundinsubalpineandtreelineecosystemsofwesternNorthAmerica.ThecoevolvedmutualismbetweenwhitebarkpineandClark’snutcrackers(Nucifragacolumbiana)presentsanopportunityto investigatetheinfluenceofpositivespeciesinteractionsandwiderecologicalnetworksonrangelimits.Abiotic(climate andtopography)andbiotic(dispersalandcompetition)hypotheseswerecompared,withthebestmodelsuggestingthat thecurrentnortherndistributionallimitofwhitebarkpineislikelyaresultofbioticdispersallimitations.Specifically,the northernrangeislimitedbyincreasingdistancefromareaswithhighlyabundantwhitebarkpineandincreasingisolation fromDouglas-fir(Pseudotsugamenziesii),analternatefoodsourceforClark’snutcrackersincombinationwithabiotic habitatsuitability.Thesefindingssuggestpositivebioticrelationshipscaninteractwiththeabioticenvironmentto determinespeciesrangelimits.Additionally,thisstudysuggestswiderecologicalnetworks,inthiscasetheindirect relationshipbetweenDouglas-firandwhitebarkpineviaClark’snutcrackers,caninfluencespeciesdistributions. Selection MONDAY14:30,ROOM:WCOAST Phenotypic selection on architectural effects in Delphinium glaucum (Ranunculaceae) ILONACLOCHER,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] LAWRENCEHARDER,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;MASONKULBABA,UNIVERSITYOFMINNESOTA Plantbodiesgrowbyiterativeadditionofbasicunits(metamers).ForAngiosperms,metamerismofreproductiveorgans isevidentintheproductionofmultipleflowerswithinfloweringstalks,orinflorescences.Althoughflowerswithin inflorescenceslookidentical,sometraitsvaryamongflowers.Gradientsinfloraltraitswithininflorescenceshaveoften beenattributedtoresourcelimitationdrivenbyearly-developingfruits.However,recentstudiesdemonstratethata flower’spositionwithinaninflorescencecanaffectitsphenotypeindependentlyofresourcedynamics.Furthermore,such architecturaleffectscanaffectreproductivefunction,andsomayreflectnaturalselection.Weassessedphenotypic selectiononarchitecturaleffectsforDelphiniumglaucum(Ranunculaceae),whichproduces10-60flowersinvertical inflorescences.For64D.glaucumplants,wesampledoneflowerineachseventhoftheinflorescence(i.e.,sevenflowers perplant)andmeasuredvariousmorphologicalandphenologicaltraits.Asfitnesscomponents,wealsocountedeach plant’stotalfruitnumber,andforsampledflowerswecountedseedproduction.Statisticalanalysisconsideredselection onpenalizedsplinefunctionsoftheassociationoffloraltraitstorelativeflowerposition.Weusedfunctionalregressions tocharacterizehowvariationinthesefunctionsamongplantsaffectedtheirfruitproductionandaverageseednumber perfruit.Thisanalysisestimatesvariationintheselectioncoefficient,β,withflowerposition.Floral-traitgradientswere subjecttosignificantselectionthroughfruitsetforsometraits,andselectionvariedwithrelativeflowerposition.In contrast,selectionwasnotevidentforseedproductionperfruit.Together,thesefindingsrevealinsightsontheselection ofarchitecturaleffects. Keywords:Plants,Selection,Morphology,Reproduction. Museumcollectionssymposium MONDAY11:15,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Using museum specimens and other best available data to assess insect conservation status: A lesson from the IUCN Red List bumblebees SHEILAR.COLLA,YORKUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Recently,theIUCNSpeciesSurvivalCommissionBumblebeeSpecialistGroupcompletedtheRedListAssessmentsfor46 NorthAmericanspecies.Ofthese,11(or26%)qualifiedasat-riskofextinctionusingIUCNRedListcriteria.Sixspecies wererankedasDataDeficientwiththeremainingeitherLeastConcernorNearThreatened.Thispresentationwill describetheassessmentprocessforthisfauna.Naturalhistorycollectionsprovedtobearichsourceofbumblebeedata acrossthecontinentandacrosstimeperiods.Challengeswillbediscussed,includingtheselectionofanalysestofit criterialargelydevelopedforvertebratesandothertaxaandaccountingfordifferencesinrangecoverage,searcheffort andothervariablesovertime.Additionalconsiderationsincludedaspectswhichareuniquetothetaxonomyandecology ofbumblebees. Populationdynamics TUESDAY08:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Meta-analyses reveal the world is truly chaotic: How did humans succeed in such a place? NICHOLASC.COLLINS,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] WENCHEN,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Themedianeffectsizesofsinglecausalvariablesfrommeta-analysesineconomics,education,medicalandbehavioral sciences,and,yes,ecologyandevolutionarybiologyareallequivalenttoacorrelation(Pearson'sr)ofonly0.1-0.2.In otherwords,astandarddeviationchangeinthemedianindependentvariablegeneratesonly0.1-0.2standarddeviations ofchangeinthedependentvariable,accountingforonly1-4%ofitsvariance.Evenifweadjustforknownnegativebiases ineffectsizeestimates,theadjustedmedianeffectsizesremainmuchlowerthanthervaluesof>0.5thatwesubjectively feelwouldbetterrepresenttheconnectednessoftheworldweexperience.Meta-analysesprovetheworldreallyis chaotic,incontrastwithoursubjectiveview.Howcouldhumans,withlongpre-reproductiveperiodsandlowfecundity, havesucceededinsuchahighlystochasticplace?Studiesofprimitivehunter-gatherersestimatethathumanfemalelife expectancyatbirthmusthavebeenatleast15yearstoallowprimitivehumanpopulationstopersist.Forhalfoffemales tosurviveatleast15years(whilegivingbirthto4childrenovertheaveragelifespan),annualprobabilityofsurvival wouldhavehadtoaveragemorethan0.95repeatedover30years,indicatingakindofreliabilitythatseemsinconsistent withtheunpredictableworldourmeta-analysesdescribe.Itthereforeseemslikelythattherelationshipswithinhuman familiesandcooperativegroupsmusthaveevolvedtocreateasubworldofhighlyreliablereciprocalcausalinteractions thateffectivelyprotecteduswithinthechaoticnaturalworld.Meta-analysisprovidestheperspectiveweneedto appreciatesuchhumanadaptations. Keywords:Meta-analysis,Human,Effectsize,Survival. LinkingEnvironmentalLawandScienceSymposium WEDNESDAY08:15,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Burden of proof, standard of proof: Revealing the chasm between science and law LYNDACOLLINS,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA,[email protected] Lawyersandscientistsoftenengageindialoguesaboutproofinenvironmentaldecision-making(whetherregulatoryor adjudicative).Oftenthetwodisciplinesaskthesamequestion,e.g.'IssubstanceXtoxictofish?'buttheanswersare implicitlybasedondivergentconceptsofburdenofproof(Whohastoprovetoxicityorsafety?)andstandardofproof (Howcertaindoweneedtobebeforereachingaconclusion?').Burdenofproofandstandardofproofareverydifferentin lawthaninscienceanditisnecessarytorevealandunderstandthesedifferencesinordertoengageinaproductive interdisciplinarydialogue. Reproductiveecologyandbehaviour MONDAY16:00,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Repeatability and reproductive consequences of boldness in female grey seals DAVIDCOLTMAN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] CHRISTINEM.BUBAC,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;WILLIAMD.BOWEN,BEDFORDINSTITUTEOFOCEANOGRAPHY,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY Wildanimalsshowrepeatablebehaviouraldifferencesacrosstimeandcontextsthatvarybetweenindividualsina consistentway,nowwidelyacceptedasanimalpersonality.Whilethisvariabilitymayhaveimportantecologicaland evolutionaryimplications,explaininghowandwhyvariationofanimalpersonalityismaintainedinanaturalpopulation remainsunclear.Inthisstudy,weassessedtheinfluenceofenvironmentalandbiologicalsourcesofvariationon behavioralresponsesmeasuredalongtheshy-boldcontinuuminalong-lived,iteroparousmarinemammal,thegreyseal (Halichoerusgrypus).Between2008-2016,458femalesfromtheSableIsland,NovaScotiabreedingcolonyofgreyseals weregivenaboldnessscoreinresponsetoahumanapproachdesignedtostimulatematernaldefenseofoffspring.Using generalizedlinearmixed-effectsmodels(GLMM)inaBayesianframework,weshowthatboldnessishighlyrepeatable withinandbetweenyears.Boldnesswasinfluencedbymaternalage,withyoungerfemalesbeinglessboldthanolder, moreexperiencedfemales.WefurtherusedGLMMstoassesssourcesofvariationonoffspringweaningmass,andwhile notstatisticallysignificant,weshowthatboldermothersproducedheavieroffspringthanshyfemales.Pupsofbold femaleswereonaverage~2kgheavierthanpupsofshyercounterparts,whichmaybebiologicallymeaningfulinthis species,asweanedoffspringmustrelyonmassaccumulatedduringlactationtosustainthemselvesthroughapost- weaningfastbeforereachingforagingindependence.Theseresultsprovidefurtherevidencethatpersonalityinfluences life-historystrategies,andsuggeststheevolutionarypotentialforanimalpersonalitytoevolveinresponsetoselection. Keywords:Mammals,Reproduction,Selection,Behaviouralecology,Animalpersonality. Animaldiet TUESDAY10:30,ROOM:WCOAST Untangling aquatic food webs using DNA and text-mining ZACCHAEUSG.COMPSON,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK,[email protected] WENDYA.MONK,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK;C.CURRY,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK;CHRISTOPHERJ.O.BAKER, UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK;ALEXANDRERIAZANOV,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK;MOHAMMADS.ALMANIR,UNIVERSITYOF NEWBRUNSWICK;ROBERTBEIKO,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY;MEHRDADHAJIBABAEI,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;MICHAELWRIGHT, UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;DONALDJ.BAIRD,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK Foodwebsarepowerfultoolsforvisualizingcommunitydataandassessingecosystemhealthandfunction.Constructing foodwebsrequireslargeamountsofdataoncommunitymembersandtheirmeasuredassociations.However,itis difficultandexpensivetodeterminethisinformationbecauseofsamplinglimitationsandthehighcostoftraining taxonomists.Recentadvancementsingenomicsandcomputingprovidenewwaysofovercomingtheselimitations.Using DNAtocharacterizeaquaticcommunitiesisasensitivetechniquethatprovidesastandardizedmethodofdetection,but thereiscurrentlynowayofextractingabundanceandbiomassdataneededforfoodwebanalysis.Text-miningprovidesa wayaroundthislimitation,allowingtraitdatatobegatheredforspecifictaxaacrosslargedatabases.Weusedascalable engine(Hydra,IPSNPInc.)forsemanticautomateddiscoveryandintegration(SADI)toquerydatabasesofpublished papersformissingdataonbenthicmacroinvertebratetraitsthatcouldnotbegatheredfromexistingfoodwebdatabases. ThisallowedustocreateheuristicfoodwebsfromtaxalistsgeneratedfromDNAfortwostreamswithdifferentflow regimesthatformthePeace-AthabascaDelta.Weaskedthreequestions.(1)Howdofoodwebproperties(i.e.,numberof links,linkagedensity,trophicheight)differbetweenthePeaceandAthabascarivers?(2)Howdofoodwebproperties changetemporallyinthesetworivers?(3)Howdoabioticvariables(e.g.,streamtemperature,pH,flow)affectfoodweb propertiesoftheserivers?WediscussusingDNA-generatedfoodwebsasapowerfultoolforrapidbioassessment. Keywords:Foodwebs,EnvironmentalDNA,Freshwater,Invertebrates,Semanticautomateddiscoveryandintegration(SADI). AcceleratingurbanecologyinCanada:Identifyingcurrentresearchapproaches,gaps,andneedsinCanadiancities symposium MONDAY08:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Socio-ecological interactions in the urban forests: Residents and their trees TENLEYM.CONWAY,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,MISSISSAUGA,[email protected] Researchontheurbanforestoccursattheboundarybetweenthesocialandnaturalsciencesbecauseurbanforestsare inherentlysocio-ecologicalsystemsthatrequireunderstandingsofbothhumanandbiophysicalpatternsandprocesses. Atglobalandcontinentalscales,biophysicalconditionsareimportantinunderstandingdifferencesbetweenurban forests.However,whenexaminingconditionswithinasingleurbanlandscape,built,socialandpolicyfactorsaremajor influencesonage-structure,speciescompositionandothercharacteristicsoftheurbanforest.Oneofthekeyactors shapinglocalurbanforestconditionsareresidents,asmosturbantreesarelocatedonprivateproperty.Whileindividual residents,orhouseholds,typicallymanageverysmallproperties,thecumulativeimpactsoftheiractionscanhave substantialeffectsonurbanforeststructureandfunction.Urbanresidents’actionsareshapedbyacomplexsetoffactors thatincludetheirknowledge,attitudesandexperienceswiththeurbanforest.Thispresentationwilldiscusstheresultsof aprojectfocusingonresidents’interactionswithtreesontheirpropertytohighlightfine-scalesocio-ecological relationshipsshapingurbanforests,withparticularattentiongiventothewaysamajoricestormalteredresidents’ attitudesandactionstowardstheirtrees.Themanagementimplicationsoftheprojectfindingswillbediscussed,aswell asthechallengesofconductingurbanecologyresearchfromasocio-ecologicalsystemsperspective. Parasitismandsymbiosis TUESDAY13:30,ROOM:SIDNEY Describing the cophylogenetic relationship between the Myrsidea chewing louse and its Neotropical Mionectes flycatcher host ANDREWCOOK,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] JULIEALLEN,UNIVERSITYOFILLINOIS;THERESECATANACH,UNIVERSITYOFILLINOIS;KEVINJOHNSON,UNIVERSITYOFILLINOIS;GUSTAVO LONDONO,UNIVERSIDADICESI;JILLJANKOWSKI,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Whenanorganismisdependentonanothertocompleteitsreproductivecycle,thereispotentialforcoevolutionandeven cospeciation.Cospeciationoccurswhentwointeractinglineagesspeciatesimultaneously,generatingcongruent phylogenies.Thiscospeciationisoftenpredictedtooccurwithpermanentectosymbionts,organismsthatcompletethe majorityoftheirlifecycleonahost.Theseorganismshavelimiteddispersalcapabilities,onlymovingbetweenacurrent andpotentialhostduringdirecthost-to-hostcontact.Myrsidealicearepermanentfeatherfeedingectoparasitesfoundon manybirdspecies.Mionectesisawidespreadgenusoffrugivorousflycatchersoccurringacrosslowlandandmontane Neotropicalforests.UsingMyrsidealicecollectedfromMionectesflycatchersacrossa2600melevationalgradientinManu NationalPark,Peru,wetestedthepredictionthattheselicewouldshowapatternofcoevolutionandcospeciationwith theirhosts.Webuiltphylogenetictreesusingtwogenesfrom61individuallicecollectedfrom4speciesofMionectes hosts.TheseresultswerethencomparedtopreviouslydescribedhosttreesfromMilleretal.(2008)andJetzetal.(2012). Ourresultsshowstrongevidenceofcospeciation.Thesefindingssuggestlong-termcoevolutionandcospeciation betweenMyrsideaandMionectesandagreewithpreviousdescriptionsoftwoMyrsidealicespeciesco-occurringwithtwo speciesofMionecteshosts.Furthermore,thisstudyprovidesmorefoundationforfuturestudiesontheevolutionary historyofMyrsidea,anunder-describedgroupofwidespreadectoparasiticorganisms.Finally,ourfindingsaddtoour knowledgeandunderstandingofhowectoparasitesandhostsinteractthroughevolutionarytime. Keywords:Parasitism,Co-evolution,Evolution,Co-speciation. Dispersal WEDNESDAY10:30,ROOM:THEATRE Dispersal limitation, climate change, and practical tools for conservation in intensively used landscapes LAURAE.CORISTINE,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] PETERSOROYE,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA;ROSANANOBRESOARES,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA;CASSANDRAROBILLARD,UNIVERSITYOF OTTAWA;JEREMYT.KERR,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA Manyspeciesaresusceptibletochangingthermalregimesassociatedwithrecentclimatechange.Whilespeciesand populationsarerespondingtoclimatechangesinmanyways,thereareindicationsthatmanyspeciesarenotkeeping pace.Rapidclimatechangesareleadingtoanaccumulationofclimatedebts(orlossofclimatichabitat)atcontinental scales.Climatechangemediatedshiftsindistributiondependonmanyfactors,butparticularlyonspecies-specific dispersalabilitiesandhabitatavailability.Usingbutterflyspeciesasanexample,wemeasuredgeographicalvariationin mobilityacrossNorthAmericarelativetoconservationstatusandtheintensityofhumanlanduse.Weidentifiedareas wheretherateandvariabilityofrecentclimaticchangeshavebeenrelativelylowandcouldbemanagedforconservation, potentiallyaugmentingexistingprotectedareanetworks.UsingtheYellowstonetoYukonregionasacasestudy,we outlinedifferencesbetweenconnectivityanalysesthatincorporate(i)humanfootprint,(ii)humanfootprintin conjunctionwithclimatechangeconsiderations,and(iii)humanfootprintinconjunctionwithclimatechange considerationsweightedbyspeciesmobilityandrichness.Allthreeapproachesyielddifferentconnectivity recommendations.Conservationmanagementeffortstoenhanceclimatechange-relateddispersalshouldfocuson improvinglandscapeconnectivitybasedonspecies-specificmobility,richness,andclimatechange,aswellaslandscape permeability.Improvingconnectivityisparticularlyvitalinareaswheremobilityandlandscapepermeabilityarelowbut speciesareatgreatestriskofextinction. Keywords:Dispersal,Climatechange,Landusechange,Insects,Speciesdistribution,Connectivity. Host-associatedmicrobes:fromprotectivemicrobestopathogenssymposium MONDAY08:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT The impact of non-pathogenic phylloplane bacteria on insect disease resistance: The importance of ecological context JENNYSCORY,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] GRANTL.OLSON,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;IKKEISHIKANO,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;JUDITHH.MYERS,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISH COLUMBIA Animalsingestawiderangeofmicroorganismswhentheyfeed.Theimpactthattheseorganismshaveontheirpotential hostscanrangefrombeneficialtopathogenic.Theoutcome,intermsofhosthealth,isoftenconditiondependent, dependingonhostnutrition,theinteractionsbetweenthevariousgroupsofmicroorganismsandabioticfactors. Herbivorousinsectsareexposedtomicroorganismswhentheyfeed,includingplantpathogensandothertransient microbes.Ithasbeensuggestedthatexposuretonon-entomopathogenicbacteriainducesacostlyimmuneresponse whichmightreducetheriskofinfectionbyinsectpathogens.Weexploredthisbothwithinandbetweengenerations usingtwospeciesofinsect,thecabbagelooper,Trichoplusianiandthewesterntentcaterpillar,Malacosomacalifornicum pluviale.Weexposedlarvaetomixturesofnaturallyoccurringphylloplanebacteriaandexaminedfitnesscosts,immunity anddiseaseresistancewithinandacrossgenerations.Ingestingphylloplanebacteriahadfitnesscosts,particularlyif combinedwithotherdiet-relatedstressors.However,wefoundnoeffectonimmunityandonlyweak,concentrationdependentchangesinresistancetoapathogenicbacterium,butnotavirus,intheparentalgeneration.Therewasno evidencethatexposuretophylloplanebacteriaalteredtheimmuneresponsivenessoftheoffspringgeneration.We concludethatwhileingestingphylloplanebacteriacouldimpactinsectfeeding,thereislittleevidencethatithasadirect impactoninsectdiseaseresistance.Thissuggeststhatinsectsareadaptedtoingestingphylloplanebacteriaandhighlights theimportanceofconsideringnaturalecologicalinteractionswhenassessingtheimpactofnon-pathogenic microorganismsindiseaseresistance. Keywords:Insects,Disease,Experiment,Foraging,Adaptation. Conservationchallengesassociatedwithaquaticsoundscapessymposium MONDAY14:00,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Motorboat noise disrupts co-operative interspecific interactions ISABELLECÔTÉ,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Human-madenoiseiscontributingincreasinglytooceansoundscapes.Itsphysical,physiologicalandbehaviouraleffects onmarineorganismsarepotentiallywidespread,butourunderstandingremainslargelylimitedtointraspecificimpacts. Here,weexaminehowmotorboatsaffectaninterspecificcleaningmutualismcriticalforcoralreeffishhealth,abundance anddiversity.Weconductedinsituobservationsofcleaninginteractionsbetweenbluestreakcleanerwrasses(Labroides dimidiatus)andtheirfishclientsbefore,duringandafterrepeated,standardisedapproacheswithmotorboats.Motorboat disturbancehadlittleeffectonclientbehaviour,asevidencedbyconsistencyofvisitrates,clientelecomposition,anduse ofcleaningincitationsignalsbyclients,butcleanersinspectedclientsforlongerandweresignificantlylesscooperative duringexposuretoboatnoise.Ourresultsareconsistentwiththeideaofcognitiveimpairmentsduetodistraction,but couldalsobeexplainedasdirecteffectsofcleanerfishstress.Tomorefullyunderstandtheimportanceofthesefindings forconservationandmanagement,furtherstudiesshouldelucidatewhethertheefficacyofectoparasiteremovalby cleanersisaffectedandexplorethepotentialforhabituationtoboatnoiseinbusyareas. Keywords: Plasticsintheenvironment MONDAY15:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Microplastic ingestion by Venerupis philippinarum and Crassostra gigas on intertidal shellfish farms and wild beaches in British Columbia, Canada GARTHA.COVERNTON,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] SARAHE.DUDAS,VANCOUVERISLANDUNIVERSITY;CHRISTOPHERM.PEARCE,PACIFICBIOLOGICALSTATION;HELENGURNEY-SMITH, ST.ANDREWSBIOLOGICALSTATION;JOHNF.DOWER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Microplasticcontaminationisanemergingthreattomarineecosystems.Manyaquaticanimals,includingfish,mammals, molluscs,andotherinvertebrateshavebeenshowntoingestmicroplastics.Theseparticlescandisruptdigestiveand reproductiveprocesses,actasvectorsforotherharmfulpollutants,andreduceoverallanimalhealth.InBritishColumbia, bivalvesareeconomicallyimportantforbothaquacultureandwildharvest.Asnonspecificfilterfeederstheyare susceptibletoingestingandconcentratingmicroplasticsfromthewatercolumn.Shellfishaquacultureoftenusesplastic infrastructure(e.g.anti-predatornettingandfencing,PVCpipes,etc.)thatmaybecomedegradedandrelease microplastics.Wequantifiedtheextentofmicroplasticingestionbytwocommerciallyimportantspecies,ManilaClams (Venerupisphilippinarum)andPacificOysters(Crassostragigas),bytransplantingadultindividualsto11shellfishfarms and11nearbyunmodifiedbeachesthroughoutsouthernBC.Thebivalveswereleftfor2-3months,andthendigested with10%KOH,filtered,andtheirmicroplasticcontentvisuallyquantifiedwithlightmicroscopy.Preliminaryresults suggestthatingestedparticleconcentrationsarehighlyvariablebetweenindividuals,evenwithinsite,andprimarily consistoffibersbetween100and1000minlength.OurresultsshowmicroplasticingestionbyBCshellfishtobelow relativetoglobalnumbers. Keywords:Aquaculture,Microplastic,Shellfish,Marine,Pollution. Biodiversity TUESDAY08:00,ROOM:VIEWROYAL A multi-method comparison of substratum community assessment techniques and the implications for diversity indices and species accumulation curves KIERAND.COX,HAKAIINSTITUTE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,VICTORIA,VANCOUVERISLANDUNIVERSITY,[email protected] FRANCISJUANES,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;SARAHE.DUDAS,HAKAIINSTITUTE,VANCOUVERISLANDUNIVERSITY Diversityestimatesplayakeyroleinanyecologicalassessments.Assuch,thereisalongstandinginterestinthe developmentofmonitoringtechniques,theirabilitytoadequatelyassessspeciesdiversity,andtheirimplicationsfor biologicalindices.Todeterminetheabilityofsubstratumcommunityassessmentmethodstocapturespeciesdiversity andabundances,andtheirimplicationsforbiologicalindices,weevaluatedfourassessmentmethods:photoquadrat, pointintercept,quadratsubsamplingandfullquadratassessments.Wethenconductedanadditionalmethodthatwastoo labourintensivetobeusedconsistentlybutwasviewedasthebestrepresentationofthediversitywithinthearea,and servedasanindicationforhowwelleachmethodcaptureddiversityandabundances.Wethencalculatedthefollowing indicesforeachmethod:Shannondiversity,Pielou’sevenness,Fisher’salpha,andspeciesaccumulationcurves.Diversity estimatesdifferedgreatlybetweenmethods,withphotoquadratsdetectingthelowestdiversityandquadratassessments thehighestdiversity.Thenumberofspeciesdetectedinitiallyincreasedwitheffortandthenplateaued.Abundance estimateswereconsistentamongstmethods,indicatingthatextrapolatingabundancesislikelyanappropriatecourseof action.Thediversityindicessuggestedthatsignificantdifferencesinrichnessarenotnecessarilytranslatedinto differencesinShannondiversity,whileFisher’salphaestimatesaremoresensitivetochangesindiversityandabundance. Pielou’sevennessandspeciesaccumulationcurvesadequatelyrelayeddifferencesbetweentheassessmentmethods.Our resultshighlighttheneedforconsistencyacrossresearchmethodologies,theadvantagesofutilizingmultipleindices,and potentialconcernsofcomparingdatafrommultiplesources. Keywords:Biodiversity,Methods,Marine,Monitoring. Stress,Antipredatorbehaviour MONDAY11:15,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Investigating the sub-lethal effects of predation in black tailed prairie dogs COLLEENCRILL,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN,[email protected] JEFFREYLANE,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN Evenintheabsenceofdirectmortality,predatorscannegativelyaffecttheirprey.Oneofthesenegativeimpactsis stimulatingastressresponseinindividualswhoeitherexperience,orsimplyperceive,highriskofpredation.Oneofthe hallmarksofthisresponseisthesuppressionoffunctionsthatarenotessentialtosurvival,includingreproduction.The cort-fitnesshypothesispositsthatthereisanegativerelationshipbetweenglucocorticoid(stress)hormones,akey componentofthestressresponse,andreproductivesuccess.Whilethishypothesisisfrequentlytested,theresultshave beenequivocal.Ratherthanfurtherobscuringtheissue,IamdeconstructingandtestingeachcomponentofthecortfitnesshypothesisusinghairsamplescollectedfromprairiedogsaspartofanongoingstudyinsouthernSaskatchewan.I amfirsttestingthehypothesisthatindividualswholiveontheedgeofthecolony,andthushavefewerneighbors scanningfor,andpotentiallyraisingalarmcallsinresponseto,predatorsshowelevatedlevelsofglucocorticoidhormones intheirhair.Second,Iamalsotestingthehypothesisthatprairiedogswithhigherlevelsofrecordedglucocorticoid hormoneshavereducedreproductivesuccess.WiththeseresearchquestionsIintendtohelptoclarifytherelationship betweenchronicstressors,glucocorticoidhormonesandreproductivesuccessaswellasexploreasub-lethaleffectof predationinapreyspecies. Keywords:Stress,Reproduction,Mammals,Physiology,Behaviouralecology. Forestecology TUESDAY13:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM From rares to richness: Spectrums of plant rarity and diversity in the boreal forest VARINACRISFIELD,ROYALALBERTAMUSEUM,ALBERTABIODIVERSITYMONITORINGINSTITUTE,[email protected] JACQUELINEM.DENNETT,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;CATHERINED.DENNY,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;LINGFENGMAO,UNIVERSITYOF ALBERTA;SCOTTNIELSEN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Rarespeciesareoftenafocusofecologicalmanagement;however,raritycanbedefinedandquantifiedinmanydifferent ways,resultingindifferencesinwhichspeciesareconsideredrare.Rarespeciesalsodifferwidelyintheirlifehistories andhabitatrequirements,andmaybemoreeffectivelymanagedifweunderstandhowtheiroccurrencecorrelateswith sitecharacteristics.Wecollectedpresence-absencedatafor459vascularplantspeciesfrom602plotslocatedinthelower AthabascaRiverregionofnortheasternAlbertaandcomparedtheoccurrenceofrarespeciestositerichnessand environmentalgradients.RaritywasdefinedusingRabinowitzsystem,whichclassifiesspeciesintoseventypesofrarity basedonacombinationofspeciesgeographicrange,populationsizeandhabitatspecificity.First,werelatedeachof Rabinowitzthreeaxesindividuallytositerichness.WethenclassifiedeachspeciesintoRabinowitzcategories,and comparedtheoccurrenceofthesecategoriestositerichness,nutrientandmoisturelevels.Significantrelationshipswere evidentforeachofthethreeindividualrarityaxesandsiterichness.Moistureandnutrientlevelsalsosignificantly affectedtheoccurrenceofrarespecies;inparticular,extremesinmoisturelevelswereassociatedwithahigher occurrenceofrarespeciesasaproportionofsiteflora.Ourresultsdemonstratethatlocalrichnessisnotnecessarilya goodpredictorofsiteswithrarespecies,withspecies-poorsitessometimessupportingarelativelylargenumberofrare speciesinourborealsystem. Keywords:Plants,Boreal,Rarity,Biodiversity. Pollution TUESDAY10:30,ROOM:SAANICH Wildlife health indicators and mercury exposure: A case study of river otters (Lontra canadensis) in central British Columbia, Canada SHANNONM.CROWLEY,JOHNPRINCERESEARCHFOREST,[email protected] DEXTERP.HODDER,JOHNPRINCERESEARCHFOREST;CHRISJ.JOHNSON,UNIVERSITYOFNORTHERNBRITISHCOLUMBIA Indicatorsofwildlifehealthareimportantelementsofacomprehensiveapproachforassessingandmonitoringtrendsof methylmercury(MeHg)contaminationintheenvironment.Riverotters(Lontracanadensis)havebeenusedasamodel speciesfortoxicologicalstudiesontheeffectsofMeHgbioaccumulationduetotheirpositionasanapexpredatorin aquaticsystemsandsensitivitytoenvironmentaldisturbance.AlthoughlaboratorystudiessuggestthatsublethalMeHg exposuremayhavedetrimentaleffectsonwildpopulationstheyarelimitedintheirabilitytoreflectrealworldexposure andforecastpopulationleveleffects.FewstudieshaveidentifiedthethresholdatwhichMeHgexposureresultsina population-leveleffectforwildpopulationsofriverottersinmarineorfresh-watersystems.Weusedacombinationof remotecameras,markedindividuals,hairsnares,andscatcounts/inventoriestocomparemercuryconcentrationsand measurementsofpopulationstatusandhealthofriverottersinhabitingalakewithahistoryofmercurymining,Pinchi Lake,andanadjacentlakewithnohistoryofmining.AlthoughwefoundPinchiLakeotterstohavesignificantlyhigher mercuryconcentrations,wedidnotdetectsignificantdifferencesbetweenthetwolakesinmanyofthepopulation parametersmeasured.WediscusstheknowledgegapsandchallengesofidentifyingthresholdsforobservingMeHg effectsinwildpopulations,determiningsensitiveandappropriatemethodsformeasuringtheseeffects,andits implicationsformonitoringtheimpactsofnaturalresourcesactivitiesthatmayreleasecontaminantsintothe environment. Keywords:Riverotters,Chemicalcontaminant,Toxicology,Freshwater,Pollution. Exploringtherolesofmechanisticandphenomenologicalmodelsinecologysymposium MONDAY10:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Mechanism and the unknown: Or, how to predict the future KIMCUDDINGTON,UNIVERSITYOFWATERLOO,[email protected] STEPHISOBEK-SWANT,RARECHARITABLERESEARCHRESERVE;JILLC.CROSTHWAITE,UNIVERSITYOFWESTERNONTARIO;BARRYLYONS, CANADIANFORESTSERVICE;BRENTJ.SINCLAIR,UNIVERSITYOFWESTERNONTARIO Wecandefineamechanisticmodelasonethatusesecologicalprocessesatalowerleveloforganizationtopredict phenomenaatahigherleveloforganization.Bydescribingthemechanismsthatdrivehigherscalephenomenawegain bothanabilitytopredictthesephenomenaundernovelconditions,andtheopportunitytocreatemorenuanced descriptionsoftheprobabilitythatcertaineventsmayoccur.Weillustrateboththesebenefitsofmechanisticmodels usingworkonrangepredictionsforemeraldashborer(Agrilusplanipennis).Bycouplinglarvaemortalityratesatcold temperatureswithmodelsofunderbarktemperatureswecancreaterangepredictionsthatareresponsivetoboth changingclimateconditionsandchangingdefinitionsoftheriskofnegativeimpactsforthisinvasivespecies.Forexample, thepotentialrangecanbelinkedtotheprobabilitythatwintertemperaturescolderthana99%mortalityrateoccurwith greaterfrequencythanonceevery6years(i.e.,thetimerequiredforanashtreetosuccumb).Withthisframeworkitis theneasytodeterminehowfutureconditionswillalterthisprediction.Anychangestotheprobabilitydistributionof wintertemperaturescanaltertheprobabilityofemeraldashborersuccessinagivengeographicallocation.Changesto estimatesofthetimetotreemortalitycanbeincorporatedeasily,ascanentirelydifferentdefinitionsofrisk.Weconclude thatmechanisticmodels,bytheirverynature,aremorescientificallyfruitfulthanphenomenologicalmodels,aswellas moreusefulforpredictingthefuture. Forestecology WEDNESDAY10:30,ROOM:WCOAST Burning in SpaDES: Automated parameter estimation for landscape fire models STEVECUMMING,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL,[email protected] EJBMCINTIRE,PACIFICFORESTRYCENTRE;YLUO,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;AMCHUBATY,PACIFICFORESTRYCENTRE;D WOOLFORD,WESTERNUNIVERSITY Spatialsimulationstudiesofborealecosystemsrequiresomerepresentationofwildfire,butseldomlydetailed mechanisticsimulationsoffirebehaviour.Neutralmodelsbasedonpercolationprocessesareverycommonlyusedin suchcases.Thesesimplemodelsaregovernedbyonlyafewparameterscontrollingthearrivalandspreadoffires.With appropriatechoiceofparameters,theycanreproducekeyattributesofrealfireregimes,suchasfirefrequencyandmean size,andsomeaspectsoffiresuppression.Inthistalk,wefirstoutlinehowtheseprocessesarerepresentedinthe percolationsimulationframework,andshowhowthesimulationmodelparameterscanbederivedfromstatistical modelsofobservationaldata.Wethenintroduceanddemonstrateafullyautomatedprocedurethatcanestimatethese statisticalmodelparametersforanyregioninCanadausinghistoricalrecordsoffiremanagementagenciespublishedby theCanadianForestService.ThisprocedureisimplementedintheRSpaDES(SpatialDiscreteEventSimulation).We outlinetheimplementationandillustratethisapplicationasanexampleofthetightconnection,affordedbySpaDES, betweendata,statisticalmodelestimation,andspatialsimulation. Keywords:Forest,Modeling,Disturbance,Fire. Sticklebackecologyandevolution MONDAY10:30,ROOM:SAANICH Diet specialization in threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) in response to lake physical characteristics and the presence of signal crayfish (Pacificasticus leniusculus) DOUGLASCURLEY,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] STEVENVAMOSI,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY Threespinestickleback(Gasterosteusaculeatus)havebeenthesubjectofnumerousevolutionarystudiesduetotheir relativelyrecent(approx.13000yearsago)colonizationofVancouverIslandlakesandsubsequentadaptiveradiation. Thisstudyinvestigatesthefactorsthatinfluencedietofpopulationsinlakesthatdonothavespeciespairs,whicharean importantbutunderstudiedcomponentofthesticklebackradiation.Previousstudieshavefoundanassociationbetween dietandmorphology,andalsobetweenmorphologyandhabitatuse,withinpopulations.Theseobservationssuggestthat differencesinhabitatuseandsubsequentpreyavailabilitymayplayaroleindrivingmorphologicaldiversification.This studyseekstodeterminehowdifferencesinphysicalcharacteristicsoflakes,includingaveragedepth,perimeter,and amountoflittoralarea,affectthedietofthreespinestickleback.Inaddition,thisstudyinvestigatestheextenttowhichthe presenceoftheintroducedspecies,thesignalcrayfish(Pacifasticusleniusculus)mayinfluencedietinstickleback populations.NinefreshwaterpopulationsofsticklebackweresampledfromcoastallakesinsouthwesternBritish Columbia.40fishweresampledfromeachlake.Stomachcontentsofthesefishhavebeenanalyzedusingtraditional visualmethods,aswellasthroughDNAbarcodingtoidentifypreyitems.Thelakessampledvaryindepthandproportion oflittoralarea,aswellaspresence/absenceofcrayfish.Theseparametershavebeenquantifiedusingexisting bathymetricmaps.Presenceofcrayfishhasbeenestablishedthroughliteratureandfieldobservations.Ongoinganalysis aimstodeterminehowproportionoflimneticpreyvarieswiththesefactors. Keywords:Habitatselection,Foraging,Fish,Predation. Aquaticecology TUESDAY14:15,ROOM:VIEWROYAL National and regional scale patterns of benthic insect beta-diversity in Canadian rivers COLINJ.CURRY,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK,[email protected] DONALDJ.BAIRD,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK;WENDYA.MONK,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK Isbeta-diversityastablepropertyofriverineecosystems,ordoesitvaryalongmajorspatialandenvironmental gradients?Incontrasttotaxonrichness,empiricalrelationshipsbetweenbeta-diversityandgeographicgradients(e.g. latitude,elevation)arepoorlydescribed.Weanalysed3,000consistentlyobservedbenthicinsectsamplesfromthe CanadianAquaticBiomonitoringNetwork(CABIN)databasetodescribepatternsofalphaandbeta-diversityatnational andregionalscales.Wesoughttotestthreenullhypotheses:1)Thatbeta-diversitywouldnotvaryamongdrainages;2) Thatbeta-diversitywouldnotdifferbetweenheadwaterandmainstemsites;3)Thatbeta-diversitywouldnotvaryalong latitudinalandelevationgradients.Werejectthefirstnullhypothesis;beta-diversity(measuredastheaveragedistance tospatialmedianinmultivariatespace)differedamongbothmajordrainagesandsub-drainages,thoughsomeofthis variationlikelyreflectsvariablesamplingeffort.Wedidnotrejectthesecondnullhypothesis;beta-diversitydidnotdiffer appreciablybetweenheadwaterandmainstemsitesinmostcatchments.Werejectedthethirdnullhypothesis;betadiversitydoesvaryalongmajorenvironmentalgradients,particularlylatitude,thoughagainthismayreflectvariable samplingeffort.Assessingtheimpactsofanthropogenicactivityonbiodiversityatlargespatialscalesmaybefacilitated bymeasuringbeta-diversity.However,caremustbetakentounderstandhowobservedbeta-diversityisaffectedby samplingdesignandkeyspatialgradients. Keywords:Insects,Freshwater,Betadiversity,Environmentalvariation. SeagrassecologyandconservationalongPacificandAtlanticcoastssymposium TUESDAY11:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Effects of multiple disturbances/stresses on eelgrass epifaunal communities MATHIEUCUSSON,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECCHICOUTIMI,[email protected] STEPHANIECIMON,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECCHICOUTIMI Manyecosystemsarefacingenvironmentalchangesandanthropogenicpressuresthatmayaffectcommunitiesintermsof bothstructureand/orfunction.Disturbancesandstressesarecommonlyco-occurringinnature,howevertheinteraction betweenthemisgenerallyconsideredadditivewithoutknowingthetrueinsitueffects.Wereportresultsfromseveral experimentsthatusedvariousstresses/disturbanceswithinZosteramarinabedcommunity(sedimentenrichment throughslownutrientdiffusers;lightreductionthroughshading,densityreduction,grazerreduction,sandcover, proximitytoedges).Theresultsareexpressedusingvariousresponsesinbothunivariate(diversityindices)and multivariate(communitystructure)averagesandvariances.Amongotherinterestingcommunityresponses,weobserved thatdensityreductionincreaseddiversityindices(pergofZostera)andaffectedcommunitystructureintime.Epifaunal communitystructurewasmoredispersedontheedgeoftheZosterabed.Antagonisticeffectswereobservedwhentwo disturbances/stresseswereappliedtocommunityrichnessandevenness.Additiveandantagonisticeffectswere observedforeelgrassgrowthwhenshadinganddensityreductionoccurred,andforplantdensitywhenshadingand enrichmentoccurred.Theresultshighlighttheneedoftheinclusionofmultipledisturbancesandstressesinfield experimentsinordertoassesstheirpotentialinteractiveeffects,whichwillthenhelpdisentanglethemechanisms structuringcommunitiesfollowingdisturbances. Livingintheeco-evolutionarytheatre:researchguidedandinspiredbyintensivefieldobservationssymposium TUESDAY16:00,ROOM:THEATRE Emergent properties from a fledgling project with long-term vision: Bear-salmonhuman systems in coastal British Columbia CHRISDARIMONT,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] Canadianprotectedareasinachangingclimate:Across-ecosystemapproachsymposium TUESDAY14:15,ROOM:SAANICH Integrating climate risk and refuge into data-driven portfolios of protected areas EMILYDARLING,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTOANDWILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA,[email protected] JOSEPHMAINA,MACQUARIEUNIVERSITY;TIMMCCLANAHAN,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETY;MARTINKRKOSEK,UNIVERSITYOF TORONTO;MARIE-JOSEFORTIN,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO ClimatechangeisanunprecedentedthreattoCanadianecosystems.Urgently,innovativesolutionsareneededtoidentify portfoliosofconservationinvestmentsthatcanbeappropriatelymatchedtopredictionsofclimateriskandrefuge.Here, wepresentaconceptualframeworkofprotectedareaportfoliosthatexplicitlyincorporateclimatechange,andacase studyexamplefromathreatenedmarineecosystem:tropicalcoralreefs.WeuseacollaborativedatasetofIndo-Pacific coralcommunitiestoidentifydata-drivenportfoliosofconservationactionsacrossgradientsofbiodiversityandclimate exposure.Theseportfoliosidentifyprioritylocationsforconservationunderdifferentscenariosofclimateriskandrefuge, suchasmarinereservesthatcanbeprioritizedtoareasofhighbiodiversitywithinclimaterefuges,orlocationsthat requireeconomicreliefandreorganizationwithlowbiodiversityandintensifyingclimateexposure.Wealsoconsider howecologicalconnectivityandrealisticnon-linearpopulationdynamicscanbeincorporatedintofutureportfoliodesign, andwherefunctioningsteppingstoneinvestmentscanstrengthenlargernetworksofconservationactions.Overall,we showthatdata-drivenframeworkstointegratebiodiversity,climateexposureandconnectivityacrossmultiplescalescan provideinnovativedecisiontoolsfordesigningclimate-smartconservationforCanadianprotectedareas. Anthropogenicinfluencesonhabitatselection TUESDAY15:30,ROOM:SAANICH Anthropogenic disturbance affects energetic trade-offs with predation risk in whitetailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) SIOBHANDARLINGTON,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] JASONT.FISHER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,INNOTECHALBERTA;COLEBURTON,INNOTECHALBERTA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISH COLUMBIA;JOHNVOLPE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA InrecentdecadesCanada’snorthernborealforestshavebeensubjecttoexpansiveenergydevelopmentandrising temperaturesthathaveallowedcertainspeciestoexpandtheirnaturalranges.Normallylimitedbylowqualityforagein coniferstandsandseverewinterconditions,white-taileddeerarenowoneofthemostpervasiveungulatesinthis ecosystem.Theroleofindustrialdisturbanceinmaintainingdeerpopulationsacrossseasonsisnotwellunderstood. Predatoravoidancebehaviourandtheexploitationofearlysuccessionalforageinclear-cutareasmayactasdriversin habitatselectionforwhite-taileddeer.Toexaminethesespatialrelationshipsandenergetictrade-offsIusetelemetry datafrom39femaledeeracrossthreeyears,relativeabundanceoffourtoppredators,andasuiteofanthropogenic featurestodevelopseasonalResourceSelectionFunctions(RSFs).Preliminaryresultsinthewintermodelsshowstrong selectionofcutblocks,wellsites,roads,andseismiclinesandavoidanceof3Dseismiclinesbydeer.Inturn,deerappear tobeselectinghabitathighlycorrelatedwithwolfrelativeabundance.Understandinghowdeersurviveharshwinters, wheretheygo,andhowtheyinteractwithpredatorswillprovideinsightintothecausesandimplicationsofwhite-tailed deerexpansionandinformcurrentindustrymanagementpractices. Keywords:Predation,Mammals,Disturbance,Habitatselection,Foraging. Marineecology TUESDAY15:45,ROOM:SIDNEY Global marine protected areas to prevent extinctions LINDSAYN.K.DAVIDSON,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] NICHOLASK.DULVY,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Onegoalofmarineprotectedareas(MPAs)istoensuretheyrepresentabreadthoftaxonomicbiodiversity.Ensuring representationofspeciesinMPAs,however,wouldrequireprotectingvastareasoftheglobaloceansanddoesnot explicitlyprioritizespeciesofconservationconcern.Whenthreatenedspeciesareconsidered,arecentstudyfoundthat onlyasmallfractionoftheirgeographicrangesarewithinMPAs.Whichglobalmarineareas,andwhatconservation actionsbeyondMPAscouldbeprioritizedtopreventmarineextinctions(CBDAichiTarget12),remainsunknown.Here, weusesystematicconservationplanningapproachestoprioritizeconservationactionsforsharks,rays,andchimaeras (ClassChondrichthyans).Weusechondrichthyansastheyhavethehighestproportionofthreatenedspeciesofany marineClass.WefindthatexpandingtheMPAnetworkby3%in70nationswouldcoverhalfofthegeographicrangeof 99imperilledendemicchondrichthyans.Ourhotspotanalysisrevealsjust12nationsharbouroverhalf(53)ofthe imperilledendemics.Fourofthesehotspotnationsarewithinthetoptenchondrichthyanfishingnationsintheworldbut areyettoimplementbasicchondrichthyanfisheriesmanagement.Giventheirgeopoliticalrealities,conservationaction forsomecountrieswillrequirereliefandreorganizationtoenablesustainablefisheriesandspeciesprotection. Keywords:Marine,Spatialplanning,Management,Area-basedtarget,Speciesdistribution,Global. Museumcollectionssymposium MONDAY10:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Reconciling phenological observations with flowering records in herbaria JONATHANDAVIES,MCGILLUNIVERSITY,[email protected] WILLIAMD.PEARSE,UTAHSTATEUNIVERSITY Datafromherbariacanvastlyexpandthetemporal,spatial,andphylogeneticscopeatwhichwecanstudyecologicaland evolutionaryresponsestoglobalchange.However,thetechnicalandstatisticalchallengesinusingsuchdataare significant.Collectionrecordsareheavilybiasedbysamplingpractices,withdifferentspeciesanddifferentregionshaving unequalrepresentation.Inaddition,modellingthetimingofaphenologicalevent,suchasfirstflowerorleaf-out,which maybeparticularlysensitivetoclimatechange,isimmenselydifficultforsparselysampleddata.Hereweaddressthislast challenge,whichwesuggestisanalogoustotheinfamousGermantankproblem:duringWorldWarII,Alliedintelligence wantedtoestimatethenumberofGermantanks,butonlyhadaccesstothesequentialserialnumbersofobserved (defeated)tanks.Likeestimatingwhenaspeciesfirstbloomed,thisisbutoneinstanceofamoregeneralproblem:howto determinetheabsolutelimitofadistribution.Weshowhowthisproblemcanbecircumventedusingsamplingtheory moreusuallyemployedtodeterminethedateaspecieswentextinct.Wethendemonstratethatsuchmethodscanresolve anongoingdebateabouttherelativetimingsoftheonsetandcessationofflowering,andallowustoreliablycombine modernobservationswiththevastwealthofhistoricaldatathatresideinherbaria,museumcollections,andwritten records. Forestecology WEDNESDAY10:45,ROOM:WCOAST Post-fire soil fungal communities and ecosystem function in Canada’s boreal forest NICOLAJ.DAY,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] KARIDUNFIELD,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;XANTHEWALKER,NORTHERNARIZONAUNIVERSITY;STEVECUMMING,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL;JILL JOHNSTONE,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN;MICHELLEMACK,NORTHERNARIZONAUNIVERSITY;MERRITTTURETSKY,UNIVERSITYOF GUELPH;JENNIFERBALTZER,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY FireisthedominantdisturbanceinborealforestsandclimatechangeiscausingincreasedwildfireactivityintheNorth. Evidenceshowsthesealteredfireregimescouldleadtosustainedchangesinforeststructurefromconiferous-to deciduous-dominatedsystems.Littleisknownaboutconcurrentchangesinsoilfungalcommunities,whichhavespeciesspecificeffectsonplantgrowthanddecomposition,drivingplantcommunitystructureandnutrientcycling.Heatresistantfungi(HRF)maybecomeincreasinglyimportantforecosystemprocessespost-fire.However,theiridentities, abundance,oreffectsonplantsareunknown.Arecord3.4MhaofborealforestburnedinwildfiresinCanada’sNorthwest Territoriesin2014.In2015,weinvestigatedpost-firesoilfungalcommunitiesacrossalandscapeofvaryingburn severitiesandforesttypestotesttwohypotheses:(1)Fireseverityisamajordriverofsoilfungalcommunitystructure; (2)HRFareabundantpost-fireandhavespecies-specificeffectsonseedlinggrowthanddecomposition.WeusedIllumina sequencingtoidentifysoilfungaltaxafrom49sitesandrelatecompositiontofireseverity,vegetation,andenvironmental conditions.WeculturedHRFtoassesstheirecologicalroleswithdominantconiferousanddeciduoustreespeciesin controlledexperiments.Resultsshowthatmanyfungaltaxawerepresentafterthesefires.Fromatotalof29,606,678 sequencesweidentified4,181fungaloperationaltaxonomicunits(97%similarity,ITS1),includingectomycorrhizas. SeventaxonomicallyuniqueHRFdemonstratedcriticalrolesasplant-growthpromotersanddecomposersthatmay impactpost-fireforeststructureandnutrientcycling.Wewillsynthesisetheseresultsinthecontextofpost-fire ecosystemfunction. Keywords:Ecosystemfunction,Fire,Fungus,Genomicsequencing,Boreal. Birdmigration TUESDAY09:15,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Sex differences in migratory restlessness of black-throated blue warblers during spring migration JESSICADEAKIN,WESTERNUNIVERSITY,[email protected] YOLANDAMORBEY,WESTERNUNIVERSITY;CHRISTOPHERGUGLIELMO,WESTERNUNIVERSITY Nocturnallymigratingbirdsheldincaptivitywilldisplaylocomotoractivityatnightduringthemigrationperiods (migratoryrestlessness),withtheonsetreflectingthedepartureformigrationandtheintensityreflectingthedistance flowninwildconspecifics.Protandryisasex-biasedtimingpatternseeninmostmigratorysongbirdswherebymales arrivetobreedingsitesbeforefemales.Thebehaviouralmechanismsthatunderlieprotandryremainlargelyunknownfor mostmigratoryspecies.Here,wetestedthehypothesisthatmaleblack-throatedbluewarblershaveearlieronsetand greaterintensityofmigratoryrestlessnessthanfemalesbyusingNoldusvideoanalysissoftwaretoquantifynocturnal behaviourinthespringofbirdsheldoverwinter.Malesandfemaleshadsimilaronsetofmigratoryrestlessnessbutmales hadgreaterintensity,representedasmeantotalactivitypernight.Thissuggeststhatdistanceflownmaybeamore importantdriverofprotandrythantimingofdepartureinthisspecies. Keywords:Birds,Migration,Protandry,Behaviourecology. Phylogenetics MONDAY08:30,ROOM:WCOAST Phylogeography of Oreohelix land snails in southern Alberta and Saskatchewan ZACHDEMPSEY,UNIVERSITYOFLETHBRIDGE,[email protected] CAMERONGOATER,UNIVERSITYOFLETHBRIDGE;THERESABURG,UNIVERSITYOFLETHBRIDGE Peripatry,orspeciationofperipheralisolates,isoftenaconsequenceoflowspeciesvagilityandisolatedhabitat fragments.Theseeffectsareparticularlypronouncedinterrestrialsnails,andremainunderstudiedinNorthAmerican species.OurprimaryobjectiveistoexaminephylogeographicpatternsofterrestrialsnailsinthegenusOreohelixfrom CypressHillsInterprovincialPark(CHIP,n=34sites)andtheRockyMountains(RM,n=17).WeusedacombinationofCOI mitochondrialDNAandITSnuclearDNAdatatodeterminethefactorsinfluencingtheircurrentdistribution.Ourdata demonstratedtheexistenceoffourmitochondrialclades,oneofwhichisO.cooperi,araresnailfoundonlyintwosky islands.TheotherthreebelongtothespeciescomplexO.subrudis,whichiswidespreadthroughoutRMandskyislandsof theU.S.TheO.coopericladecontainedsmall-bodiedsnailsfoundexclusivelyonscreeslopesinCHIP.Thelushaspen slopesofCHIParesharedbetweentwooftheotherclades,oneofwhichisrestrictedtothenorthwesterncornerofCHIP. Thisphylogeographicpatternlikelyreflectsreproductiveisolationduringthelastglacialmaximum,followedby secondarycontactduetoperipatricpassivelongrangedispersaltoCHIP.Theseresultsreflectthelowsnailvagility,local adaptation,andthecomplexglacialhistoryoftheseregions. Keywords:Invertebrates,Evolution,Phylogeography,Adaptation,Isolation,Reproductiveisolation. Invasivespecies TUESDAY15:45,ROOM:VIEWROYAL New house, new rules: Life-history strategies can enhance invasion success of introduced species DANIELLEDENLEY,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ANNAMETAXAS,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY Variationinlife-historystrategiescanalterpopulationdynamicsofnon-indigenousspeciesoutsideoftheirnative habitats,leadingtopotentiallysignificantandunforeseeneffectsoninvasivepotential.Membraniporamembranaceaisan encrustingbryozoanthatisnativetothePacificcoastofNorthAmericaandanecologicallysignificantinvasivespeciesin thenorthwestAtlantic:ithasfacilitatedadramaticdeclineinkelpbedecosystemsfromtheGulfofMainetothe southwesterncoastofNovaScotia.Life-historycharacteristicsofM.membranaceainNovaScotiadifferfromthoseof nativepopulations,likelyduetoacombinationofdifferencesinthephysical(temperature)andbiological(predation, competition,availablesubstrate)characteristicsbetweennativeandinvadedecosystems.Inthistalk,Ipresent quantitativedataoncriticaldemographicratesandlife-historyprocessesforinvasivepopulationsofM.membranacea, withafocusonkeylife-historystrategiesthatcontributedtotheinvasionsuccessofM.membranacea.Ifurther demonstratehowthesedatacanbeincorporatedintopopulationmodelstopredictthepersistenceandspreadofM. membranaceainthenorthwestAtlanticunderprojectedscenariosofincreasingtemperatureandshiftsinalgal communitystructure.TherapidestablishmentandpersistenceofM.membranaceainthenorthwestAtlanticunderscores theneedtoquantifypopulationdynamicsofnon-indigenousspecieswithininvadedecosystemstoaccuratelypredictthe long-termconsequencesoftheinvasion. Keywords:Invasion,Populationdynamics,Marine,Bryozoan,Environmentalvariation. Selection MONDAY14:45,ROOM:WCOAST Survival by genotype: Patterns at Mc1r are not black and white at the White Sands ecotone SIMONEDESROCHES,UCSANTACRUZ,[email protected] RACHELSOLLMANN,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIADAVIS;KCALHOUN,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIABERKELEY;ANDREWP.ROTHSTEIN, UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIABERKELEY;ERICAB.ROSENBLUM,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIABERKELEY Measuringlinksamonggenotype,phenotypeandsurvivalinthewildhaslongbeenafocusofstudiesofadaptation.We conducteda4-yearcapture-recapturestudytomeasuresurvivalbygenotypeandphenotypeinthesouthwesternfence lizard(Sceloporuscowlesi)attheWhiteSandsecotone(transitionareabetweenwhitesandsanddarksoilhabitats).We reportseveralunanticipatedfindings.First,incontrastwithpreviousworkshowingthatcrypticblanchedcolorationinS. cowlesifromtheheartofthedunesisassociatedwithmutationsinthemelanocortin-1receptorgene(Mc1r),ecotonalS. cowlesishowedminimalassociationbetweencolourphenotypeandMc1rgenotype.Second,thefrequencyofthederived Mc1ralleleinecotonalS.cowlesiappearedtodecreaseovertime.Third,ourcapture-capturedatarevealedalower survivalrateforS.cowlesiindividualswiththederivedMc1rallele.Thus,ourresultssuggestthatselectionattheecotone mayhavefavouredthewild-typealleleinrecentyears.Eveninasystemwhereagenotype-phenotypeassociation appearedtobeblackandwhite,ourstudysuggeststhatadditionalfactors,includingphenotypicplasticity,epistasis, pleiotropyandgeneflowmayplayimportantrolesattheWhiteSandsecotone.Ourstudyhighlightstheimportanceof linkingmolecular,genomicandorganismalapproachesforunderstandingadaptationinthewild.Furthermore,our findingsindicatethatdynamicsofnaturalselectioncanbeparticularlycomplexintransitionalhabitatslikeecotonesand emphasizetheneedforfutureresearchthatexaminesthepatternsofongoingselectioninotherecologicalgreyzones. Keywords:Populationgenetics,Adaptation,Capture-recapture(SCR),Reptiles,Phenotypicvariation. Policyandplanning MONDAY15:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Taking the path of least resistance: how conservation science got left behind in the design of the largest Canadian marine protected area RODOLPHEDEVILLERS,MEMORIALUNIVERSITYOFNEWFOUNDLAND,[email protected] MANUELMUNTONI,MEMORIALUNIVERSITYOFNEWFOUNDLAND;MARIANOKOEN-ALONSO,NEWFOUNDLANDANDLABRADOR Manycountriesareworkingonincreasingtheirprotectedareanetworksformeetinginternationalcommitmentssetby theAichiconvention.Canadaischallengedtobringitsmarineprotectionfrom1%to10%ofitsterritorialwatersinless than3years.Ourstudylookedattherolescienceandstakeholdersplayedinthedesignofwhatshouldbecomethe largestCanadianmarineprotectedarea(MPA),theLaurentianChannel(LC).Outof11EcologicallyandBiologically SignificantAreas(EBSAs)identified,theLCwasselectedin2010asanareaofinterest(AOI)forafutureMPAduetoits broaderacceptancebystakeholders(e.g.fisheriesandoilandgasindustries).TheLCAOIboundarieswerethenreduced severaltimesuntil2014toaccommodateadditionalpoliticalandeconomicconstraints.Outof16speciesoriginally identifiedasconservationpriorities,10wereremovedby2012,includingtwocommercialspecies,Atlanticcodand redfish.Weanalyzedandcomparedtheconservationandeconomicimpactsofeachareaboundarymodificationusing landedvaluesandbiologicaldataforsixspeciesinitiallyidentifiedasconservationpriorities,includingtwothatwere droppedaspartoftheprocess.ResultsshowthatthetotalAOIsizereductionof33.4%allowedreducingtheeconomic impactonfisheriesby65.5%butledtodecreasesinprotectionofthespeciesthatremainedasconservationprioritiesup to43%.NoscientificassessmentoftheareareductionimpactontheLCAOIconservationvaluewasconducted,raising questionsonthepotentialeffectivenessofthisfutureMPA. Keywords:Marine,Conservationpractitioners,Spatialplanning,Reservedesign,Area-basedtarget,Protectedareas. Populationdynamics TUESDAY08:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Climate change effects on the predator-prey relationship between polar bears and common eider seaducks CODYDEY,GREATLAKESINSTITUTEFORENVIRONMENTALRESEARCH,UNIVERSITYOFWINDSOR,[email protected] EVANRICHARDSON,ENVIRONMENTANDCLIMATECHANGECANADA,SCIENCEANDTECHNOLOGY;DAVIDMCGEACHY,ENVIRONMENT ANDCLIMATECHANGECANADA,SCIENCEANDTECHNOLOGY;SAMUELA.IVERSON,ENVIRONMENTANDCLIMATECHANGECANADA, CANADIANWILDLIFESERVICE;HUGHG.GILCHRIST,ENVIRONMENTANDCLIMATECHANGECANADA,SCIENCEANDTECHNOLOGY; CHRISTINAA.D.SEMENIUK,GREATLAKESINSTITUTEFORENVIRONMENTALRESEARCH,UNIVERSITYOFWINDSOR ClimatechangeisleadingtothelossofArcticsea-ice,andincreasesinpolarbearpredationofseabirdnests.Howthis changingpredator-preyrelationshipwillimpactpolarbearandseabirdpopulationsisunclear,althoughsomeauthors havearguedthatconsumptionofterrestrialfoodscouldmitigatelossesinice-basedhuntingopportunitiesforpolar bears.Weuseddatafromfieldstudiestodevelopanagent-basedmodeloftherelationshipbetweenpolarbearsand commoneiderseaducks,anabundant,andculturallyimportantseabirdintheCanadianArctic.Ourmodelsuggeststhat polarbearpredationofcommoneidernestswillaccelerateassea-icecontinuestodecline.Additionally,ourmodel suggeststhatpolarbearpredationwillhavenegativeconsequencesforeiderpopulationsize,andwillleadtochangesin eiderspatialecology.Finally,ourmodelshowsthatincreasednestpredationwillnotenergeticallycompensatepolar bearsforthelossofice-basedhuntingopportunities. Keywords:Largecarnivores,Polarbears,Climatechange,Predation,Seabirds,Simulationmodel,Arctic. Usingexperimentalevolutiontorevealtheeco-evolutionaryimpactsofglobalchangesymposium WEDNESDAY08:15,ROOM:THEATRE Fisheries-induced evolution: Insights from experimental populations of guppies BEATRIZDIAZPAULI,UNIVERSITYOFOSLO,UPMCUNIV,UNIVERSITYOFBERGEN,[email protected] DIEPMACHELLERTSEN,UNIVERSITYOFBERGEN;HEIKKISAVOLAINEN,UNIVERSITYOFBERGEN;IRINASMOLINA,NORDUNIVERSITY; GALICEHOARAU,NORDUNIVERSITY;DAVIDREZNICK,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIARIVERSIDE;ANNECHRISTINEUTNE-PALM,INSTITUTE OFMARINERESEARCH,BERGEN;MIKKOHEINO,UNIVERSITYOFBERGEN,INSTITUTEOFMARINERESEARCH,BERGEN,INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTEFORAPPLIEDSYSTEMSANALYSISLAXENBURG Exploitationbyfisherieshasbeenlikenedtoalarge-scaleexperimentonlife-historyevolution,whereincreasedmortality favourshighfecundityandearlymaturation.However,obtainingevidenceforexploitation-inducedevolutioninwild populationsremainsachallenge.Wedevelopedanexperimentalevolutionstudytobetterunderstandtheeffectsof human-inducedsize-selectiononfishpopulation,usingtheguppy(Poeciliareticulata)asmodelspecies.Ourapproachnot onlyallowstestinglife-historytheorypredictions,butstudyingtheevolutionofothercorrelatedtraitsandtheeffectsof selectionatthegenomiclevel.Wecomparedthreedifferentfishingregimes:1)positivesize-selectiveharvest,where individualslargerthanaminimumsize(16mm)werekilled,mimickingacommercialfishery,2)negativesize-selective harvestconsistedofremovingindividualssmallerthan16mmand3)insize-independentharvestbothlargeandsmall individualswerekilled,inexperimentalself-renewingpopulationswithoverlappinggenerations,whereecological feedbacks,naturalandsexualselectionwereallowed.After3.1years(4.3generationsonaverage)ofselectiveharvestwe observedareductionofthelengthatmaturationinpositivelyharvestedpopulations,bothphenotypicandgenetic(based oncommongardenexperiments).Inaddition,positivelyharvestedpopulationsshowedamoretimidbehaviour,more colourationandadifferentgenomicresponse(basedonddRADsequencingandtargetedre-sequencing)comparedto otherfishingregimes. Keywords:Fish,Fisheries,Morphology,Experiment,Selection,Evolution. Forestecology WEDNESDAY11:00,ROOM:WCOAST Changes in soil carbon stock quantity and stability in response to wildfire events in the southern boreal forest CATHERINEM.DIELEMAN,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] BRENDANM.ROGERS,WOODSHOLERESEARCHCENTER;SANDERSVERAVERBEKE,UNIVERSITYOFAMSTERDAM;MERRITTR.TURETSKY, UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH Borealforestssequesterlargeamountsofcarbonintheirsoils,whichareexpectedtobecomemorevulnerableto disturbancesuchaswildfireincomingdecades.Expectedchangesinfireregimesincludeincreasesinthelengthofthe fireseason,firefrequencyandfireseverity.In2015,Saskatchewanexperiencedoneofthelargestfireseasonsonrecord, withanunusuallyhighpercentageofthelandburnedclassifiedasreburnevents,havingveryshortfire-freeperiod.As partofaNASA-fundedremotesensingstudytoquantifythecumulativeeffectsofborealfireonradiativeforcing (emissions,albedo,etc.),wequantifieddifferencesinsoilcarbonstocksandsoilorganicmatterqualityin~50burned standsversus~30mature(unburned)stands.Ineachstand,wequantifieddominantplantspecies,standage,and moistureclass.Organicsoildepth,bulkdensity,soilmoisture,andsoilpercentcarbonwasquantifiedalong30m transects.Soilsfromasubsetofsamplesites(n=35)wereincludedinalong-termincubationstudytoquantifypotential CO2productionratesandmineralizationratesoflabileversuspassivesoilCpools.Whiledecreasesinthefire-freeperiod reducesthetotalstockofcarbonintheorganiclayer,ourpreliminaryresultsindicatethatmorefrequentfireeventsmay infactbolstersurfacesoilorganicmatterstability,inhibitingpost-fireecosystemcarbonlossesviadecomposition.Such findingsallowustobetteranticipatetheeffectsoffuturewildfireeventsonborealforestcarbonstocks,andtheir potentialpositiveforcingeffectsonclimatechange. Keywords:Boreal,Fire,Carbonstorage,Disturbance. Plasticsintheenvironment MONDAY16:00,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Determining the efficacy of depurating microplastics from Pacific oysters (Crassostrea gigas) MAGGIEM.DIETTERLE,VANCOUVERISLANDUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Duetothelargeamountofplasticpollutants,namelymicroplastics,presentinthemarineenvironmentthereisincrease concernforaccumulationofplasticsinshellfishboundforhumanconsumption.Asopposedtootherseafoodtrades, wheretheintestinaltractsareremovedbeforeingestion,filter-feedingshellfishareofgreaterconcernformicroplastic consumptionbyhumansastheentireorganismisingested.Depurationisaprocessthatutilizesthefilterfeedinggastrophysiologicalfunctionsofbivalves,suchasPacificoysters(Crassostreagigas),alongwithcleanseawatertoremove microbes,virusesandbacteriafromtheshellfish.Depurationisacommonprocessusedbytheshellfishindustryfor removalofbacteria,microbesandviruses,butitsuseformicroplasticremovalisunknown.Here,weinvestigatethe potentialfordepurationtoremovemicroplasticsfromPacificoystersover1,3,5,10,25and50days.Experimentalset-up included10experimentaltanksprovidedwithafilteredflow-throughseawatersystemtoreduceenvironmental contamination.Preliminaryresultssuggestthatadepurationperiodof5daysiseffectiveforremovingmicroplasticsfrom Pacificoysters.However,thedifficultyandcostofmaintainingacleanwaterfiltrationsystemmaylimittheutilityof depurationformicroplasticsinindustrysettings. Keywords:Experiment,Marine,Shellfish,Microplastic,Depuration. Socialsystems MONDAY15:30,ROOM:THEATRE Exploring the evolution of eusociality in a primitively eusocial paper wasp using population genomics KATHLEENDOGANTZIS,YORKUNIVERSITY,[email protected] AMYTOTH,YORKUNIVERSITY;AMROZAYED,IOWASTATEUNIVERSITY Eusocialityisamajorevolutionarytransitionthatindependentlyevolvedseveraltimesininsectsandisdefinedbythree maincharacteristics:overlappinggenerations,cooperativebroodcare,andreproductivedivisionoflabour.Whilemuchis knownabouteusocialbehaviour,themechanismsunderlyingitsevolutionarenotwellunderstood.Populationgenomic analysisofeusocialspeciesprovidesanopportunitytoobjectivelyassesssignificantgenomicchangesandidentifykey genegroupsassociatedwithsocialevolution.Suchstudieshavebeencarriedoutincorbiculatebees,buthavenotbeen conductedoutsideofthisgroup.Here,wecarriedoutapopulationgenomicstudyoftheprimitivelyeusocialwasp Polistes.WesequencedseveralPolistesdominulagenomes,alongwithacloselyrelatedspecies,tomapoutpatternsof adaptiveevolutioninthegenus.Weaskediftaxonomicallyrestrictedgenes,andworker-biasedgeneswereenrichedfor signaturesofadaptiveevolution,likepreviouslyfoundinthehoneybee.Ourresultsindicatednosignificantdifferencein thestrengthofpositiveselectiononnovelrelativetoconservedgenes,whilecastebiasedgenesassociatedwithqueen traitsshowedmarginalenrichmentforpositiveselection.Ourresultsareconsistentwiththehypothesisthatnovelgenes aremostlyimportantwithgeneratingthehighlyderivedphenotypesfoundinadvancedeusocialinsects,suchashoney bees,butqueensmayplayagreateradaptiveroleatthecolonylevelatearlierstagesofeusociality. Keywords:Genomicsequencing,Socialbehavior,Invertebrates,Wasps,Evolution. Museumcollectionssymposium MONDAY10:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Elevation, crypsis, and community structure of neotropical arthropods SARAHDOLSON,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] ELYSSALOEWEN,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;MEGANMCPHEE,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;ELLENRICHARDS,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;LAUREN STITT,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;DANIELH.JANZEN,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;WINNIEHALLWACHS,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;M.ALEX SMITH,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH Ourlabgroupisinterestedinhowarthropodcommunitiesareassembledalonggradientsofelevationanddisturbance. Weincorporatebothphylogeneticandfunctionalmeasuresofdiversitytotrackhowecologicalcommunitieschangein responsetothechangingabioticconditionsassociatedwithclimatechange.WeusestandardizedcollectionsandDNA barcodesacrossanelevationgradientintheneotropicstoquantifydiversityandcommunitystructureforsomeofthe mostabundantterrestrialarthropods(ants,beetles,spiders,springtails,andisopods).Itisonlythroughthecreationand maintenanceofstandardisedandaccessiblenaturalhistorycollectionsthatwecanexploretheseconceptsinmultiple taxa.Furthermore,makingdata(specimens,DNAsequences,imagesandlocalities)availablepriortopublicationallows ourlabgroupandotherstoaskandanswerquestionsinthefutureregardinghowthesesystemsarechanging.This transparencyinwhatwearestudyingisofcriticalimportancewhenmanyofthetaxainquestionarenotnamed.Since scientificnamesprovideaccesstoourunderstandingofaspeciesandaframeworktopredictthefunctionalelementsof thatspecies,lackingnamescriticallyimpedesconductingpredictiveandprocess-orientedbiodiversityscienceinthe neotropicsamongstarthropods.OurworkistocatalyseourcollectionsviaDNAbarcodesandrapidmovementintothe publicsothatwecanrapidlydocumentthespeciesthatliveinthishyperdiversearea.Weaimtomeasurephylogenetic diversityandmeasuresoffunctionaldiversitybygathering/offering/extendingdataontheecology,lifehistorytraits,and morphologicalvariableslinkedtospeciessurvivalinparticularabioticconditions. Pollinationsystems TUESDAY11:15,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Clonal growth increases outcross mating opportunities MARCELE.DORKEN,TRENTUNIVERSITY,[email protected] SAMANTHASTEPHENS,TRENTUNIVERSITY;MARKVANKLEUNEN,UNIVERSITYOFKONSTANZ Clonalgrowthhaslongbeenthoughttoyieldincreasedselfingandreducedoutcrosssiringsuccessbyincreasingthe likelihoodthatpollenwillbetransferredbetweenshoots(ramets)withintheclone(genet)insteadoftoothergenets. Thesenegativeconsequencesofclonalexpansionhavebeenchallengedbyrecenttheoreticalandexperimentalwork indicatingthatclonalgrowthmighthavetheoppositeeffect.Inparticular,thesestudieshaveshownthatclonalgrowth shouldtendtoenhanceoutcrossmatingsuccessbyincreasingthenumberofnon-selframetsthatfallwithinaclone's pollinationneighbourhood.Studiesfromnaturalpopulationsareneededtotestthisprediction.Tothisend,wemapped andgenotypedallfloweringrametsfromanisolatedpopulationofSagittarialatifolia,ahighlyclonalemergentaquatic plant.Wethensampledandgenotypedasingleseedfromeachfruitingramettomeasureselfingratesandexamine patternsofpollendispersalandsiringsuccess.Ourresultssupportthepredictionthatincreasesinclonesizeshouldtend toenhanceoutcrosssiringsuccess. Keywords:Plants,Clonality,Genomicsequencing. Coralreefecology TUESDAY14:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Effects of shellfish farming on invertebrate and finfish communities SARAHDUDAS,VANCOUVERISLANDUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ROBERTBOURDON,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,VANCOUVERISLANDUNIVERSITY;BRENNACOLLICUTT,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA, VANCOUVERISLANDUNIVERSITY;KIERANCOX,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,VANCOUVERISLANDUNIVERSITY;FRANCISJUANES,UNIVERSITY OFVICTORIA Shellfishfarmingcanaltertheenvironmentinseveralways.Modificationsincludeplacementofdeepwaterraftsandlong lines,intertidalanti-predatornettingandfencing,additionofgraveland/orshelltobeachsedimentandalterationofthe speciesand/ordensityofshellfish.Theseactivitiesmayaffecthabitatavailability,complexityandsuitabilityforother species.Inthisstudyweinvestigatedtheinfluenceshellfishfarmingonintertidalinvertebrateandfinfishdiversityand abundance.Invertebratesandfinfishweresurveyedatthreepairedfarmed/un-farmedbeachesinBaynesSound.Habitat complexityateachsitewasmeasuredusingaprofilegauge.Epifaunaandinfaunalinvertebratesweresurveyedusing quadratsamplingtechniques,finfishweresampledusingmodifiedfykenetsandbeachseines(forjuvenilesalmonids only).Averagehabitatcomplexitywas1.2Xgreateratshellfishfarms.Invertebratesurveysshowedgreaterepifaunal speciesrichnessandahigherabundanceofnon-nativespeciesonshellfishfarms.Epifaunalandinfaunalabundanceand infaunaldiversityvariedgreatlybetweensitesbutshowednocleardifferencesbetweenfarmedandun-farmedbeaches. Finfishdiversity(e.g.speciesrichnessandfunctionaldiversity)andabundancedidnotdiffersignificantlybetweenfarmed andun-farmedbeaches.Finfishcommunitiesalsoshowedahighdegreeoffunctionalredundancy.Thesefindingssuggest thathabitatmodificationsassociatedwithshellfishfarmingmayhavegreatereffectsoninvertebratecommunitiesin comparisontofinfish,whichmayinpartbeduetotheincreasedhabitatcomplexityonshellfishfarms. Keywords:Aquaculture,Fish,Invertebrates,Marine,Disturbance,Habitatcomplexity. SensoryandBehaviouralEcologySymposium WEDNESDAY08:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Reconstructing ancient whale rhodopsin: Dim-light vision over a major evolutionary transition SARAHZ.DUNGAN,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] BELINDAS.W.CHANG,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Cetaceansareextraordinarymammalsthathaveevolvedobligatorilyaquaticlifestyles,aniconicevolutionarytransition thatwasaccompaniedbymanysensoryadaptations.Here,wepresenttheevolutionofrhodopsinacrossthecetacean terrestrial-aquatictransition.Rhodopsinisthevisualpigmentthatmediatesdim-lightvision,anditsactivationbylight constitutesthefirststepoftheeye'svisualtransductionpathway.First,weusedaminoacidandcodonmodelsto reconstructtherhodopsingenesequencesoftheancestralcetacean,andthecommonancestorofcetaceansand hippopotamids.Todeterminethefunctionalphenotypesoftheancestralrhodopsins,thereconstructedgeneswerethen synthesizedandsubjectedtoverticalmutagenesisexperimentsandproteinexpressionassaysthatmeasurethespectral tuningandkineticsofrhodopsin.Forthefirsttime,thehypothesisthatthecetaceanterrestrial-aquatictransition coincidedwithablue-shiftinrhodopsinspectralsensitivityhasbeendirectlysupported.Ourresultsindicatea~14nm blue-shiftoccurredontheancestralbranchseparatingcetaceansfromterrestrialrelatives,andisaccountedforbyjust twoaminoacidsubstitutions.Nevertheless,ourresultsforrhodopsinkineticratessuggestextantcomparativesystems cannotalwaysbereliablyusedtoinferancestralfunctionalshifts.Thesepatternsmayofferinsightintoenvironmental andbehaviouralpressuresthatinfluencedancestralcetaceanvisualecology.Exploringgeneevolutionbycombining computationalandexperimentalmethodsaddsanimportantdimensiontoourunderstandingofhowchangesatthe nucleotidelevelinfluenceproteinfunction,particularlyinwaysthatarefunctionallyrelevant(andthusofadaptive significance)toorganisms. Exploringtherolesofmechanisticandphenomenologicalmodelsinecologysymposium MONDAY10:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Mechanism versus phenomenology in models of insect outbreak GREGDWYER,UNIVERSITYOFCHICAGO,[email protected] Mathematicalmodelsusedtounderstandinsectoutbreaksareoftenusedtoextrapolatefromsmall-scalemechanismsto large-scalephenomena,andthereforeprovideausefulalternativetothephenomenologicalmodelstypicallyusedin conventionalstatisticalanalysesofinsectoutbreakdata.Extrapolatingacrossscalesissodifficult,however,that ultimatelytheonlyfeasibleapproachistouseamixtureofmechanisticandphenomenologicalmodeling.Toillustratethis point,IwilldiscusseffortsbymycolleaguesandItounderstandoutbreaksofthegypsymoth,Lymantriadispar,andthe jackpinebudworm,Choristoneurapinus.Forthegypsymoth,wehaveenoughdatatousehighlymechanisticagent-based models,butsometimesmorephenomenologicalmodelsaremoreuseful.Forthejackpinebudworm,ourdataare sufficientlyscantythatwehaveinsteadreliedonmorephenomenologicalmodels,butthelackofmechanisminthe modelshindersourunderstanding.Thetensionbetweenmechanismandphenomenologyappearstobeinevitable,butit alsoseemsveryuseful Geneticsofautoimmunity TUESDAY16:45,ROOM:COLWOOD Exploring the genetic basis of autoimmune disease through the differential expression of foxp3 in zebrafish (Danio rerio) following an increase in dietary sodium RUSSELLEASY,ACADIAUNIVERSITY,[email protected] LEAHMACLEAN,ACADIAUNIVERSITY Autoimmunityexhibitsafemalebiaswhichisconsistentacrossmanydisordersincludingmultiplesclerosis(MS), systemiclupuserythematous(SLE),andrheumatoidarthritis.However,muchoftheinterplaybetweenenvironment, genderandautoimmunityisnotunderstood.FoxP3istheprimarytranscriptionfactorcontrollingthedevelopmentof regulatoryTcells(Tregs)whichhelpcontroltheimmunesystemthroughsuppressiveeffects.Thisstudyaimstoevaluate howanincreaseindietarysodiumaffectstheexpressionofzFoxp3.Additionally,thisstudyexaminesifzFoxP3is differentiallyexpressedbetweenmalesandfemales.Fifty-twozebrafishwereseparatedintotestandcontrolgroupswith eachgrouphavingequalnumbersofmaleandfemalefish.Followinganacclimationperiod,thedietofthetestfishwas modifiedtoincludeaten-timesincreaseinsodiumconcentration.Onemaleandonefemalezebrafishweresampledat time0asacontrol.Threemaleandthreefemalezebrafishfromeachgroupweresampledat1,2,4,and8weeksfollowing theintroductionofthesodiumdiet.TotalRNAwasextractedfromgilltissue,followedbycDNAgeneration.Differential expressionofzFoxP3andthereferencegene-actin,wasevaluatedusingrealtimePCR(qPCR).AnalysisoftheinitialqPCR resultsconfirmasingleproductgeneration,andsuggestthatzFoxP3isdifferentiallyregulatedbetweentestandcontrol groups.Furtheranalyseswillaidtofillgapsintherelationshipbetweencausativefactorsandthedevelopmentof autoimmunity. Policyandplanning MONDAY14:00,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Freshwater conservation planning in an intact landscape BRIEEDWARDS,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA,[email protected] CONSTANCEO’CONNOR,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA;MEGSOUTHEE,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA; MATTHEWSTRIMAS-MACKEY,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;CHERYLCHETKIEWICZ,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA Ontario’sFarNorthisalargeintactsubarcticboreallandscapedominatedbyfreshwater,includingsomeoftheworld’s largestwetlands,peatlandsandunregulatedriversystems.Facedwiththreatsduetodevelopmentandclimatechange, proactiveplanningforthefutureoffreshwatersystemsinOntario’sFarNorthisanimportantpriority.In2010,the GovernmentofOntariocommittedtoprotecting50%ofthisregioninordertoconservebiodiversityandmaintain ecologicalfunctionsandprocesses.However,conservationplanningforfreshwaterremainsachallenge,becausespatial planningapproachesdevelopedforuseinterrestrialandmarineareasneedtobemodifiedinordertoidentify appropriatewatershedscalesandincorporatelongitudinalconnectivity.Here,wepresentconservationplanning scenariosforfreshwaterfishbiodiversityinOntario’sFarNorthdevelopedusingthespatialplanningtoolMarxan.This workprovidesauniquecasestudyforhowproactiveconservationplanningcanbeadaptedtoafreshwatercontextin ordertoaddressanthropogenicthreatstofreshwaterbiodiversityandsupportprovincialandnationalcommitmentsto theprotectionoffisheriesandecosystemservices. Keywords:Freshwater,Boreal,Conservationpractitioners,Spatialplanning. Forestecology TUESDAY14:00,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Intact forest landscapes: Definitions, use, and clarity. KATEEDWARDS,NATURALRESOURCESCANADA,[email protected] DARRENSLEEP,NATIONALCOUNCILFORAIRANDSTREAMIMPROVEMENT ForestIntactnessisbecomingamorefrequentlycitedlandscapecharacteristicthatmakesanareaapotentiallydesirable targetforconservation.However,thedefinitionofintactcanvarydependingonbothecologicalandlandscapecontext,as wellastheresearchormanagementcontextinwhichitisused.Tohelpbringclaritytothediscussion,wesurveyedthe literaturetodocumentuseoftheconceptofintactness.Althoughhighlyvariableinitsmeaningandscale,wefoundwithin thescientificliteratureintactnessusedasadescriptor,butnotasaninherentpropertyofanecosystemorlandscape.In contrast,outsideofthescientificliteraturetheusageoftendoesimplyaninherentpropertyofanecosystemorlandscape. Wediscusssomeofthepotentialassumptionsbehinddifferentusesofthetermandtheimplicationsforconservation policyandmanagement.Werecommendaconservativeusageofthetermasastructuralbutnotafunctionalecosystem descriptor,whichwouldmaintainconsistencywithwhatwefoundtobethetypicalscientificunderstandingandusage. Keywords:Fragmentation,Forest,Management,Landscapeconfiguration. Marineecology TUESDAY16:00,ROOM:SIDNEY If you cease it, will they come back? How exposure to and release from a pollution disturbance shapes rocky intertidal communities in British Columbia AARONM.EGER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] JULIAK.BAUM,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;SHANNONM.BARD,HEMMERAENVIROCHEMINC. MarineecosystemsinBritishColumbiaaresubjecttoavarietyofpollution-baseddisturbancesthatrestructurethe compositionofthevegetativeandanimalcommunities.Aprimehistoricalexampleofthisistheeffluentdischargedfrom pulpmillsacrosstheprovince,whichhavebeenshowntohavesubstantialnegativeimpactsoncoastalbiodiversity. However,asenvironmentalregulationshavebecomemorestringentlyenforcedandtheeconomicdriversofpulpmills havesloweddown,muchofthispollutionhasabated.Thediminishmentandinsomecases,eliminationofsuch disturbancesprovidesauniqueopportunitytoassesstherecoveryofcommunitiesonceaffectedbythemilldischarge. Wetakethisopportunitytousealongtermmonitoringdatasetspanningthreedecadestostudyrockyintertidal communitiessituatedaroundpulpmillsinPrinceRupert,PowellRiver,andHoweSound.Usingthisdataset,we demonstratehowproximitytothemillnegativelyinfluencedtheintertidalcommunityatthesesites.Nextweexamine howthecommunitycompositionshiftsandrecoversoncethemilldisturbanceisalleviated.Lastlywetakeaspecificlook atwhichspeciesandwhichlifehistorytraitsarebestabletosurviveinadisturbedenvironmentandwhichspeciesare bestabletorecolonizethoseoncedisturbedlocations.Thisresearchprovidesinsightintoclassicecologicaltheory, appliedunderstandingoftheimpactsandimplicationsofindustrialactivityinmarineecosystems,andpossiblemethods bywhichtoassessthoseindustrialimpacts. Keywords:Marine,Pollution,Disturbance,Resilience,Intertidal. Invasivespecies TUESDAY16:00,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Comparative genomics of historic marine invaders: Neutral and selective processes influencing the success of the amphipod Corophium volutator and polychaete Hediste diversicolor in the North Atlantic ANTHONYEINFELDT,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK,[email protected] JASONADDISON,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK Globalcolonizationandtradeallowsmanyspeciestoexpandtheirdistributionsbeyondbarrierstonaturaldispersal, profoundlychangingglobalpatternsofbiodiversity.Introducedspeciesoftenfaceecologicalandenvironmental conditionsthatdifferfromtheirnativeranges,andtheirsuccessfulestablishmentmaydependonopportunities presentedbyinvasionvectorsandthespeciespotentialtorapidlyadapttonewchallenges.Previouslywehaveshown thattheamphipodCorophiumvolutatorandthepolychaeteHedistediversicolorhaveoverlappingrangesandwere historicallyintroducedacrosstheNorthAtlantic.Thesimilardistributionsandhistoriesofthesespeciesprovidean opportunitytostudytheevolutionaryprocessesactinginsuccessfulintroductionsandtheirconsistencyacrossphyla.To investigatetherelationshipbetweenintroductionpathwaysandselectioninthesuccessfulestablishmentofthesespecies, weusedgenomicandtranscriptomicdatafrompopulationsacrosstheirnativeandintroducedranges.Wecomparethe relativeimportanceofadaptivevariationoriginatinginthenativevs.introducedranges,environmentalfilteringon standinggeneticvariation,andselectionongeneticdiversityfrommultipleintroductionsources.Ourresultsshowthat responsestoselectivepressurescanoperateovershorttimeperiodsatlocalandregionalscales,withparallelgenetic patternsbetweenspeciesthatsuggestcommonevolutionaryprocessesareimportanttothesuccessofbothinvaders. Keywords:Colonization,Populationgenetics,Marine,Invasion,Geneticvariation,Amphipods,Polychaete. SeagrassecologyandconservationalongPacificandAtlanticcoastssymposium TUESDAY11:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Turning up the heat on seagrass wasting disease MORGANEISENLORD,CORNELLUNIVERSITY,[email protected] MAYAGRONER,CORNELLUNIVERSITY;COLLEENBURGE,UNIVERSITYOFMARYLANDBALTIMORECOUNTY;NATALIERIVLIN,UNIVERSITY OFMARYLANDBALTIMORECOUNTY;PHOEBEDAWKINS,CORNELLUNIVERSITY;REYNYOSHIOKA,CORNELLUNIVERSITY;EVANFIORENZA, CORNELLUNIVERSITY;FRANCESCAGIAMMONA,CORNELLUNIVERSITY;DREWHARVELL,CORNELLUNIVERSITY Seagrasswastingdisease,causedbytheopportunisticmarinepathogenLabyrinthulazosterae,hasthepotentialto devastateimportantseagrasshabitatsworldwide,yetlittleisknownaboutthehost-pathogeninteractionorhowthe diseasewillbeimpactedbyclimatechange.FieldsurveysofZosteramarinabedsintheSalishSea,WAshowsome populationswereheavilyimpactedbywastingdisease,whileothershadconsistentlylowdiseaseseverity.Inthisstudy, weinvestigatetheeffectofL.zosteraestrain,pathogendosage,andtemperatureonvirulence,thedegreeofhostdamage causedbyapathogen.WetestedL.zosteraevirulenceinZ.marinabyinoculatingplanttissuefromasinglebedwith strainscollectedfromarangeofeelgrasspopulationsintheinlandwaterofthenortheastPacific.The11strainstested displayedqualitativelydifferentlevelsofvirulence,withinfectionratesrangingfrom0to100%.Pathogenvirulence increasedproportionaltodosage.Crossinfectingplantsfromtwospatiallydistinctsiteswithdifferingnaturaldisease patternsshowedincreasedvirulenceoccurredwithforeignstrainsandthetwoplantpopulationsdifferedintheir responsetothelocalstrain.Toinvestigatetheroleoftemperature,Z.marinashootswereacclimatedtolow(11degrees C)andhigh(18degreesC)watertemperaturesandthenhalftheseindividualswereexposedtoavirulentL.zosterae strain.Diseaseoccurredwithhigherseverityatthehightemperature.Ourresultsshowthatpathogenvirulenceis impactedbystrain,dosage,andenvironment;suggestingL.zosteraehasthepotentialtocauseexponentiallyincreasing damagewherethesefactorsco-occur. Sticklebackecologyandevolution MONDAY10:45,ROOM:SAANICH Eco-evolutionary interactions in stickleback elemental composition RANAW.EL-SABAAWI,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] DANIELJ.DURSTON,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Interspecificdifferencesinelementalcompositionarewellknown,andcandrivepredictabledifferencesinecosystem interactions.However,littleisknownaboutthecausesandextentofintraspecificvariationinelementalcomposition. Suchvariation,ifsubstantialandbasedingenetics,couldunderlieanimportantmechanismofevo-ecointeractions, whereevolutionarychangeinelementaldemanddrivessubsequentchangesinecosysteminteractions,suchasfoodweb structureandnutrientdynamics.Toinvestigatethemagnitudeandsourcesofintraspecificelementalvariation,we sampledevolutionarymodelspeciesGasterosteusaculeatus(threespinestickleback)from12locationsinBritish Columbia,Canada.Eachfishwasphenotyped,genotypedforEdaallelesunderlyingvariationinlateralplatingandassayed forelementalcontent(C,N,P).Wefoundtheelementalcompositionofsticklebackvarieswidely(2.26.5%P;3.09.4:1 N:P).Phenotypicmodelsexplainedmuchofthisvariation(R2=0.52,0.81)usingfourbonerelatedtraits(pelvislength, lateralplatecount,bonemineralization,bodysize)andcondition.FurthergeneticmodelsfoundallelicvariationatEda generatesa7-14%changeinwholeorganismN:P.Astheseallelesarecommonlyunderstrongselectioninnatural populations,weinferthattheelementalcompositionandthuselementaldemandofsticklebackcanevolverapidly. Keywords:Stickleback,Populationdynamics,Plastic,Geneticvariation,Evolution,Functionaltraits. Lifehistories:reproduction,senescence TUESDAY10:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Post-reproductive lifespan and grandmothering in a pre-industrial human population SACHAC.ENGELHARDT,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,[email protected] PATRICKBERGERON,BISHOP'SUNIVERSITY;ALAINGAGNON,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL;LISAY.DILLON,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL; FANIEPELLETIER,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE Post-reproductivelifespan(PRLS)isthetimebetweentheageatlastreproductionandtheageatdeath,forfemalesliving pastreproductivecessation.ThegrandmotheringhypothesisproposesthatthePRLSintervalislonginhumansbecause thepresenceofpost-reproductivemothersshouldincreasethenumberandsurvivalofgrandchildren.Weinvestigated thishypothesisinapre-industrializedpopulationofthefirstFrenchsettlerslivingintheSt.LawrenceValleyduringthe 17thand18thcentury.Weusedregistersofbaptisms,marriagesandburialsfromtheseRomanCatholicparishes.When comparedtopost-reproductivemotherswhoweredeadattheirdaughter’sfirstreproduction,post-reproductivemothers whowerealiveincreasedthenumberofoffspringborn,theageatlastreproduction,thelengthofthereproductive tenure,thelifetimereproductivesuccessoftheirdaughtersandthesurvivaloftheirgrandchildren,andtheydecreased theageatfirstreproduction.Daughtersofpost-reproductivemothersborninurbanparisheshadalowerfitness comparedtothoseborninruralparishes,becauseofahigherrateofinfantmortalityinurbanparishesthaninrural parishes.Daughtersofpost-reproductivemotherswithahigherproportionoffemalesiblingshadadecreasedinthe numberofoffspringborn,thelifetimereproductivesuccessandthelengthofreproductivetenure.Lifetimereproductive successwasinfluencedbytheinteractionbetweenlifestatusofpost-reproductivemothersandtheproportionoffemale siblings.OurresultssupportedthegrandmotheringhypothesisandthatPRLSwasadaptive. Keywords:Reproduction,Human,Grandmotheringhypothesis,Historicalrecords. Animaldiet TUESDAY10:45,ROOM:WCOAST A century of ecological change reflected in the stable isotopes of a migratory aerial insectivore PHILINAENGLISH,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] DAVIDGREEN,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;VANYAROHWER,CORNELLUNIVERSITY;JASMINECRUMSEY,STANFORDUNIVERSITY;JOSEPH NOCERA,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK Identifyingthemechanismsofecologicalchangeischallengingintheabsenceoflong-termdata.Aerialinsectivoresare exhibitingthesteepestpopulationdeclinesofanyavianguildinNorthAmerica.Onehypothesisforthesepopulation declinesisachangeinavailabilityoftheirprey;however,welacklong-termdataoninsectabundances.Fortunately, stableisotoperatiosofmuseumspecimentissuesmayprovidearecordofdietandhabitatchangethroughtime.Nitrogen isotoperatios(d15N)increasewithtrophiclevel,whiled13Ctendstoincreasewithagriculturalintensification.Weuse stableisotopesofmuseumtissuestotestfordietchangeinanocturnalaerialinsectivoreAntrostomusvociferous.We measuredtemporalchangesind15Nandd13Cofbirdtissuesgrownonwinteringgrounds(claws)andduringbreeding season(feathers)frommuseumspecimensspanning1880-2005,andcontemporarysamplesfrombreedingindividualsin 2011-2013.Amongstcontemporarysamples,d15Ndidnotvarywithsexorbreedingsite,butnestlingshadlowerd15N thanadults.Overthepast100yearsforbothseasonsandageclasses,wefoundasignificantdeclineind15N,butno changeind13C.TotestiftheuseofsyntheticNfertilizerhaschangedenvironmentalbaselines,wealsosampledd15Nof 3potentialinsectpreyspeciesand3non-aerialinsectivorebirdspecies.Neitherprey,norotherbirdspecies,showedany temporaltrendind15N,butourpowertodetectsuchatrendwaslimitedbyhighersamplevariance.Theseresults supportthehypothesisthataerialinsectivorepopulationsaredecliningduetochangesinabundanceofhighertrophiclevelprey,butwecautionthatstableisotopestudiesofterrestrialfoodchainsrequireadditionaltestsofbaselinechange. Onceaddressed,theabilitytodecodethehistoricalrecordlockedinsidemuseumcollectionshasthepotentialtoenhance ourunderstandingofecologicalchangeandinformconservationdecisions. Keywords:Stableisotopes,Birds,Foraging,Museumcollection,Populationdeclines. Forestecology WEDNESDAY08:30,ROOM:WCOAST Preliminary results and predictions from a beyond-range field planting experiment of four northern temperate tree species in Newfoundland PIERSEVANS,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY,[email protected] CARISSAD.BROWN,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY Thereisageneralexpectationthatasclimaticnichespacebecomesavailableatthepolewardreachofspecies' distributionalranges,thosespecieswillshifttofillthatspace,butourunderstandingofbioticorabioticfactorsor combinationsthereofthatcouldhindersuchshiftsisstilldeveloping.TheislandofNewfoundland,offCanada'seastern coast,iswithintheborealforestbiome,butcouldpotentiallyseeariseinnortherntemperatetreespeciesdiversityas climaticlimitationsarealleviated.FiveexperimentalplantingsiteswereestablishedacrossNewfoundlandinthesummer of2015totestnon-climaticconstrainingdriversonthegerminationsuccessoffournortherntemperatetreespecies (Acersaccharum,Betulaalleghaniensis,Fraxinusnigra,andThujaoccidentalis)beyondtheirrespectivedistributional ranges.Thenestedexperimentaldesignallowedforreplicateplantingblockswhereinthegerminationsuccessratescould bemeasuredunderherbivory,substrateandforest-typetreatments,where'boreal'coniferousdominatedstandsand 'ecotone'deciduousdominatedstands,weretreatedasproxiesforsubtlydifferingenvironmentalconditions.Results fromthispreliminarystudyrevealedthatpositivebinarygerminationresponseof3ofthetestspecieswasmoststrongly correlatedwithrelieffromvertebrateherbivory.Otherimportantmethodologicallessonswerelearnedregarding herbivoreexclosurecagedesignflawsthatpreventedevenleaflitterandsnowfallaccumulation.Employinganadaptive designapproachinanexpandedexperimentestablishedin2016willrefinedatacollectionandincreaseconfidencein predictionsoftherelativeimportanceoftreatmentsbasedonpreliminarydataanalysis. Keywords:Climatechange,Forest,Transplant,Populationrange. LinkingEnvironmentalLawandScienceSymposium WEDNESDAY09:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM From fishing gears to fish habitat: Canada’s fisheries future depends on evidencebased decision-making BRETTFAVARO,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Fisheriesrepresentadynamicsetofinteractionsbetweenhumansandtheenvironment,andtherelationshipismediated bypolicy.Canada’sfisherieshaveexperiencedahistoricmixtureoffisheriespolicybasedonevidenceandscience,and decisionsthatappeartoabandonboth,andasaresultourcountryhasauniquemixtureofsuccessesandfailuresin fisheriesmanagement.Inthistalk,Iwilloutlinetwoareaswheredecisionsmadenowwillhaveaprofoundimpactonthe integrityofCanadianaquaticecosystemsforyearstocome.Thefirstareaishabitatprotection,andhowauthorizednet lossesoffishhabitat-evenpriortothe2012changestotheFisheriesAct-havelikelyproducedasubstantial uncompensatedimpactonhabitatthatunderpinsfisheries.Second,Iwillexplorehowadynamicpolicylandscapeis supportingatransitiontoreduced-impactfishinggearsthattargetAtlanticcod(Gadusmorhua)inNewfoundlandand Labrador,andthatconsequentlywillmakelong-termsustainabilitymorelikely.Iwillcomparetheroleofscienceinthese twocases,anddiscusshowcollaborationbetweenscientistsandexpertsinlawandpolicycanadvancethecauseof evidence-baseddecision-making. Museumcollectionssymposium MONDAY08:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM A student's-eye view of taxonomy and collections research in Canada JAMIEFENNEMAN,,[email protected] JEANNETTEWHITTON TheEarth'sbiodiversityiscurrentlyundergoingacrisisunparalleledinhumanhistory.Atthesametime,interestinand supportforthefieldoftaxonomyiswaning,withfewerandfewerindividualsbeingtrainedtomakesenseofthe biodiversitythatisbeinglost.Largeandimportantcollectionsofbiologicalspecimens-whicharecriticaltoourabilityto describeanddefinetheunitsofbiology-oftenremainlittleusedandpoorlysupported.Thesecollectionshousemillions ofpiecesofbiodiversityinformationintheirspecimens-informationthatspansbothlargegeographicareasandlong spansoftime.Theyareanindispensablecomponentofbothalphaandbetataxonomy,throughwhichweareableto defineanddescribetheunitsofbiodiversityand,ultimately,theunitsofconservation.Theseunitstheninformand providestructuretotheremainingbiologicaldisciplines,whethertheybeecological/organismalormolecular/cellularin nature.Thuswithoutthesecollectionsandthetaxonomytowhichtheycontribute,muchofourabilitytomakesenseof thebiologicalworldiscompromised,andwebegintoloseourbiodiversityliteracy.Fortunately,withrenewed investmentintaxonomicresearchinCanadaand,inparticular,acommitmenttoitssupportfromacademia,wecanbegin toturnthetideofthiswell-publicized"taxonomicimpediment".Giventhecritical,andgrowing,importanceof biodiversityscienceinarapidlychangingworld,suchaninvestmentisunlikelytobewasted. Keywords:Biodiversity,Museumcollection,Taxonomy. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY12:00,ROOM:COLWOOD Tremendous genetic drift and accumulation of deleterious mutations may not preclude thermal adaptation in lake trout ANNE-LAUREFERCHAUD,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL,[email protected] CHARLESPERRIER,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL,CENTRED'ÉCOLOGIEFONCTIONNELLEETÉVOLUTIVE;PASCALSIROIS,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBEC; ISABELTHIBAULT,MINISTÈREDUDÉVELOPPEMENTDURABLE,DEL'ENVIRONNEMENT,DELAFAUNEETDESPARCSDUQUÉBEC;LOUIS BERNATCHEZ,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL Understandinggenomicsignaturesofdivergentselectionunderlyinglong-termadaptationinpopulationsoccupying heterogeneousenvironmentsisakeygoalinevolutionarybiology.Inthisstudy,weinvestigated,bymeanofgenotypingby-sequencing,neutralandadaptivegeneticvariationamong32laketrout(Salvelinusnamaycush)populationsfrom Québec,Canada.Demographicmodelingbasedon9,000filteredSNPsrevealedthathalfofthepopulationswerelikelyto haveundergonebottlenecksfollowinglakecolonizationandisolation.Geneticdiversitywassmall,weaklysharedamong lakes,andpositivelylinkedtolakesize,supportingamajorroleforgeneticdriftnegativelycorrelatedtolakesize.For eachpopulation,wedetectedasmanynon-synonymousmutationsassynonymousmutationsandwefoundthat60%of non-synonymousmutationswerepotentiallydeleterious.Yet,severaloutlierlociwerealsofoundtoco-varywith temperatureandrelatedtobiologicallyrelevantfunctionsnotablyrelatedtoheat-stressimmuneresponses.Outcomesof gene-temperatureassociationswerenotablyinfluencedbytheinclusionofpopulationswithhighestinbreeding coefficients,illustratingchallengesinfindinggene-environmentassociationsincasesofhighgeneticdriftandvery restrictedgeneflow,aswellassuggestinglimitationsforadaptationinsmallerpopulations.Wediscusstherelevanceof thesefindingsfortheconservationandmanagementoflaketroutpopulations,asothercold-waterlakefishpopulations, notablyregardingstockingandgeneticrescue. Keywords:Freshwater,Populationgenetics,Fish,Geneticvariation,Management. Populationdynamics TUESDAY09:00,ROOM:ESQUIMALT The strength of density-dependence in mountain ungulates varies over time MARCOFESTA-BIANCHET,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,[email protected] STEEVED.CÔTÉ,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL;FANIEPELLETIER,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE Populationecologistshavealwaysbeeninterestedinhowpopulationdensityaffectspopulationgrowth,andnearlyall harvestprogramsofwildspeciesassumesomedensity-dependence.Density-dependencecanvarysubstantiallyovertime becauseofchangesinresourceavailability,lageffects,andchangesinotherextrinsicvariablesthatcanaffectpopulation growth,suchasdisease,weatherandpredation.Fewstudies,however,haveassessedhowthestrengthofdensitydependencevariesovertimeinungulates.Weuseddetailed,long-termindividualmonitoringofthreepopulationsof mountain-dwellingungulatesinAlbertatoexplorechangesindirectdensity-dependenceinageofprimiparityand juvenilesurvival,twovitalratesthatareusuallyamongthemostresponsivetochangesinenvironmentalconditionsin ungulates.Density-dependencehadalargeeffectonthesevitalratesonlyduringandsoonafterapopulationcontrol programofbighornsheepatRamMountain.ForbighornsheepatRamMountaininthelast15years,bighornsheepat SheepRiverover24yearsandmountaingoatsatCawRidgeover28years,densityplayedaverylimitedornorolein populationdynamics,becausevitalrateswereaffectedbypredation,disease,weather,inbreedingandstochasticity,in additiontopossiblelageffectsofpredation,forageavailabilityanddensityatbirth.Itappearsthatdirectdensitydependenceisratherweakinmountainungulatesthattypicallyformsmallpopulationswithlimiteddispersal.Harvest managementmustconsiderthattheassumptionofstrongandconsistentdensity-dependenceisviolated. Keywords:Ungulates,Densitydependence,Mountain,Management. Plantecology MONDAY13:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 The inclusion of positive interactions in modeling the niche space of desert annuals ALESSANDROFILAZZOLA,YORKUNIVERSITY,[email protected] DIEGOA.SOTOMAYOR,YORKUNIVERSITY;CHRISTOPHERJ.LORTIE,YORKUNIVERSITY Thenicheforplantspeciesistypicallydefinedbytheirenvironmentalrequirements,butthisignoresinteractionsamong species.Indeserts,positiveinteractionsstructureplantcommunitiesandareimportantdriversofbiodiversity.Thus, modelsfortheavailablenicheofdesertplantspeciesshouldincludethesepotentialpositiveinteractionsand associations.Wetestedthehypothesisthatshrubsincreasethegeographicaldistributionofdesertannualsbecause throughmicroclimatemodificationtheycanprovideconditionsthatmatchnecessarynicherequirements.Weusedthe databaseGlobalBiodiversityInformationFacilitytoconstructMaxEntspeciesdistributionmodelsforannualswithand withoutreportedbenefactorspeciesindeserts.Wecontrastedprobabilitiesofoccurrenceinclimatemodelswithand withoutreportedbenefactorshrubspeciesforannualsreportedasbeneficiaries(i.e.beneficiary)relativetothosethat havenotbeenreportedasfacilitated(i.e.unreported).Wefoundtheinclusionofshrubsintomodelssignificantly improvedmodelpredictabilityandsuitableareaforallbeneficiaryspecies.However,theinclusionofshrubsdidnotaffect modelsfortheunreportedplantspecies.Thissuggeststhatshrubsprovideclimaticconditionsthatmatchtheniche characteristicsofthebeneficiaryspecies,butnottheunreportedspecies.Shrubsandbeneficiariesspecieswerefoundto begeographicallyassociatedandcouldbedependentonpositiveinteractionsfortheiroccurrence.Wehighlightthe importanceofincludingfacilitationinmodelingclimatescenariosthatcurrentlyneglectbioticinteractions.Including positiveinteractionsinspeciesdistributionmodelingisstillarelativelynovelconceptthatcanenhancethepredictability ofclimatemodelsthatestimatespeciesloss. Keywords:Plants,Interactions,Speciesdistribution,Speciesdistributionmodel,Modeling. Movement,activity,wildlifemanagement WEDNESDAY08:15,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Natural regeneration on seismic lines influences movement behaviour of wolves and grizzly bears LAURAFINNEGAN,FRIRESEARCH,[email protected] KARINEPIGEON,FRIRESEARCH;JEROMECRANSTON,ARCTOSECOLOGICALCONSULTANTS;MARKHEBBLEWHITE,UNIVERSITYOF MONTANA;MARCOMUSIANI,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;LALENIANEUFELD,PARKSCANADA;FIONASCHMIEGELOW,UNIVERSITYOF ALBERTA;JULIEDUVAL,FRIRESEARCH;GORDONB.STENHOUSE,FRIRESEARCH AcrosstheborealforestofCanada,habitatdisturbancenegativelyaffectsarangeofwildlifespecies,andisbelievedtobe theultimatecauseofwoodlandcariboudeclines.OneofthemostpervasivedisturbanceswithincaribourangesinAlberta areseismiclinesthatwereclearedduringsoundwavemappingforenergyexploration.Seismiclinesfacilitatepredator movementandmayattractpredatorsbecausetheycontainvegetationpreferredbyungulateprey.WeusedLiDARdata, andmulti-speciesGPSlocationscollectedinwest-centralAlberta,tounderstandhowregenerationinfluencedmovement ofwolvesandgrizzlybears.Wolvesmovedtowardsseismiclinesregardlessofvegetationheight,andparticularly towardswetlow-vegetationheight(~1.5m)seismiclines.Wolvesalsomovedfasternearlow-vegetationheightseismic lines(~0.7m)duringsummer.Wetlow-vegetationheightseismiclineswerealsopreferredbygrizzlybears.Theseresults suggestthatwolfmovementscouldbeinfluencedbyaccesstoareaswithhigherungulatepreyhabitatquality,andthat wolvesuselow-vegetationheightseismiclinesfortravelduringsummer.Forgrizzlybears,movementsmaybegoverned byaccesstovegetativefoodresourcesandungulateprey.Becauseresultsandmodelcrossvalidationrevealedstronger selectionofseismiclinesbywolveswhencomparedtogrizzlybears,itislikelythatseismiclinesprimarilybenefitwolves. Toreducewolfmovement,habitatrestorationcouldfocusonseismiclineswithregenerationheightsoflessthan1m. However,becausewewereunabletoidentifyaregenerationheightwhenwolfmovementsceasedtobeinfluencedby seismiclines,activerestorationtacticssuchaslineblockingcouldalsoberequiredtoreducewolfresponsetoseismic lines. Keywords:Largecarnivores,Landusechange,Oilandgas,Caribou,Predation,GPS. Selection MONDAY15:30,ROOM:WCOAST Multilevel and sex-specific selection on competitive traits in North American red squirrels DAVIDFISHER,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] STANBOUTIN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;BENDANTZER,UNIVERSITYOFMICHIGANANNARBOUR;MURRAYM.HUMPHRIES,MCGILL UNIVERSITY;JEFFE.LANE,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN;ANDREWG.MCADAM,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH Individualsofteninteractmorecloselywithoffspring,siblingsorsomemembersofthepopulationsuchastheirgroup members,thantheydowithotherindividualsinapopulation.Thisstructuringofinteractionsinapopulationhasthe potentialtoleadtomultilevelnaturalselection,wheretraitsatthegrouplevelinfluencefitnessalongsideindividual-level traits.Suchmultilevelselectioncanconsiderablyalterevolutionarytrajectories.Yetmultilevelselectionisrarely quantifiedinthewild,norinnon-socialspeciesthatdonotinteractindiscretegroups.Wequantifiednaturalselectionon twotraits,postnatalgrowthrateandparturitiondate,atmultiplelevels,inapopulationofNorthAmericanredsquirrels (Tamiasciurushudsonicus).Selectionongrowthrateandparturitiondatewastypicallystrongestwithin-social neighbourhoods,withmultilevelselectionapparentforgrowthrateatseverallevels.Increasedpopulationdensities increasedthestrengthofselectionforearlierbreedingwithin-socialneighbourhoods,and,toalesserextent,within-study areas.Wealsofoundstrongfemale-specificselectionongrowthrateatonlythewithin-litterlevel.Thisdemonstratesthe importanceofconsideringmultilevelandsex-specificselectioninterritorial,sexuallymonomorphicspecies.Thisisrarely quantifiedbutcangreatlyinfluenceevolutionarydynamics. Keywords:Smallmammals,Selection,Socialbehavior,Reproduction. Communication MONDAY16:15,ROOM:WCOAST What does the tweet say: The use of social media for science communication ALINAFISHER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] Informingthepublicisagoalofdisseminatingscientificresults,butmuchofscienceoutreachiscommunicatedwithout thoughttoaudienceengagement.Relyingonthecommunicationoffactsalone,typicalsciencecommunicationoverlooks theinfluencesofemotiononengagementanddissemination,especiallydownsocialmedianetworks.Thisseemstoimply thatthereisadichotomybetweeninformationaccuracyandaudienceengagement,butisthisactuallythecase?Totest this,aself-administeredonlinesurveytestedoriginalTwitterandFacebookpostscomparedtoreframedmessaging informedbytheliteratureonvirality.Focusgroupswerealsoheldtodiscusstheeffectivenessofextantsamplesocial mediaposts.Preliminarydatashowsthatpreferredsocialmediamessageframingvarieswithunderlyingscienceliteracy, eventhoughengagementmaybesimilar.Thisresearchwillinformhowweasscientistscanmoreeffectivelyengagethe publicinscientificdiscourse,andhelptoinformevidence-basedpolicyandconservationdecisions. Keywords:Sciencecommunication,Scienceoutreach,Global,Survey. Remotecameranetworkstoscaleupecologicalinsightsandconservationapplicationssymposium TUESDAY08:15,ROOM:THEATRE Landscape and climate change: Ecological insights from camera-trap research JASONT.FISHER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,INNOTECHALBERTA,[email protected] Biodiversityconservationisadiresocietalchallenge.Landscapespromisingabundanteconomicopportunitiesvia resourceextractionarechangingfast,asisourclimate.Therateofchangevastlyoutpacesourabilitytoresearchits effectsonspeciesandbioticcommunities.Cameratraps(CTs)arehelpingtoclosethatgapbyprovidinglarge-scale, multi-speciesdatatoinformresearchonthetwindriversoflandscapeandclimatechange.Iillustratesomeexamples usingwhite-taileddeer(Odocoileusvirginianus)andwolverines(Gulogulo).Wedeployedfourcamera-traparrays(N= 220)inprobabilisticsamplingdesignsascoordinateddistributedexperimentsacrosstheforestedlandscapeofAlberta, Canada,whereratesofdeforestationrivalthoseofthetropicalAmazon.Wehypothesizedthatmammalspecies'spatial responsetodevelopmentwouldbeassociatedwithhabitatlossandfragmentation,butthatclimatechangewouldbe detectableasanadditionalstressor.Wemodelledmammalspeciesdistributionagainstlandscapecharacteristicsand climatevariablesusinggeneralizedlinearmodels(GLMs),rankedinaninformation-theoreticframework.Signalsofboth landscapechangeandclimatechangeweredetectableaschangesinspeciesdistributioninspaceortime.Wesuggestthat CDEsdesignedtoexaminemammalianresponsetobiodiversitythreatsacrossdifferentlandscapesandcommunitiesbea majorfuturegoalforbiodiversityresearch. Parasitismandsymbiosis TUESDAY13:45,ROOM:SIDNEY Alternative management of Varroa destructor mites using their odour responses ALLIEFLINN,ACADIAUNIVERSITY,[email protected] DAVESHUTLER,ACADIAUNIVERSITY;KIRKHILLIER,ACADIAUNIVERSITY;CATELITTLE,ACADIAUNIVERSITY ParasiticVarroadestructormiteisthemostdestructivediseaseofEuropeanhoneybees,makingthemofsignificant economicimportance.Miteresistancetomiticides,aswellasdetrimentaleffectsofmiticidesonhoneybees,have motivatedexplorationofalternativemethodstosafelymanageVarroamites.Myresearchexaminesbehaviorally-relevant compoundsusedinhost-findingbehaviour(attractants),andpotentialdeterrentstoformitemanagement.Itested variousodourcompoundsassociatedwithhoneybees,includingbutyricacid,hexanol,methyloleate,and2hydrohexanoicacidversusthesecompounds;ahexanesolventasacontrol,onmitesinlaboratorybehavioralassays. Butyricacidand2-hedrohexanoicacidataconcentrationof100ng/Lwerefavouredrelativetotheothercompounds. Subsequently,allodourcompoundswerealsotestedonbeestoquantifytheirreactions.Thisresearchprovided preliminaryresultsthatcanbebuiltuponinthefuture.Italsogaveinsightsintorefinedmethodsthatcanbeusedin furthertesting. Keywords:Parasitology,Honeybees,Mite,Management,Odourattractant. Habitatselectionanduse WEDNESDAY08:15,ROOM:ESQUIMALT First assessment of hybrid poplar plantations as a suitable habitat for small mammal species in Quebec JUSTINEFONTAINE-TOPALOFF,CENTRED’ÉTUDEDELAFORÊT,CENTREDELASCIENCEDELABIODIVERSITÉDUQUÉBEC,[email protected] ANGÉLIQUEDUPUCH,CENTRED’ÉTUDEDELAFORÊT,CENTREDELASCIENCEDELABIODIVERSITÉDUQUÉBEC;FRANÇOISLORENZETTI, CENTRED’ÉTUDEDELAFORÊT Treeplantationsareincreasinglyusedtomeettheworld’sdemandforwood.Plantationstendtohaveasimplified structurecomparedtothenaturalforestmatrixbecausetheyareusuallymonospecificandtheyhavearegulartree spacingpattern.Theeffectonwildlifeingeneralofthisstructuralsimplificationofthehabitathasnotoftenbeen addressedinaNorthAmericancontext.Thepurposeofthisstudywastohaveaninitialassessmentofthesuitabilityof hybridpoplar(HP)plantationsasahabitatforsmallmammalspeciesinQuébec.Thediversityofthesmallmammal communityhasbeenassessedinsevenHPplantationsandsevennaturallyregeneratedtremblingaspenstands(controls) inHaute-Mauricieduringthesummerof2015.Theabundanceandotherdemographicvariablesweremeasuredforthe red-backedvole(Myodesgapperi),thedominantspeciesinthesampledsites.Vegetationstructurewasalsomeasuredat allsites.Ourresultsindicatethatbecauseofdifferencesinvegetationstructurebetweencontrolsitesandplantations,the setofmicro-habitatsavailablealsodiffer.Plantationshadfewermicro-habitatswithahighvolumeofcoarsewooddebris onthegroundandmoremicro-habitatswithgreaterlateralvisualobstruction.Thesetofmicro-habitatsusedbytheredbackedvolealsodivergedbetweenbothstandtypesandreflectedtheirrelativeavailability.Despitethesedifferences,the abundanceanddemographicvariablesofthered-backedvoles,aswellasthediversityofthesmallmammalspecies,were similarinplantationsandcontrolstands.ThissuggeststhatHPplantations,atleastthoseinvestigatedinHaute-Mauricie, haveattributesthatareappropriatefortheparticulargroupofspeciesobservedinthepresentstudy. Keywords:Smallmammals,Habitatselection,Speciesdistribution,Landusechanges,Experiment,Forest. Ecology&EvolutioninaSocialContextSymposium TUESDAY08:30,ROOM:COLWOOD Social relationships shape vocal interactions of male black-capped chickadees at dawn JENNIFERFOOTE,ALGOMAUNIVERSITY,[email protected] LAURENFITZSIMMONS,UNIVERSITYOFWINDSOR;DANMENNILL,UNIVERSITYOFWINDSOR;LAURENERATCLIFFE,QUEENSUNIVERSITY Thedawnchorusisanimpressivedisplayinwhichmalesongbirdssingatahighratejustbeforesunrise.The simultaneoussingingbymanyindividualssuggeststhatvocalinteractionsmaybeprevalentandshapedbythesocial relationshipsamongsingers(SocialDynamicsHypothesis).Black-cappedchickadeesareanexcellentmodelspeciesto testtheSocialDynamicsHypothesisbecausetheyareresidentandwecandeterminethesocialrelationshipsofmales duringthewinter.Todeterminewithin-flockdominancehierarchies,weobserveddominanceinteractionsamongcolour bandedbirdsatfeedingstationsatQueen’sUniversityBiologicalStation.Wealsofollowedflocksawayfromfeeding stationstodetermineflockcomposition.Inspring,weuseda16-microphoneacousticarraytorecordthedawnchorusin 15neighbourhoodsoverthreefieldseasons.Wefoundthatmalechickadeesmatchthefrequencyoftheirneighbours songsatdawnandthatmatchinginteractionsregularlyextendbeyondthedyadiclevel.Vocalmatchingoccurredmost oftenbetweenmalesfromdifferentflocksandbetweenmalesofdisparateranks.Weshowthatapair’sbreedingstage influenceshowfarmalesmoveatdawnandtheintensityatwhichtheysing.Finally,weshowthatmalesattendtothe starttimeofconspecificsandbegintosingearlierinresponsetosimulatedinsertions.Weshowthatthedawnchorusis aninteractivecommunicationnetworkwhereinformationexchangeisinfluencedbythesocialenvironment.Thedawn chorusprovidesagoodopportunityforreceiverstoassessthesocialrelationshipsofvocalizingmales. Metacommunitytheoryforreal-worldcommunities:theoreticalandempiricaladvancesfortrophicmetacommunities symposium TUESDAY08:00,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Current advances and future challenges of reconciling the horizontal metacommunity with a vertical world COREENFORBES,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] RACHELGERMAIN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;MELISSAGUZMAN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;MARYO'CONNOR, UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;DIANESRIVASTAVA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;PATRICKTHOMPSON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISH COLUMBIA Whendispersalconnectsotherwiseisolatedcommunitiestoformametacommunityofpotentiallyinteractingspecies,the structureanddiversityofthosecommunitiesareinfluencedbyacombinationoflocalandregionalprocesses.Thismeans diversitycannotbepredictedbyabioticandbioticconditionsatthelocalscalealone,butprocessesoccurringatbroader scalesmustbeappreciatedaswell.Sincethepublicationoftheseminalmetacommunityframework,thismultiscale perspectivehasbeenwidelyembracedbyspatialecologists.Whilethisframeworkprovidesabasisforunderstanding competitivemetacommunities,itdoesnotprovideanadequatebasisfromwhichtounderstandmulti-trophicsystems shapedbybothcompetitiveandtrophicinteractions.Numerousworkshavenowtakenstepstomodifymetacommunity theorytoincorporatetrophicinteractions,butacomprehensiveandempirically-applicableframeworktodosohasyetto beachieved.Herewefirstreviewcurrentapproachestotrophicmetacommunitiesandthenidentifyareasfor advancement.Wefindthatcurrentapproachesaresimplisticin3keyways:1.Metacommunitiesareplacedintodiscrete categoriesthatdonotreflectthenuancesofreal-worldcommunityprocesses.2.Speciesdonotvaryinthewaytheyuse spaceasisobservedwithinandbetweentrophiclevels.3.Complexfoodwebscanonlyemergeatregionalscaleswhile localpatchesarelimitedtosimpletrophicchains.Byoutliningtheadvancesandcurrentchallengesofincorporatingfood webdynamicsintometacommunitytheory,wehopetolaythegroundworkforacomprehensiveframeworkfortrophic metacommunities. HERB MONDAY15:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 The chemical arms race between hungry herbivores and clever plants JENNIFERFORBEY,BOISESTATEUNIVERSITY,[email protected] CAROLYNDADABAY,COLLEGEOFIDAHO;JOHNVUCETICH,MICHIGANTECHNOLOGICALUNIVERSITY;JACKCONNELLY,RETIREDIDAHO DEPARTMENTOFFISHANDGAME;LISASHIPLEY,WASHINGTONSTATEUNIVERSITY;JANETRACHLOW,UNIVERSITYOFIDAHO;GAIL PATRICELLI,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIADAVIS;ALANKRAKAUER,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIADAVIS;GRAHAMFRYE,UNIVERSITYOF ALASKAFAIRBANKS;JORDANNOBLER,TETONSCIENCESCHOOLS;MARCELLAFREMGEN,BIRDCONSERVANCYOFTHEROCKIES;DAN MELODY,BOISESTATEUNIVERSITY Escalatingbattlesinvolvingattackbyhungryherbivoresandsubsequentchemicaldefensesbyplantsarebelievedto drivediverseevolutionaryinnovationsonbothsides.Plantinnovationsincludetheproductionofbioactivemixturesof novelsecondarymetabolitesthatprovideresistanceagainstherbivores.Inresponse,herbivoresevolvemolecular adaptationstoresistthesemetabolites.Weinvestigatedthediversechemicalandmolecularinnovationsarisingfromthe chemicalarmsracebetweenherbivoresandplants.Wefocusoninteractionsbetweenbirchandsnowshoeharesin Alaska,balsamfirandmooseatIsleRoyaleNationalParkinMichigan,andsagebrushandsage-grouse/pygmyrabbitsin Idaho.Wefoundthatplantcompoundsavoidedbymostherbivoreshavediversemechanismsofcytotoxicityincluding inhibitionofdigestiveandmetabolicenzymesandoxidativestress.Wealsofoundthatdietaryspecialistsuseregulated absorptionandrapiddetoxificationasmolecularmechanismsofresistance.However,hostplantsavoidedbydietary specialistssynthesizecompoundsthatinhibitedthesemolecularmechanismsofresistance.Moreover,wedemonstrate howtoxin-mediatedchangesinherbivorycantranslatetochangesinnutritionalconditionandpopulationdynamicsof herbivores.Understandingchemicaldiversityandfunctioninplantsandco-evolvingmechanismsofresistancein herbivoreshasimplicationsforpredictingpopulationdynamicsandpatternsofbiodiversity,aswellasfarreaching impactsonthemanagementofcrops,forests,andhumanhealth. Remotecameranetworkstoscaleupecologicalinsightsandconservationapplicationssymposium TUESDAY08:30,ROOM:THEATRE Trophic traps: Inferring species relationships from camera trap imagery ADAMFORD,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN,[email protected] Cameratrapsareawidelyusedtoolinwildlifemanagement,withapplicationsforlong-termmonitoringofspecies occurrenceoverbroadspatialscales.Relativetomanyothersurveymethods(DNA,collaring,capture-recapture),camera trapsallowthesimultaneousdocumentationofmorethanonespecies.Thismulti-speciesapproachhasbeenusedto assessfactorsaffectingsinglespeciesandco-occurrenceofspeciesacrossthelandscape.Lesswellappreciatedisthe potentialforthismulti-speciesapproachtocapturetheintimaterelationshipsbetweenorganismsthatgiverisetocritical ecologicalprocesses:fear,herbivory,predation.Here,Idrawonexamplesofhowcameratrapshavebeenusedtoassess speciesinteractionsatwildlifecrossingstructuresinBanffNationalParkandfear-structuredpatternsofherbivoryinan Africansavanna.Whilenotaperfectsolutiontoquantifyinganimalbehaviour,cameratrapsofferapowerfultooltohelp gainnovelinsightsonthehiddentrophicrelationshipsinnature. Complexcoevolution:understandinghowcoevolutionmayoperatedifferentlyacrossdiverseinteractiontypes, systems,andscalessymposium TUESDAY08:00,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Pollen specialization by bees and pollen protection by plants: is there an arms race? JESSICAFORREST,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA,ROCKYMOUNTAINBIOLOGICALLABORATORY,[email protected] Thereisalwaysanevolutionaryconflictofinterestinherentinmutualisticinteractions,andthisisnowheremoretrue thanintheassociationbetweenfloweringplantsandpollen-feedingbees.Yetbeesarestillmoreoftenthoughtofas helpfulaidstoseedproductionthanaspredatorsofmalegametophytes.Tobesure,itiswellacceptedthatplantsand pollinatorscanengageincoevolutionaryarmsraces;thelongfloraltubesandcorrespondinglyexaggeratedtonguesof severalplant-pollinatorpairsprovidecompellingevidence.However,plant-pollinatorcoevolutionisnotnormally expectedtoresultintheescape-and-radiatepatternassociatedwithplant-herbivorecoevolution,becauseplantsshould notbeunderselectiontoescapetheirpollinators.Nevertheless,escape-and-radiatemayrepresentausefulwaytothink oftheevolutionarydynamicsofplantsandpollinators,particularlybees.Forexample,chemical(andperhaps morphological)defencesinthepollensofseveralplantfamilies,andpollen-concealingfloralmorphologiesinothers,can allbeviewedaskeyinnovationsallowingescapefrompollen-feedingbees.Conversely,evolutionoftheabilitytoaccess, collect,and/ordeveloponthesepollensmayhaveledtospecializationandadaptiveradiationsamongbees.Inthistalk,I willassessthevalueofapplyingtheperspectiveofantagonisticcoevolutiontotheevolutionaryhistoryofplant-bee relationships. Keywords:Co-evolution,Pollination,Evolution,Selection,Plants. Biodiversity TUESDAY08:15,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Functional diversity in fragments: The joint effects of ecological drift and deterministic responses LEILAFORSYTH,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] BENJAMINGILBERT,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Functionaltraitsofferauniquewindowforunderstandingcommunityassembly,andtheresultingbiodiversityand functionaldiversitywithinandamongcommunities.Ecologicaldrift(i.e.,neutralprocesses),ishypothesizedtobean importantdriverofdiversityinsmallercommunities,whereasdeterministic(niche-based)processesarepredictedto influencehowlargercommunitiesassemble.However,thecombinedeffectsofdriftandniche-basedprocessesonthe functionaldiversitywithincommunitiesarenotknown.Usingplantcommunitiesthatvariedinsizefrom0.25-4square m,wedeterminedhowdifferencesinfragmentsizedrivesdeterministicchangesincommunity-wideassembly,andhow thesedifferencessimultaneouslyaltertheimportanceofstochasticprocessesondiversity.Withinexperimental metacommunities,wemeasuredfunctionaltraitsofallspeciespresentwithineachcommunity,andcomparedcommunity meantraits(aniche-basedresponse),among-communitytraitvariation(correspondingtoecologicaldrift)andwithincommunitytraitvariation,whichistheoreticallylinkedtobothdriftandniche-basedprocesses.Usingnestedplotsand nullmodels,weshowthati)fragmentsizecauseddeterministicshiftsinmeantraitvalues;ii)withincommunitytrait variationincreasedwithfragmentsize,beyondwhatwasexpectedfromdeterministicshifts(mean-variance relationships)andspeciesdiversityeffects;andiii)amongcommunitytraitvariationdecreasedwithcommunitysizeina mannerconsistentwithecologicaldrift.Wediscusstherelevanceofourresultstotheory,andhighlighthowintegrating ecologicaldriftandniche-basedprocessesintocommunityassemblymaybeparticularlyusefulforconservingdiversity withinfragmentedcommunities. Keywords:Functionaltraits,Biodiversity,Experiment,Plants,Spatialdistribution. Livingintheeco-evolutionarytheatre:researchguidedandinspiredbyintensivefieldobservationssymposium TUESDAY15:30,ROOM:THEATRE Spawning Pacific herring: ecological consequences and insights into the past CAROLINEFOX,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY;RAINCOASTCONSERVATIONFOUNDATION,[email protected] PAULC.PAQUET,RAINCOASTCONSERVATIONFOUNDATION,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;THOMASE.REIMCHEN,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Themovementsofanimals,nutrients,andmaterialsacrossecosystemsareubiquitous,includingspatialsubsidiesthat flowacrosstheland-seainterface.Pacificherring(Clupeapallasii),thedominantforagefishinBritishColumbia,spawnin nearshoresubtidalandintertidalzonesbutcross-ecosystemlinkagesremainlittleknownfromscientificperspectives. Informedbystudiesofotherspatialsubsidies,particularlythosedrivenbymigratoryPacificsalmon(Oncorhynchusspp.), ourresearchintotherelationshipsbetweenspawningPacificherringandnearshoresubtidal,intertidal,andterrestrial ecosystemsuncoveredpreviouslyundocumentedcross-ecosystemlinkages.Fromprimaryproducersatthebaseofthe foodwebtouppertrophic-levelpredators,numerousrelationshipswithPacificherringweretracedusingstableisotopes, fattyacids,cameratrapping,anddirectobservations.Evidenceacrossmultipletaxaincluded:(1)thesubstantial contributionofherringtothedietofblackbears(Ursusamericanus);(2)positiveassociationsbetweenherringspawns andthefrequencyofblackbearsinintertidalzones;(3)elevatedherring-derivedomega-3fattyacidsinintertidal amphipods(Traskorchestiaspp.),and;(4)elevatedstableisotopicsignaturesofnitrogeninadiversityofsubtidaland intertidalspeciesfollowingspawnevents.Further,anindirectassociationbetweenherringandblackbearsviabear consumptionofintertidalamphipodswasalsodocumented.Providingabroaderunderstandingofherringandthe ecosystemstheyinfluence,evidencealsosuggeststhatherring-drivenspatialsubsidieswerelikelystrongerandmore widespreadinthepast. Keywords:Marine,Herring,Fish,Marinesubsidies. Coralreefecology TUESDAY15:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Fish movement drives spatial and temporal patterns of nitrogen availability on coral reefs FIONAT.FRANCIS,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ISABELLEM.CÔTÉ,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Nutrientprovisioningbyanimalscanbeamajordriverofprimaryproductivityinecosystems.Animal-mediatednutrient sourcesareparticularlyimportantinnutrient-poorsystemssuchascoralreefs.However,becauseoftheirmobilenature, aggregationsofanimalsmightleadtotemporalandspatialvariabilityinlocalnutrientavailability,whichisnotwell understood.Inthisstudywequantifiedhowpatternsoffishmovementandabundanceinfluencethestabilityofnitrogen provisioningonBahamiancoralreefs.Weempiricallymeasuredandmodellednitrogenexcretionestimatesfor16coral reeffishcommunitiesandcombinedthesemeasurementswithfishabundanceandbehaviouralobservationstocompare reefnutrientbudgetsondiel,monthly,andannualtimescales.Dielreefnitrogenprovisioningvariedgreatly,withdiurnal ratesbeingonaveragefourtimesgreaterthannocturnalrates.Diurnalrateswerehighlyvariableamongreefsandwere drivenprimarilybymigratorygrunts(Haemulidae)restingoverreefsduringthedaybutforagingoffreefsatnight.Atthe reefscale,overallnitrogenexcretionrateswerecorrelatedwithgruntabundance;however,gruntabundancecouldnotbe predictedbyanyreefphysicalcharacteristics.Within-reefgruntexcretionrateschangedlittleacrossa4-monthperiod butvariedsignificantlyovera24-monthperiod,indicatingthatnutrientsupplyonareefisnotstableoverlongperiodsof time.Quantifyinghownutrientprovisioningonreefsislinkedtofishmovementpatternsandhowthisprovisioningvaries ondifferentspatialandtemporalscalesisimportantforunderstandingoverallpatternsofprimaryproductivityonreefs. Keywords:Coralreef,Fish,Marine,Animalmovement,Nutrientcycling. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY16:45,ROOM:SAANICH Intraspecific resource competition and phenotypic selection in polymorphic Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus) OLIVERFRANKLIN,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] SKÚLISKÚLASON,HÓLARUNIVERSITYCOLLEGE;MOIRAFERGUSON,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH Theadaptivediversificationhypothesisprovidesamechanismwherebypopulationscandiversifyintodistinctmorphsor speciesthroughintraspecificresourcecompetition.Supportforadaptivediversificationfromcomplexnaturalsystemsis limited,partlyduetouncertaintyregardingtheoriginofcoexistingmorphpopulations.Here,weexaminesupportforthe adaptivediversificationhypothesiswithintwopolymorphicArcticcharr(Salvelinusalpinus)systems,inwhichrepeated colonisationisdeemedunlikely.TheIcelandiclakesThingvallavatnandVatnshlidarvatnofferresourceenvironments characterisedastemporallystableandtemporallyvariable,respectively,withArcticcharrpopulationsdifferingindegree ofpolymorphism.Wefirstaskhowindividualdifferencesinmorphologyrelatetoindividualdifferencesindiet,witha strongrelationshipdemonstratingintraspecificcompetitiondependentonphenotype.Fordistinctmorphstobe maintainedbyintraspecificcompetition,individualswithintermediatemorphologyshouldbelessfitthanthosewith morphologyalignedwithbiomechanicalexpectations.Usingindividualgrowthrateasaperformancemeasure,we describethequalitativefeaturesofthefitnesslandscapesineachlake,totestwhetherfitnessvalleysexistbetween sympatricmorphpopulations,therebyconstitutingapost-zygoticreproductivebarrier.Ourstudyaddresseswhatare oftenstatedbutuntestedkeyassumptionsregardingphenotypicselectionincomplexnaturalsystems,particularly relevantgiventheimportanceofpostglacialfreshwaterfishsystemstoourunderstandingofpopulationdiversification andecologicalspeciation. Keywords:Evolution,Competition,Arcticcharr,Freshwater,Lakes,Selection,Europe. Plantecology MONDAY13:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Population level variation in host plant response to multiple symbionts JAMESFRANKLIN,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] HAFIZMAHERALI,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH Thoughco-evolutioncancausegenotypelevelspecificityinmulti-partnersymbioses,fewstudieshaveexploredtherange ofvariationinsymbioticinteractionswithinaspecies.Onewidespreadmulti-partnersymbiosistakesplacebetween legumeplantsandarbuscularmycorrhizalfungi(AMF),whichassistwithphosphorusuptake,andrhizobiumbacteria, whichfixatmosphericnitrogen.Becausethenutrientsprovidedbyeachsymbiontarecomplementary,andthesymbionts shareacommongeneticpathwaytoinitiatetheinteraction,itisexpectedplantresponsetoAMFandtorhizobiaare positivelycorrelated.Wegrew35populationsofMedicagotruncatulawithorwithoutthepresenceofeachsymbiontina fullyfactorialexperiment.Plantgrowthincreased17.35-foldinresponsetoAMfungicolonization,butonlyby22%in responsetorhizobiacolonization.Population-levelvariationingrowthresponsewashigherforAMFthanforrhizobia. Growthresponseratiorangedfrom7.6to30.3forAMF,butonlyfrom0.9to1.6forrhizobia.Wefoundaweakpositive correlationbetweentheresponsetoAMFandrhizobia(R=0.373,p=0.027).Expressedonalogscale,population-level variationintheresponseratioforM.truncatulaencompassed16%oftherangefoundamongplantspecies.The asymmetryingrowthresponsestoeachsymbiontsuggesttheevolutionofplantresponsetoAMFismorelabilethanthe evolutionofplantresponsetorhizobia.Furthermore,theweakcorrelationbetweenAMFresponseandrhizobiaresponse suggeststhatevolutioninonesymbiosisisunlikelytobeconstrainedbyevolutionintheother. Keywords:Plants,Fungus,Symbiosis,Evolution. Aquaticecology WEDNESDAY11:15,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Using a space-for-time substitution approach to predict implications of climate change on tropical stream ecosystem function THERESEC.FRAUENDORF,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] RICHARDA.MACKENZIE,PACIFICSOUTHWESTRESEARCHSTATION;RANAW.EL-SABAAWI,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Currentclimatechangepredictionsforstreamecosystemsarelimitedbythelackofappropriatemechanisticmodels, whicharedifficulttobuild,requireextensivebackgrounddata,andtimetodevelop.Aspace-for-timesubstitutionisan experimentaldesignwhereaspatialgradientmimicsaforecastedorhistoricalchangeovertime.Itisaninnovativeway tocharacterizeecologicaldynamicsthatoccurovertime-scalesbeyondthedurationofconventionalexperimentswithout compromisingrealism.Climate-drivenchangesinrainfallarepredictedtodecreaseflowandincreaseflashfloodingin tropicalfreshwaterecosystems,buttheecologicalimplicationsofthesechangesarepoorlyunderstood.Weinvestigated howclimate-drivenchangesinflowalternutrientdynamicsinHawaiianstreamsusingaspace-for-timesubstitution approachoverthreeyears.Wemeasuredstreamnitrogendemandandsupplyviaexcretionofthreedominant invertebrates(comprising80%ofanimalbiomass)ineightstreamsacrossa4500mm/yrrainfallgradientthatmimics predictedchangesinstreamflowonHawaiiIsland.Thedemandfornitrogenrangedbetween0.54-5.53mgN/square m/hranddidnotvaryconsistentlywithstreamflow.Totalcommunityexcretionsupplied~160%ofthenitrogendemand undercurrentclimateconditions,butthisdecreasedto10%withclimate-drivenchangesinflow.Thesepatternswere consistentacrossyears.Weconcludethatpredictedclimatedrivenchangesinflowwillsignificantlydecreasethetotal amountofnutrientsexportedbythesestreams,whichcanhaveasubstantialeffectontheproductivityoforganismsat thebaseoffoodwebs(e.g.microbes,algae)indownstreamandnear-shorehabitats. Keywords:Climatechange,Ecosystemfunction,Streamcharacteristics,Invertebrates,Nutrientuptake,Spatialmodel,Nutrient Cycling. Complexcoevolution:understandinghowcoevolutionmayoperatedifferentlyacrossdiverseinteractiontypes, systems,andscalessymposium TUESDAY09:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Cooperation, conflict, and coevolution MEGANFREDERICKSON,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] Cooperationandconflictshouldgeneratedifferentcoevolutionarydynamics,buthowthisplaysoutwithinorbetween speciesisnotwellunderstood.Coevolutionbetweenchoosinessandcooperationhasbeenexploredtheoretically,butwe rarelyknowthegeneticbasisofthesetraits(andphenotypingpartnersforthesetraitsislaborious).Furthermore,conflict maymanifestinsubtleways;forexample,notovertheamountofcooperation,butoveritstimingorlocation,orover otheraspectsofaninteractionentirely.Iwilldiscusssomepossibleempiricalapproachesformovingourunderstanding ofcooperation,conflict,andcoevolutionforward. LifeOntheEdge:MechanismsofAdaptingtoClimateChangeSymposium TUESDAY11:00,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Tundra plant responses to experimental warming and snowmelt timing ESTHERFREI,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] GREGHENRY,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Arcticregionsareparticularlyaffectedbyrapidlyrisingtemperaturesandalteredsnowfallregimes.Snowmelttiming, whichdeterminesthestartofthegrowingseason,notonlydependsonspringtemperaturesbutalsoontheamountof winterprecipitation.Therefore,predictionsaboutfuturesnowmelttimingaredifficultandexperimentalevidenceforits ecologicalconsequencesisscarce.Weinvestigatedtheinfluenceofexperimentalchangesinsnowmelttimingand warmingoncommontundraplantspeciesinaHighArcticevergreenshrubheathcommunityattheInternationalTundra Experiment(ITEX)siteatAlexandraFiord,EllesmereIsland,Nunavut.Theexperimentcombiningpassivewarmingby open-topchamberswithsnowremoval,snowadditionandcontroltreatmentswasestablishedin1995.Weexamined responsestoearlieranddelayedsnowmeltaswellasexperimentalwarmingbymeasuringphenological,growthand reproductivetraitsofCassiopetetragona,Dryasintegrifolia,LuzulaarcticaandPapaverradicatum.Despiteatrendfor increasingsnowdepth,therewasnolong-termtrendinnaturalsnowmelttiming,buthighinterannualvariability. Snowmelttimingprimarilycontrolledearlyseasonphenology,buthadlessinfluenceonlaterphenologicalstagessuchas theonsetoffloweringandseedripening.Experimentalwarminggenerallyadvancedfloweringandseedripeningand warmingeffectspersistedoverthecourseofthegrowingseasoninfluencingothertraitssuchasgrowthincrementand flowerheight.Ourresultsunderlinetheimportanceofunderstandingtheinteractionsbetweentemperatureandwinter precipitationthatdrivespeciesresponsestoclimatechangeintheArctic. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY11:30,ROOM:SAANICH Ecological drivers of covariance in productivity among Fraser River sockeye salmon conservation units CAMERONFRESHWATER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] BRIANBURKE,NORTHWESTFISHERIESSCIENCECENTER,NOAAFISHERIES;ERICBUHLE,NORTHWESTFISHERIESSCIENCECENTER;MARK SCHEUERELL,NORTHWESTFISHERIESSCIENCECENTER,NOAAFISHERIES;SUEC.H.GRANT,FISHERIESANDOCEANSCANADA;MARK TRUDEL,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,FISHERIESANDOCEANSCANADA;FRANCISJUANES,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Althoughtheimportanceofdiversitytomaintainingmetapopulationstabilityiswidelyrecognized,theecological characteristicsthatleadtosynchronousordivergentdynamicsareoftenunclear.Weuseddynamicfactoranalysisto explorepatternsofcovarianceamongFraserRiversockeyesalmonconservationunits(CUs)anddeterminewhether coherenttrendsinproductivitywerebestpredictedbythespatialcharacteristicsofnurserylakes,returnmigration phenology,geneticsimilarity,orearlymarinemigratorytraits.Thetop-rankedmodelidentifiedtwocoherenttrends-one representingthedynamicsof16CUsthatrearinnurserylakespriortooceanentryandasecondforthesinglesea-type CUincludedhere,HarrisonRiver.Theuniformresponseoflake-typeCUs,aswellasHarrisonRiverCUsuniqueoceanlife history,suggeststhatvariationinFraserRiversockeyesalmonproductivityismoderatedbylarge-scale,regional mechanisms,whichmayinfluencemarinegrowthorsurvival.Furthermore,wedocumentthatproductivityamongFraser RiverCUshasbecomeincreasinglysynchronous,whichsuggeststheimportanceoflarge-scalemarinedriversmayhave increasedrelativetolocalprocessesoccurringduringfreshwaterresidence.Giventheapparentdisconnectbetween ecologicaldiversityandasynchronyamongFraserRiversockeyesalmonCUs,ourresultssuggesttheremayberelatively littlebenefittopreservingspecificpopulationgroupsandconservationeffortsshouldemphasizesustainingthemaximum numberofCUspossible. Keywords:Salmon,Productivity,Management,Fisheries. Mammalianmovementandactivity TUESDAY11:15,ROOM:THEATRE Carnivore activity patterns in relation to landscape development and competitor cooccurrence SANDRAFREY,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] JASONT.FISHER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,INNOTECHALBERTA;JOHNP.VOLPE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Dielactivitypatternsareanimportantcomponentofspeciesecology.Environmentalcuessuchaspredationrisk, anthropogenicdisturbance,andthepotentialforagonisticencounterswithdominantcompetitorsmayinfluence behaviouraldecisionsthatalteranimalactivitypatterns.Usingcamera-trapdatacollectedovermultipleyearsacrosstwo studysystemsintheRockyMountainsofAlberta-theWillmoreWildernessandtheKananaskis/EastSlopesregion-we comparedthedielactivitiesofmultiplecarnivorespeciesinrelationtolandscapedevelopmentandcompetitorcooccurrence.Applyingkerneldensityfunctionsonthetemporaldatacollectedviathetime-stampedcamera-trapimages, weassessedchangestoanimalactivitypatternsbetweenhighversuslowdisturbanceareasbothwithinandacrossthe studysystemsbasedonGISlandscapedata.Wealsocharacterizedhowspeciesaltertheiractivitiestemporallyinthe presenceofcompetitorsorintraguildpredators.Suchcomparisonsprovideinsightintotheextentthatenvironmental variablesalteranimalbehaviours,thedegreeofplasticityinspeciesactivityschedules,andpotentialmechanisms facilitatingspeciescoexistencewithincomplexcommunities.Understandinghowbioticprocessesandabioticfactorssuch asspeciesinteractionsandhuman-drivenlandscapechangesmayinfluencespeciesactivityisofspecialrelevanceto managementandconservationdecisions. Keywords:Behaviouralecology,Predation,Competition,Disturbance,Spatialmodels,Landusechange. EcologicalandEvolutionaryDynamicsinFluctuatingEnvironmentsSymposium MONDAY08:00,ROOM:THEATRE Seasonality, climate change, and consumer-resource dynamics JOHNFRYXELL,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] Thereisincreasingappreciationthatthemagnitudeandtimingofprecipitationeventsmaybechangingatagloballevel. HereIwilloffersomesimplewaysofthinkingaboutthedemographicimpactofrainfallseasonalityonprimaryproducers andrelatethoseeffectsinturntotheirknock-onimpactonherbivores,andtoppredators.Apiece-wiseseriallogistic modelisusedtorepresentseasongrowthanddeclineinresources,allowinggeneralsolutionsforsustainable combinationsofseasonlength,intrinsicgrowthrates,andnaturalmortalityaswellasavantagepointforconsideringlife historyevolutionunderclimatechangescenarios.Imbeddingthatformulationinaconsumer-resourcecontextoffersa differentperspectiveonnaturalregulationandlong-termdynamicsoffoodwebinteractions.Thesepatternsare illustratedusingexamplesdrawnfromtheSerengetiecosystem. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY13:30,ROOM:COLWOOD Fine-scale genome-wide analysis of spawning herring (Clupea harengus) populations in the Northwest Atlantic ANGELAP.FUENTES-PARDO,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY,[email protected] CHRISTINABOURNE,FISHERIESANDOCEANSCANADA;RABINDRASINGH,FISHERIESANDOCEANSCANADA;HUGUESBENOIT,FISHERIES ANDOCEANSCANADA;GREGORYMCCRACKEN,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY;DANIELE.RUZZANTE,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY AtlanticherringisapelagicfishofmajorecologicalandeconomicimportancethroughouttheNorthAtlantic.Previous attemptstodescribeitsgeneticstructureintheNWAtlanticusingahandfulofneutralmarkershavefoundnogenetic differencesamong9locationsintheScotianshelfwiththeexceptionofherringfromBrasD’Orlake,asemi-enclosed brackishenvironment.Populationgeneticanalysesonherringexhibittwomainchallenges:1)difficultyinsampling populationunitsgiventhespeciesintricatelifehistoryinvolvingannualmigrationsbetweenspawning,feeding,and overwinteringareas,andtemporaldifferencesinspawningbehaviouramongpopulationsincludingpopulationsfromthe sameregion;2)difficultyindetectinggeneticstructuringatneutralmarkers,giventhenegligiblegeneticdriftexpectedin populationswithlargeeffectivesizes.Weusedapool-seqapproachtocomparewhole-genomeresequencingdataamong 14spawningpopulationsdistributedalongthecoastoftheNWAtlantic,includingNewfoundland,theGulfofStLawrence, theScotianshelf,andBrasD’Orlake.Someofthesepopulationsspawninthefallandothersinthespringandwe demonstratefunctionaldifferencesamongsomeofthesespawningpopulations.Thisconstitutesthefirstpopulation genomicsstudyinherringatthisscaleintheregion.Theinformationgatheredisusefulforstockdelineationand monitoring. Keywords:Fish,Geneticvariation,Marine,Populationrange,Monitoring,Populationgenetics,Genomicsequencing. Usingexperimentalevolutiontorevealtheeco-evolutionaryimpactsofglobalchangesymposium WEDNESDAY09:30,ROOM:THEATRE Evolutionary rescue of complex phytoplankton communities exposed to a widespread herbicide VINCENTFUGÈRE,MCGILLUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Evolutionaryrescuetheorysuggeststhatundersomeconditions,rapidevolutioncanpreventlocalextinctioninseverely degradedenvironments.Microcosmexperimentshaveidentifiedseveralfactorsfacilitatingrescue,includinglarge populationsizesandpre-exposuretosub-lethaldosesofstress.However,theapplicabilityofthistheorytocomplex ecosystemsexposedtoconservation-relevantstressorshasnotbeentested.Totacklethisproblem,anew,large-scale aquaticmesocosmfacility(the'LargeExperimentalArrayofPonds',orLEAP)wasrecentlybuiltatMcGill'sGaultNature Reserve.LEAPcomprises96freshwaterpondmesocosmsthatcontainacomplexcommunityofplanktonicorganisms originatingfromanearbypristinelake.ThefirstexperimentatLEAPtestedwhether:1)diversephytoplankton communitiescouldberescuedfromsevereherbicidestress,and2)whethercommunityabundanceandpre-exposureto sub-lethaldosesofstresswouldfacilitaterescue.Wefocusedontheherbicideglyphosate(Roundup),themost widespreadpesticidebothlocallyandglobally.Wefirstimposeddivergentselectionregimesacrosscommunitiesby manipulatingpopulationsize(vianutrientenrichment)andexposuretosub-lethalstress(viapulseapplicationsof Roundup).Wethenexposedallcommunitiestoadoseofglyphosatepre-determinedtobelethaltoourcommunities,and notedwhichcommunitiespersisted.Wefoundthatpre-exposuretosub-lethalstresswasastrongpredictorof persistencewhilstcommunityabundancewasnot.Theseresultsexpandthescopeofevolutionaryrescuetheoryfrom laboratorymicrocosmstocomplexecosystems,andconfirmthatexposuretomoderatedegradationallowsdiverse communitiestowithstandfuture,moreseveredegradation. Keywords:Freshwater,Experiment,Pollution,Resilience,Phytoplankton,Disturbance. Remotecameranetworkstoscaleupecologicalinsightsandconservationapplicationssymposium TUESDAY09:15,ROOM:THEATRE Camera trap surveys to inform management decision making ANGELAFULLER,U.S.GEOLOGICALSURVEY,NEWYORKCOOPERATIVEFISHANDWILDLIFERESEARCHUNIT,CORNELLUNIVERSITY, [email protected] Remotecameratrapnetworksalthoughnowwidelyused,areunderutilizedasamethodtohelpinformmanagement decisionmaking.Adaptivemanagementisincreasinglybeingusedtoaidindecisionmakingwhenthedecisionisrepeated overtimeandthereexistssomeuncertainty.Ifthesourceofuncertaintyrelatestohowmanagementactionsinfluencethe system,multiplemodelsthatpredicttheoutcomeofmanagementactionscanbecompared.Understandingunknown systemresponsetomanagementactions(i.e.,learning)requiresmonitoringtheoutcomesandcomparingthemwith expectations-thisallowsforupdatingbeliefaboutthemodelthatbestpredictedsystemresponsetomanagement. Monitoringdatafromcameratrappingisarelativelyinexpensivemethodforlearninghowspeciesrespondtospecific managementactionswhentheobjectiveorstatevariableofinterestmayincludeaspectsofspeciesabundance,density, patchoccupancyorlocalpatchextinction.Indecisioncontextswithoutiterativedecisions(i.e.,one-offdecisions), structureddecisionmakingcanbeusedtoaidthedecision,usingcameratrapdatatodevelopamodelofsystemresponse tomanagementactions.Finally,Iprovideanexampleofusingcameratrappinginadecisionmakingcontextthatdidnot utilizeaformalprocesssuchasstructureddecisionmakingoradaptivemanagement,butwasinformativeaboutdecisions relatedtotrappingseasonsforfishers(Pekania[Martes]pennanti).Idiscussdesigningcameratrapsurveysand monitoringeffortsfocusedonconservationormanagementdecisionmaking. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY10:45,ROOM:COLWOOD Population genomics of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) introduced on Anticosti Island JÉRÉMIEFULLER,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL,[email protected] Introductionofaspeciesmayreducegeneticvariationandincreasegeneticdivergencebetweenpopulations. Understandingevolutionaryprocessesoccurringonthesepopulationsisthekeyfortheirsustainablemanagement. White-taileddeer(Odocoileusvirginianus)wereintroducedonAnticostiIsland(7,943squarekm,Québec,Canada)inthe late1890’s.Fromabout200deer,thepopulationincreasedrapidlytoreach>20deer/squarekm.Ourmaingoalwasto documenttheextentofgeneticdifferentiationandgeneticdiversitybetweenAnticostideer,itscontinentalsourceof originandaremotepopulation.Toachievethis,wegenotyped8,515filteredSNPsusingGenotype-By-Sequencing(GBS) from571individualsharvestedbysporthunting(445ontheislandand126fromtwocontinentalpopulations).Wefound noevidenceofreducedgeneticdiversityinAnticostideervsbothcontinentalpopulations(Ho=0.117-0.129).This indicatesnofoundereffectandgeneticdriftforthepopulationofAnticostiIsland.Minimalgeneticdriftaffectwasalso evidencedbytheweakgeneticdifferentiation(Fst=0.005)fromthecontinentalsourceoforigin.Nevertheless,aperfect populationassignmentsuccess(100%)revealedthatAnticostideerdivergedsufficientlytogeneticallyidentifyindividual deerwithhighaccuracy.Whilenoclearpatternofgeneticstructurewasdetectedontheislandpopulation,spatial autocorrelationanalysesrevealedthatthepopulationwasnottotallypanmictic.Finally,wealsoinvestigatedpossible genotype-phenotypeassociationsusinglong-termdataonbodyconditionofwhite-taileddeerontheisland.Wewill interpretanddiscussthoseresultsinthecontextofhuntingmanagement. Keywords:Genomicsequencing,Mammals,Geneticvariation,Populationgenetics,Hunting. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY15:30,ROOM:COLWOOD Immune gene functional heterozygosity affects survival in caribou MARIANNEGAGNON,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL,CARIBOUUNGAVA,CENTRED’ÉTUDESNORDIQUE,[email protected] GLENNYANNIC,UNIVERSITÉSAVOIEMONTBLANC;STEEVED.CÔTÉ,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL,CARIBOUUNGAVA,CENTRED’ÉTUDES NORDIQUE Themechanismsunderlyingtheassociationbetweengeneticdiversityandindividualperformancearepoorlyunderstood, withoftenconflictingresultsamongstudiesconductedatdifferentgeneticorfunctionalscales.Here,wewereinterested incontrastingtheeffectsofglobalandlocalgeneticdiversityonbodymassandsurvivalofmigratorycaribou(Rangifer tarandus)fromtworapidlydecliningherdsinnorthernQuebec-Labrador.Asameasureofglobalgeneticdiversity,we estimatedmeanheterozygosityusingSNPmarkersdistributedthroughoutthegenome.Wepredictedthatindividuals withhighermeanheterozygosityshouldhavehighermassandsurvivalbecausethismeasureisusuallynegatively associatedwithinbreeding.Inaddition,wefocusedonimmunegenevariability(i.e.,MHCclassIIDRBexon2;MHC-DRB), toassesstheeffectoflocalgeneticdiversityonperformancethroughimmunefunctions.Weconsideredfourdifferent measuresofdiversityrangingfromgenetictofunctionaldiversity.Contrarytoexpectation,wefoundanegative relationshipbetweensurvivalandfunctionaldiversityatMHC-DRB,i.e.,functionalhomozygotespresentedahigher survivalthanfunctionalheterozygotes,regardlessoftheallelescarried.Itsuggeststhatitmaybedisadvantageousto carrytwoallelesfromdifferentMHCfunctionalgroups,whilewedidnotdetecteffectsofclassicalheterozygosityonboth massandsurvival.Functionalhomozygositycouldenableindividualstorecognizemorespecificallyonetypeofpathogens insteadofrecognizinglessefficientlymultipletypes.Ourstudyhighlightstheimportanceofconsideringvariouslevelsof geneticdiversitywhenassessingitsrelationshipwithperformance. Keywords:Geneticvariation,Caribou,Inbreeding,Genomicsequencing,Scale,Individualsurvival. Beeecologyandbehaviour WEDNESDAY11:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Mass-flowering canola crops: Implications for prairie pollinators PAULGALPERN,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] SARAHA.JOHNSON,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;JENNL.RETZLAFF,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;D.CHANG,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;JOHN SWANN,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY Wereportfindingsthatpointtoanecologicaltrapcreatedbycanola,amass-floweringcropwidelygrownonthe CanadianPrairies.Wedemonstratethatbumblebeequeensareattractedtolocationswithahighercoverofcanola, wheretheyestablishcoloniesearlier.However,despitethisattraction,bumblebeeworkersattheselocationsareless abundantthanatcontrollocationswhenthecropisnolongerinbloom.Thispatternsuggestsmass-floweringcrops,such ascanola,havethepotentialtolureinmobilepollinatorslikebumblebees,butthatademographicbenefitofthis resourcepulsemaybeshort-lived.Inparticular,ourstudypointstothiseffectwhenthecropisgrownunderhighlyintensiveconditions.Thisworkisrelevantinlightofrecentclaimsthatmass-floweringcropsmaybufferagainstthe widely-reporteddeclineinwildinsectpollinators.Ourstudysuggeststhattheremaybelimitstothiseffect.The conservationimplicationsforbumblebeesandotherlarge,mobilebeespeciesarerelevantatacontinentalscale,given thevastregionandoverwhichcanolaiscultivatedinNorthAmerica(approx.85,000squarekmplantedin2015),andthe spatialintensitywithwhichcroppingtypicallyoccurs.Weexaminethespatialimplicationsofourfindings. Keywords:Pollinators,Bumblebees,Ecologicaltrap,Agriculture. Host-associatedmicrobes:fromprotectivemicrobestopathogenssymposium MONDAY08:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Thermal stress alters host-parasite interaction and drives parasite distribution in a marine invertebrate ALYSSA-LOISGEHMAN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] CHRISHARLEY,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Endosymbioticinteractionsarepervasivethroughoutourecosystems.Endosymbiontscanexacerbateorbufferhost responsetoenvironmentalconditions,andthushostinganendosymbiontcanaffectwheretheirhostssurviveandhow theirhostwillinteractwiththeircommunityandecosystem.Weexaminetheeffectofshell-boringendolithic cyanobacteriaonitsmusselhost,Mytiluscalifornianus.Wefoundthatcyanobacterialinfestationcausestheblackouter layeroftheshelltosloughofftheshell,thattheresultantlightgrayshellabsorbslesssolarenergy,andinfestedmussels remaincooleronsunnydays.Fieldmanipulationsofshellcolordemonstratedthatgrey-paintedmusselshadhigher survivalthenblack-paintedmussels.Furthermore,wefoundthatmusselshadahigherprobabilityofsurvivinghighheat stresseventsthemoretheirshellwaseroded.Thus,endolithiccyanobacteriacanactasmutualistsduringintenseheat events.Erosionratesacrosstheintertidalreflectthisadvantage,withhighererosionintheupperthenlowerintertidal. Thiscontextdependentmutualismmayenableinfestedmusselstosurvivehigherintheintertidalthanwouldotherwise bepossible,thusindirectlybenefitingthelargenumberoforganismsdependentonmusselbeds.Undestandingtheeffect ofthermalcontextontheoutcomeofhost-symbiontinteractionswillbeimportanttosuccessfullypredictingthe outcomesofglobalclimatechange. Metacommunitytheoryforreal-worldcommunities:theoreticalandempiricaladvancesfortrophicmetacommunities symposium TUESDAY09:00,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Cascading effects of spatial structure across trophic levels RACHELGERMAIN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] LAURAJOHNSON,UNIVERSITYOFWATERLOO;ANDREWMACDOUGALL,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;KARLCOTTENIE,UNIVERSITYOF GUELPH;ELIZABETHGILLIS,WESTERNUNIVERSITY Withinecologicalcommunities,speciesareimmenselydiverseintheirtraits,suchasbodysize,dispersalability,or behavior,thataffectmovementpatternsandpopulationdistributionsinlandscapes.Ifweconsiderthatspeciesinteract withoneanother,thenthespatialpatternsinonegroupofspeciescanhavecascadingeffectsonthespatialpatternsofan interactinggroupsofspecies.Wetestedthelinkbetweenriskavoidancebehaviorbysmallmammalsandemergent spatialpatternsintheassemblyoftall-grassprairiecommunities,usingexperimentalmanipulationsofpredationrisk, seedpalatabilityassays,andplantsurveys.Whatwefoundwasthatsmallmammalsarehighlyselectiveforagers,and concentratetheirforagingactivitiesinareasperceivedtobeoflowerpredationrisk,suchasareaswithdensecanopy cover.Intheseareasoflowriskandhighactivity,plantdiversitywasgreatlyreducedandhomogenizedtoonlycontain specieswithunpalatableseeds;areasofhighriskandlowactivitysupporteddiverseandspatiallyheterogeneousplant communities.Ourresultsdemonstrateaclearspatialcascadeamongaerialpredatorstosmallmammalgranivoresto plantcommunities,asmediatedbygranivorebehaviour. Complexcoevolution:understandinghowcoevolutionmayoperatedifferentlyacrossdiverseinteractiontypes, systems,andscalessymposium TUESDAY08:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Coevolution’s ups and downs: A long-term study of sex in a natural population AMANDAK.GIBSON,EMORYUNIVERSITY,[email protected] DANIELAVERGARA,UNIVERSITYOFCOLORADOBOULDER;LYNDADELPH,INDIANAUNIVERSITY;CURTLIVELY,INDIANAUNIVERSITY TheRedQueenhypothesisarguesthatcoevolvingparasitesmaintainsexualreproduction.Apriorfieldstudyofthe freshwatersnailPotamopyrgusantipodarumsupportedacentralpredictionoftheRedQueen:asexualsweresignificantly moreinfectedonaveragethansympatricsexualfemalesfrom2001to2005.Interestingly,weobservedtheoppositein fieldsamplestakenfromthesamesitesin2012to2016:asexualfemalesweresignificantlylessinfectedthansexual females.Wetookadvantageofthisperiodofasexualunder-infectiontotestanunusualpredictionoftheRedQueen: asexualswillbelessinfectedthansympatricsexualswhenasexualsarerare,consistentwithanabsenceofcommon clones.Weindeedfoundthatasexualsweresignificantlylessfrequentin2012-2016ascomparedto2001-2005.Withan experimentinsemi-naturalmescosms,wefoundthatunder-infectionconferredafitnessadvantageuponasexualrelative tosexualfemales.Accordingly,thefrequencyofasexualfemalesatourfieldsitesincreasedsignificantlyfrom2012to 2016.Thedegreeofincreasevariedbetweensites,withasexualfemalesreachingtheirhighestfrequenciesatsiteswhere coevolvingparasiteswererelativelyrare.Lastly,fielddatasuggestthatasexuallineagesareintheprocessofbecoming over-infectedastheyincreaseinfrequency.ConsistentwiththeRedQueen,ourlong-termfieldandexperimentaldata suggestthatcoevolutionarydynamicscanexplaintheevolutionofreproductivemodeinthisnaturalpopulation. Parasites,parasitoids,pathogens WEDNESDAY10:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Mosquito community ecology and malaria transmission AMBERGIGIHOI,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] NICOLEMIDEO,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Mosquitoesexistincommunitiesintheirnaturalhabitats,andthesecommunitiesvaryintheirabsolutesize,andspecies compositionandrichnessthroughtimeandspace.Mosquitospeciesdifferinlifehistory,behaviour,nichepreferences, therangeofparasitestheycarry,andvectorcompetence.Assuch,mosquitocommunitystructureisexpectedtobean importantdriverofvariationindiseasetransmissionpatternsacrosstheglobe.Surprisingly,therehasbeenlittle researchintotherelationshipbetweenmosquitodiversityanddiseasedynamics,andexistingdataandtheorytendto generatemixedresultsandpredictions.Toshedlightonthisimportantquestion,weanalyzedpublicly-availabledataon globalmosquitoandmalariaprevalencegatheredundertheMalariaAtlasProject.Thesesystematically-compileddatasets allowedforathoroughexaminationof1)theeffectsofthebiotic(e.g.presenceofnon-humanhosts)andabiotic(e.g.landusetypes)environmentonvariousindexesofmosquitodiversity,and2)theeffectofmosquitodiversityonMalariarisk. Resultsfrompreliminaryanalysesandimplicationstodiseasecontrolarediscussed. Keywords:Epidemiology,Mosquito,Landscapeconfiguration,Human,Interactions,Management. Speciesinteractionsinawarmingworldsymposium TUESDAY14:00,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Temperature dependency of consumptive dynamics and dispersal structure local and regional coexistence BENJAMINGILBERT,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] ZACHARYMOORE,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;TESSN.GRAINGER,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Inspatiallyheterogeneouslandscapes,theimpactsofwarmingdependonthetemperatureresponsesoflocalecological dynamicsaswellasthedirectandindirecteffectsoftemperatureondispersal.Inplant-herbivoresystems,asymmetric temperatureresponsesamongspeciescanshiftcompetitiveandconsumptivedynamicsand,inextremecases,leadto localextinctionofcompetingherbivoresortheirhostplant.Weusedcontrolledexperimentswithcommonmilkweedand twospecialistaphidspeciestotestindividualandpopulationlevelresponsestotemperature,andhowthesealteraphid competitivedynamicsandplantpersistence.Weincludethesedynamicsandaphiddispersalpropensityina metacommunitymodeltohypothesizefeedbacksbetweenlocalandregionaldynamicswithincreasingtemperature.Our resultsshowthatasymmetrictemperatureresponsesbetweenaphidspeciesandmilkweedplantsleadtocorrelated aphidresponsestowarmingintheabsenceofinterspecificcompetition,butoppositeresponseswhenacompeting specieswaspresent.Correlatedresponsesoccurreddespiteopposingimpactsonmilkweedplants–plantmortality increasedathighertemperaturesinthepresenceofthesuperioraphidcompetitor,butdecreasedwithtemperaturewhen theinferiorcompetitoroccurredalone.Species-specificdispersalledtoagreaterspreadofthesuperiorcompetitor, generatingapositivefeedbackbetweenlocalandregionaldynamicsthatdestabilizescoexistenceinthismetacommunity. Remotecameranetworkstoscaleupecologicalinsightsandconservationapplicationssymposium TUESDAY10:30,ROOM:THEATRE Flying cameras: Promises and pitfalls of drones for wildlife ecology SOPHIEGILBERT,UNIVERSITYOFIDAHO,[email protected] KATIECHRISTIE,ALASKASEALIFECENTER;CASEYBROWN,ALASKASEALIFECENTER;MIKEHATFIELD,UNIVERSITYOFALASKAFAIRBANKS; LEANNEHANSEN,USGEOLOGICALSURVEY Unmannedaircraftsystems(UAS)-alsocalledunmannedaerialvehicles(UAVs)ordrones-canactasflyingcameras,as wellasflyingplatformsforothersamplingsystems.Assuch,theyareanemergingtoolthatmayprovideasafer,more cost-effective,andquieteralternativetotraditionalresearchmethods.WereviewexampleswhereUAShavebeenusedto documentwildlifeabundance,behavior,andhabitat,andillustratethestrengthsandweaknessesofthistechnologywith twocasestudies.WesummarizeresearchonbehavioralresponsesofwildlifetoUAS,anddiscusstheneedtounderstand howrecreationalandcommercialapplicationsofthistechnologycoulddisturbcertainspecies.Currently,thewidespread implementationofUASbyscientistsislimitedbyflightrange,regulatoryframeworks,andalackofvalidation.UASare mosteffectivewhenusedtoexaminesmallerareasclosetotheirlaunchsites,whereasmannedaircraftarerecommended forsurveyinggreaterdistances.ThegrowingdemandforUASinresearchandindustryisdrivingrapidregulatoryand technologicalprogress,whichinturnwillmakethemmoreaccessibleandeffectiveasanalyticaltools. Pollinationsystems TUESDAY11:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Pollinator-dependent invasive species impacts on network structure and community traits SANDRAGILLESPIE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ELIZABETHELLE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Invasivespeciescanaffectpollinationnetworkcharacteristicsrelatedtostability.Forexample,asaninvasiveplant increasesindensity,thecommunitymightbecomemoregeneralized,asspecialistsmaynotpersistwhentheirpreferred partnerisoutcompetedbyaninvasive.Thiscouldleadtolowerasymmetry,butpotentiallyhigherresilience.Manyof thesepredictionsarebasedongeneralistinvadersbuttheymaychangeinunexpectedwaysiftheinvaderisspecialized. Furthermore,ecologicalunderstandingoftheimplicationsofchangesinnetworkstructurerequiresrelatingthepatterns backtospeciestraits.Weexaminetheimpactsofapollinatorspecialistinvasiveshruboncommunitystructureandplant andpollinatortraitswithinanendangeredecosystem.Wefindthathighdensityoftheinvasiveplantresultsinhigher modularity,andlowerresilienceoftheplantcommunity.Thetraitsofthepollinatorcommunityareinpartaffectedbythe pollinationrequirementsofthespecialistinvasive,whiletheplantcommunitymaybemoreresponsivetothelandscape inwhichthehabitatisembedded.Overall,ourresultssuggestthatinvasiveplantsmayhaveuniqueimpactson communitiesbasedontheirpollinationsyndrome. Keywords:Invasion,Plants,Pollination,Resilience. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY14:45,ROOM:SAANICH Reduced growth in wild juvenile sockeye salmon infected with sea lice SEANGODWIN,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] LARRYM.DILL,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;MARTINKRKOŠEK,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;MICHAELH.H.PRICE,SIMONFRASER UNIVERSITY;JOHND.REYNOLDS,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Marinepathogenscancauselargepopulationdeclinesandheavylossesforfisheriesandaquacultureglobally.Indisease ecology,sublethaleffectsofpathogensonhosttraitsarelargelyignoreddespitetheirpotentialimportancetohost survival.Bodygrowthisonesuchtraitthatmaybeinfluencedbypathogeninfectionandoftendeterminessurvival, especiallyformarinefish.Weassessedwhetherwildjuvenilesockeyesalmonthatarehighlyinfectedwithsealice-an ectoparasitewhoseabundanceonwildsalmoniselevatedinpartfromopen-netsalmonfarms-experiencereduced growthrelativetouninfectedindividuals.Weexaminedthedailygrowthringsinjuvenilesockeyeotolithsandfoundthat heavilyparasitizedfishdidindeedgrowmoreslowlyinthetendaysprecedingcapture.Largerfishalsogrewfasterthan smallerfish,andwerelessimpactedbylice.Ourresultshighlightthepotentialsurvivalconsequencesforsalmonfromthe sublethaleffectsofpathogens.Astheaquacultureindustryexpands,understandingtheimpactsofpathogensonwildfish -includingthosewhichoccurindirectly-willbecriticalforconservingvulnerablepopulations. Keywords:Marine,Salmon,Sea-lice,Parasitology,Fisheries,Aquaculture. ECOLOGICAL,EVOLUTIONARYANDENVIRONMENTALSYNTHESISINTHE21STCENTURYSYMPOSIUM TUESDAY14:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT The age of research synthesis: The contribution Quebec Centre for Biodiversity Science ANDREWGONZALEZ,MCGILLUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Researchsynthesishasemergedinrecentdecadesasaprimarymodeofadvancingknowledgeintheenvironmental sciences.Therenowexistsaworldwidenetworkofresearchcentresandinstitutesdedicatedtosupportingresearch syntheses.Quantitativesynthesisthroughmeta-analysisisthestatisticalanalysisofalargecollectionofresultsfrom individualstudiesforthepurposeofintegratingthefindings.Ifanalysedproperlythevariationinoutcomesamong relatedstudiesbecomesavaluablesourceofinformationthatcanestablishtheempiricalbasisforwidespreadecological phenomena,reinforcetheprimacyofatheory,signalthedemiseofanidea,oradjusttheactivitiesofafieldofresearchfor yearsintothefuture.But,theycanalsogeneratedebateandmanyresearchershavesignaledtheconsequencesofpoorly conductedmeta-analysis.InthistalkIwillprovideexamplesofsynthesisresearchsupportedbytheQuebecCentrefor BiodiversityScience.Examplesincludeclimatechangeimpacts,rapidevolution,emergingdiseases,andlocalbiodiversity change.Researchsyntheseshavethepowertoinfluencepolicyandguidetheinvestmentoffunding.Thefuturewilllikely seetheglobalnetworkofsynthesiscentresworkingtogethertoharnesstheextraordinarycollectivepowersofsynthesis ofthousandsofscientistsusingopendataandadvancedecoinformatics. Usingexperimentalevolutiontorevealtheeco-evolutionaryimpactsofglobalchangesymposium WEDNESDAY08:00,ROOM:THEATRE Evolutionary rescue comes of age: An account of the growth in our understanding through theory and experiments ANDREWGONZALEZ,MCGILLUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Ourunderstandingofevolutionaryrescuehasgrownrapidlyoverthelastdecade.InthistalkIwilltellthestoryofthis progress.Withfewexceptions,experimentsshowthatevolutioncanallowpopulationstoadaptandpersistinahighly stressfulenvironment.Earlyexperimentswithevolvinglaboratorypopulationsofbacteria(E.coli,P.fluorescens),and single-celledeukaryotes(e.g.Saccharomycescerevisiae,Chlamydomonas)haveconfirmedpredictionsofearlytheory, suchastheimportanceofpopulationsize,dispersalandpre-exposuretostress.Theseexperimentsalsosignificantly expandedthescopeofthetheoryandsubsequentlyspurrednewtheorythataddedimportantfeaturessuchasstagestructure,phenotypicplasticityandinterspecificinteractionstothedomainofapplicationofevolutionaryrescue. Experimentswithmulticellularorganisms,suchasinsects(Triboliumcastaneum)crustacea(Daphniapulex)andaquatic plants(e.g.duckweed),suggestevolutionaryrescueispossibleinlonger-livedpopulationswithin5-50generations.Most recentlytheconceptofcommunityevolutionaryrescuehasbeendevelopedandtestedinthelabwithmetacommunities ofmicrobesandinthefieldandrealisticfreshwatercommunitiesofplankton.Cruciallyexperimentshavefoundthat evolutionaryrescueispossibleacrossarangeofstressors,includingsalt,antibiotics,heavymetals,andpesticides.The nextphaseinevolutionaryrescueresearchwillfocusontherescueofecosystemprocesses,trophicstructureandthe developmentofmodelsthatpredictthetimecourseofrapidevolutioninthelabandfield.Thisisanexcitingtimeinthe developmentofappliedevolutionaryecology. Keywords:Evolution,Evolutionaryrescue,Experiment,Bacteria. Effectsofclimatechange TUESDAY16:00,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Spatial and temporal patterns of bobcat and lynx distributions in British Columbia TJGOOLIAFF,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN,[email protected] KARENE.HODGES,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN Climatechangeiscausingmanyspeciestoshifttheirrangesnorthward.Bobcats(Lynxrufus)andCanadalynx(Lynx canadensis)mightbeamongthesespeciessincetheirdistributionsaretiedtosnow.Lynxhavelonglegsandsnowshoelikepawsmakingthemwelladaptedfordeepsnow.Incontrast,bobcatsareheavier,havesmallfeet,andsinkintothe snow.WhilelynxarefoundthroughouttheinteriorofBritishColumbia(BC),bobcatshavebeenrestrictedtosouthernBC. However,climatechangehasledtoearlierspringsandlowersnowlevels.Asaresult,wespeculatedthatbobcatsmight beexpandingtheirrangenorthwardwhilelynxmightbecontractingtheirrange.Ourobjectivesweretomapthecurrent provincialdistributionofeachspecies,andtodeterminewhethereachspecieshasshifteditsrangeoverthepast80years. Todeterminetheircurrentdistributionswecollectedphotographsofbothspeciessubmittedbythepublicfrom throughouttheprovince.Intotal4,397photographswerecollectedcomprising1,621separatedetections.Themost northernbobcatsweredetectedinPrinceGeorgeandHouston.Todeterminewhethereachspecieshasshifteditsrange, weexaminedhistoricharvestrecords.Wealsodistributedtrappersurveystodeterminewhethertrappershavenoticed anyrangeshifts.Ouranalysissuggestsrangeshavenotchangedmuchinthelast80years.Despiteachangingclimatethat isthoughttofavourbobcatsoverlynx,wefoundnoevidencethattherangeofeitherspecieshasshiftedinBC. Keywords:Mammals,Speciesdistribution,Climatechange,Historicalrecords,Photographs. Biodiversity TUESDAY08:30,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Measuring diversity using entropy (Shannon), covariance (Simpson), and independence (linkage disequilibrium) ROOTGORELICK,CARLETONUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Iintroducethreewaystoquantifyβ-diversityanditseviltwinsegregation,akadivisionoflabour:(1)Shannon’sindex usingentropy,(2)Simpson’sindexusingcovariances,and(3)linkagedisequilibriumusingdeviationsfromindependence. Nobodyhaspreviouslyusedlinkagedisequilibriumtoquantifyβ-diversity.Allthreemethodsconceptuallymeasurethe sameaspectsofaprobability/abundancematrix:Howmuchdoesknowledgeofwhichrowofthematrixyourdataisfrom indicateaboutthelikelihoodofbeinginanyspecificcolumnofthatmatrix,andviceversa.Forinstance,givenamatrixof speciesabundancesinseveralgeographicalpatches(provinces),howmuchdoesidentificationofaspecificspecies indicateaboutwhichgeographicalpatchyouarelikelyin?Viceversa,howwellcanyoupredictwhichspeciesyouwill encounteronceyouknowwhichgeographicpatchyouarein?Lackofdiversitymakesiteasiertopredict,butIamunsure whichofthethreewaysofquantifyingdiversityisbest. Keywords:Methods,Statistics,Betadiversity,Landscapeconfiguration. ConsequencesofRapidEcologicalChangeinMountainEcosystemsSymposium TUESDAY08:30,ROOM:SIDNEY Spatial genetic structure of Alberta’s bighorn sheep: Population resilience and implications for harvest management JAMIEGORRELL,VANCOUVERISLANDUNIVERSITY,[email protected] JEFFKNETEMAN,MINISTRYOFENVIRONMENTANDPARKS,GOVERNMENTOFALBERTA;DAVIDHIK,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;DAVID COLTMAN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Bighornsheep(Oviscanadensis)areaniconicspeciesoftheCanadianRockyMountains.Despitetheirecological,cultural andeconomicimportanceasatrophyspecies,manypopulationsshowsignsofdeclineandweknowlittleabouttheir geneticcontinuityandgeneflowpatterns,orhowresilientpopulationsmaybetolocaldisturbancesandriskof extirpation.Forexample,theLuscar-GreggmineinCadominissuspectedofdrawingsheepfromsurrounding populations,actingasanecologicaltrap.WeinvestigatedthespatialgeneticstructureofbighornsheepinAlbertawith thepurposeofidentifyingpotentialbarrierstogeneflow.Aftergenotypingover1,500sheepfromacross50locationswe foundthatthemajorityofgeneticvariationwasexplainedbygeographicdistanceacross700kmofmountainranges.We alsodeterminedthatmajorriversystemsimpedegeneflow,butdidnotdetectevidenceofsex-specificstructure.The Luscar-Greggminepopulationwasgeneticallysimilartosurroundingpopulationsandshowedasimilardegreeof admixture.Thissuggeststhatitcouldactasalocalecologicalsink,butdoesnotlikelydrawgeneticallydistinctmigrants frommoredistantpopulations.Populationsweremoderatelystructured(GlobalFST=0.09)suggestingregionalgeneflow andconnectivitymodifiedbydistanceandmajorhabitatfeatures.Population-levelheterozygosityfollowedapredictable patterndecliningalongtheaxisofhistoricalrecolonizationfromsouthtonorthandwefoundnoevidenceforlocally depauperatepopulations. StudentSymposium MONDAY13:30,ROOM:THEATRE Multi-scale responses to warming in an experimental metacommunity TESSGRAINGER,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] BENJAMINGILBERT,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Inmetacommunities,diversityistheproductoflocalspeciesinteractionsandregionaldispersalbetweenhabitatpatches. Althoughwarmingisknowntoaffectbothoftheseprocesses,thecombinedimpactsofwarmingatthesetwo metacommunityscalesremainslargelyunknown.Weconstructedexperimentalmetacommunitiesconsistingofenclosed milkweedpatchesseededwithfivemilkweedspecialistinsectspeciesandtreatedwithtwolevelsofwarming(unwarmed andwarmed)andthreelevelsofconnectivity(isolated,lowconnectivity,highconnectivity).Wepredictedthatifplant resourceswerelimited,warmingwouldaccelerateresourcedrawdown,causinglocalinsectdeclinesandincreasing dispersalandtheimportanceofconnectivitytoneighbouringpatchesforinsectpersistence.Conversely,givenabundant resources,warmingcouldhavepositivelocaleffectsoninsectsandtheriskoftraversingcorridorscouldoutweighthe benefitsofadditionalresources.Wefoundsupportforthelatterscenario.Weakresourcedrawdownandmostlypositive insect-insectassociationsinoursystemwereunaffectedbywarming,somostinsectspeciesdidbetterlocallyinwarmed conditionsandhaddispersalresponsesthatwereunchangedorindirectlyaffectedbywarming.Regionally,dispersal acrossthematrixposedaspecies-specificriskthatledtodeclinesintwospeciesinconnectedmetacommunities. Combined,thiscausedaninteractiveeffectofwarmingandconnectivityondiversityattheregionalscale,withunwarmed metacommunitieswithlowconnectivityincurringthemostrapiddeclinesindiversity.Thisstudydemonstratesthe importanceofintegratingthecomplexoutcomesofspeciesinteractionsandspatialstructureinunderstanding communityresponsetoclimatechange. Keywords:Insects,Scale,Interactions,Dispersal,Connectivity,Thermaltolerance. Metacommunitytheoryforreal-worldcommunities:theoreticalandempiricaladvancesfortrophicmetacommunities symposium TUESDAY08:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Simple rules for complex spatial food web dynamics DOMINIQUEGRAVEL,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,[email protected] Thesuccessoftheoriginalmetacommunityframeworkstandsonitssimplicityandacleardefinitionofasetofcore assemblyprocesses.Itishoweverlimitedtocompetitiveinteractions,perhapsbecauseofthecomplexityofspatialfood webs,whichhaveamuchmorediversesetofinteractionssuchasapparentandexploitativecompetition,intra-guild predation,omnivoryandcannibalism.Spatialfoodwebs,andmoregenerallyecologicalnetworks,makeupamongthe mostcomplexecologicalsystemsbecausetheyincorporatebothspatialstructuresandbioticinteractionsacrossmore thanonefunctionalcompartment.Recenttheoreticaldevelopmentsinthefieldsuggestnonethelessthattheremightbea setofcoremechanismsdrivingfoodwebdynamicsattheregionalscale.Herewebuildonthesimpleassumptionthat predatorsrequirepreytocolonizelocationsandpersistandproposeatrophicmetacommunitytheory.Amajor consequenceofthisphenomenonisthatthefractionofoccupiedpatchesreducesaswemoveupinthefoodchain.This fundamentalconstrainthasseveralimplicationsfornetworkorganizationandpromotestheemergenceofdiverse networkstructures,atbothlocalandregionalscales.Extensionsofthetheoryofislandbiogeographyhasallowedto proposenovelexplanationsforthescalingoffoodwebstructurewithareaandisolation,improvingsignificantlyour abilitytopredicttheconsequencesofhabitatdestruction.Further,byintroducingallometricconstraintsoncolonization andextinctiondynamicsandonfoodwebstructure,wederivepredictionsforthescalingofbodysizedistribution.In conclusion,wefindthatsimplemechanismsofspatialfoodwebdynamicsrevealamuchwiderrangeoftestable predictionsandapplicationsthantheoriginalmetacommunityframework. Invasivespecies TUESDAY16:15,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Using geographically weighted logistic regression to evaluate invasive species presence in the Adirondack Park Region, USA JELENAGRBIC,RYERSONUNIVERSITY,[email protected] RICHARDSHAKER,RYERSONUNIVERSITY InvasivespeciesareasignificantthreattotheecosystemandeconomyofNewYork(NY),USA.Theytakeadvantageof foreignenvironmentslackingtheirnaturalpredatorstooutcompetenativespeciesforfoodandresources.Thisdisrupts thebalanceoftheecosystemandcancausedirectharmtohumanfoodsupply,indigenouswildlife,andthebuilt environment.Totackletheinvasivespeciesthreat,theAdirondackParkInvasivePlantProgram(APIPP)monitorsand runseradicationprogramsonterrestrialandaquaticinvasivespecies(AIS)foundthroughouttheAdirondackregionof NY.ThisstudywillutilizedatafromAPIPPontheAISthathavebeenidentifiedinAdirondacklakesin2015.Theanalysis willmodeltheprobabilityofinvasionoccurringwithrespecttokeyvariablesincluding:physicallakecharacteristics,land covercomposition,class,localdiversity,lakeaccesstypeanddistancestomajorhighwayexits,invadedlakes,andurban centers.ThespecificAISthatwillbeconsideredareEurasianwatermilfoil,spinywaterflea,andcurlyleafpondweed.A geographicallyweightedlogisticregressionwillbeappliedtoexaminethepresence/absenceofAIS.Thismethodoffers twosalientadvantagesovermultivariatelinearregression.Firstly,itenablestheconsiderationofpredictorsthatchange withspatiallocation.Secondly,itutilizesabinaryresponsevariable,whichalignswellwiththebinarypresence/absence determinationofthisstudy.Itisexpectedthatthoselakesthatareeasiertoaccessandclosertolakesthatarealready invadedhavehigheroddsofbeinginvaded. Keywords:Modeling,Invasion,Monitoring,Management,Freshwater,Conservationpractitioners. Pollution TUESDAY10:45,ROOM:SAANICH Oil sands and the marine environment: Current knowledge and future challenges STEPHANIEJ.GREEN,STANFORDUNIVERSITY,OREGONSTATEUNIVERSITY,[email protected] KYLEDEMES,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;MICHAELARBEIDER,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;WENDYJ.PALEN,SIMONFRASER UNIVERSITY;ANNEK.SALOMON,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;THOMASD.SISK,NORTHERNARIZONAUNIVERSITY;MAUREENE.RYAN, SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY TheenvironmentalconsequencesofbitumenextractionfromoilsandsdepositsareatthecenterofNorthAmerican naturalresourceandenergypolicydebate,yetimpactsonoceanenvironmentshavereceivedlittleattention.Usinga quantitativeframework,weidentifyknowledgegapsandresearchneedsrelatedtotheeffectsofoilsandsdevelopment onmarinebiota.Fifteensourcesofstressanddisturbance-varyinggreatlyinspatialandtemporalscale-aregenerated viatwopathways:(1)thecoastalstorageandoceanictransportofbitumenproducts,and(2)thecontributionofindustryderivedgreenhousegasestoclimatechangeintheocean.Ofhighestresearchpriorityarethefate,behavior,andbiological effectsofbitumenintheocean.Bycontrast,climate-changeimpactsarescientificallywellestablishedbutnotconsidered inkeyregulatoryprocesses.Moststressorsco-occurandaregeneratedbyotherindustries,yetcumulativeeffectsareso farunaccountedforindecisionmakingassociatedwithnewprojects.Oursynthesishighlightspriorityresearchneededto informfutureenergydevelopmentdecisions,andopportunitiesforpolicyprocessestoacknowledgethefullscopeof potentialandrealizedenvironmentalconsequences. Keywords:Oilandgas,Marine,Scale,Disturbance,Cumulativeeffects. Policyandplanning MONDAY14:15,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Phylogenetic patterns of amphibian community disassembly from concurrent landuse change and climate DANGREENBERG,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ARNEO.MOOERS,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;WENDYJ.PALEN,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Astheburgeoninghumanpopulationcontinuestogrow,therewillbeanincreasedincursionofanthropogenicactivities intonaturallandscapes.Theeffectsofhumanmodificationsofnaturalhabitatsonbiodiversityarewelldocumented,asin mostcasesspeciesarelostinlinewiththedegreeofmodificationrelativetoasite'snaturalstate.Thereisalsosome indicationthatclimatemayinteractsynergisticallywithland-usechange,wherebythepaceofbiodiversitylossfrom humandevelopmentisgreaterinwarmerpartsoftheworld.Whatisstillunknownistheextenttowhichanthropogenic activityactsasanextinctionfilter,suchthatacertainsubsetofspeciesaredisproportionatelyaffectedbydevelopment. Whetherclimatecanalsomodifythedegreeofextinctionselectivitycausedbyanthropogeniclandusechangeisalso unknown.Ifclimateandland-usechangehavesynergisticeffectsonextinctionselectivity,thenfuturebiological communitieslivinginhumandominatedlandscapesmaynotonlybeincreasinglydepauperate,butalsoincreasingly homogenized.Here,weexamineamphibianassemblagesfromnaturalandhuman-modifiedsitescompiledfrom103 studiesand~1200speciesacrosstheglobe,usingpatternsofphylogeneticcommunitydisassemblyfromdeforestationto testtheextenttowhichland-usedevelopmentactsasanextinctionfilter.Wefurthertestwhetherthedegreeofextinction selectivityismodifiedbythebroad-scaleclimateofsites,suchthathumanmodificationofhotteranddriersitesleadto morephylogeneticallyhomogenizedassemblages.Measuringthepaceandpatternsofbiodiversitylosswillbecriticalto understand,andabate,futureextinctions. Keywords:Amphibians,Landusechange,Disturbance,Thermaltolerance,Speciesdistribution. Forestecology TUESDAY15:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Determining abundance of forage lichens for boreal woodland caribou in a fireprone region of the Boreal Shield Ecozone RUTHJ.GREUEL,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN,[email protected] JILLF.JOHNSTONE,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN;PHILIPD.MCLOUGHLIN,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN Theavailabilityofforagelichenisakeycomponentofthehabitatofwoodlandcaribou(Rangifertaranduscaribou),a threatenedspeciesoftheCanadianborealforest.Groundlichensareanimportantsourceofwinterfoodforwoodland caribou;however,theygrowveryslowlyanddonotrecoverquicklyafterfire.Ourstudyarea,whichoccupiesalmost 200,000squarekmofcaribouhabitatintheborealshieldecozoneofSaskatchewan,experiencessomeofthehighestfire frequenciesinCanadawithanaturalfirecycleofapproximately100years.Lichenabundanceislargelyunknown, althoughdataonlichensuccessioninotherareassuggestthatforagespeciesdonotbegintoregrowuntil30yearspostfire.Consideringthatapproximately55%ofthisareahasburnedinthepast40years,wepredictthattherewillbelow quantitiesofforagelichen.This,inturn,maylimithabitatqualityforcaribou.Overthepast3yearswehavesurveyed lichenabundanceandforestcharacteristicsin312sitesacrossnorthernSaskatchewantodeterminewhathabitatsand standagesarelikelytosupportadequatecaribouforage.Thispresentationwillincludethemodellingapproachesweare usingtodeterminelichenavailabilityinnorthernSaskatchewan.Preliminaryresultssuggestthatlichenabundanceis patchyandrelatedtostandageandcanopycover.Incorporatinglichenabundanceintocaribouhabitatmodelsisvitalto supportingconservationeffortsandimprovingmanagement,especiallyinareasofhighfireactivity. Keywords:Lichen,Caribou,Foraging,Disturbance,Fire,Spatialmodel,Habitatselection. Beeecologyandbehaviour WEDNESDAY11:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Past floral resources as a predictor of present bee visits to crops JESSICAGUEZEN,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA,[email protected] JESSICAFORREST,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA Relyingonnativeinsectsforpollinationserviceshasbecomeanecessityastheglobaldemandforcropsdependenton insectpollinationincreases.Nativebeescanenhancecroppollinationbeyondwhatispossiblebyhoneybeesalone,but requirestableandconsistentfloralresourcesforestablishmentandpersistence.Myresearchexaminestherelationship betweenbeeabundanceandfloralresourcesoveraseasonwithinagroecosystems.Ifpastfloralresourcesinalandscape affectestablishmentandpersistenceofbees,thenumberofbeevisitstoacropinagiventime-periodshouldbeapositive functionoffloraldensityinthesurroundingareainprevioustime-periods.Totestthishypothesis,Isurveyedbeevisits andfloralresourceswithina750-meterradiusat28agriculturalsitesinOntarioandQuebecoveroneseason.Examining preliminarydatafromfloralresourcesinforagecropsandpastures,forests,andsemi-naturalhabitat,andbeevisitsin squashfields,Ifoundthatpastfloralresourcesdidnothaveasignificanteffectonthenumberofbumblebeeorhoneybee visitstosquash;however,floralresourcesfromthebeginningoftheseasonbetterpredictedbeeabundanceinsquash fieldsthandidfloralresourcesfromonemonthprevious.Understandinghownativebeesareinfluencedbylandscape structureandfloralresourcescanallowfordevelopmentofagriculturallandplanningstrategiesthatcouldenhancethe functionalroleofnativebeesascroppollinatorsaswellasconservespeciesthatarethreatenedbyagricultural intensification. Keywords:Pollinators,Landusechange,Interactions,Foraging. Forestecology WEDNESDAY08:45,ROOM:WCOAST Arctic willow: Probing polar deserts for pockets of nutrients? AMANDAL.GUY,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN,[email protected] SARAHP.HARDY,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN;STEVEND.MAMET,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN;MITSUAKIOTA,UNIVERSITYOF SASKATCHEWAN;ERICG.LAMB,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN;STEVEND.SICILIANO,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN Uniqueinteractionsbetweenwater,soilandvegetationinhigharcticpolardesertscreatenutrient-richpatches(diapirs) deepindesertssoils.Thesediapirsformfromwaterandnutrientsaccumulatingabovethepermafrostandultimately risingintotheuppersoilhorizonsthroughcryoturbatedconvectivelandforms(frostboils).Wehypothesizedthatthe dominantshrubspecies,Salixarctica(Arcticwillow),wasactivelyforagingforandaccessingnutrientsfromthisunique nutrientsourceinthecold,dryandnutrientlimitingpolardesertsoils.Todetermineifdiapirsprovideanenhanced sourceofplant-availableNforS.arctica,wecharacterizedthenaturalabundancesignatureofd15Ninthesoil,andS. arcticaroot,stem,andleafacross24diapirandnon-diapirfrostboilsinaHighArcticgraniticsemi-desert.Whendiapir horizonswereavailable,S.arcticaincreaseditssubsurface(i.e.,diapir)Nuptakeandplantrootbiomassdoubledwithindiapir.Plantuptakeofenriched15Ninjectedintoorganicrichsoilpatcheswas2.5foldgreaterindiapirthaninnondiapirfrostboil.S.arctica%coverwasoftenhigher(meanof7.3±1.0SE)ondiapiricfrostboils,comparedtofrostboils withoutdiapirs(4.4±0.7),potentiallyreflectingthe20%highernitrogenavailableinthesubsurfaceofafrostboil containingadiapir.SelectiveNacquisitionfromdiapirssoilsmaybeonemechanismbywhichsoil-waterinteractions enhanceArcticshrubgrowth. Keywords:Plants,Arctic,Nutrientuptake,Permafrost. Metacommunitytheoryforreal-worldcommunities:theoreticalandempiricaladvancesfortrophicmetacommunities symposium TUESDAY08:15,ROOM:OAKBAY2 A general framework for trophic metacommunity ecology LAURAMELISSAGUZMAN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] PATRICKTHOMPSON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;RACHELGERMAIN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;COREENFORBES, UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;DIANESRIVASTAVA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;MARYO'CONNOR,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISH COLUMBIA Themaingoaloftrophicmetacommunitytheoryistodeterminehowspatialdynamicsalterthestability,persistence,and complexityoffoodwebsatdifferentspatialscales.However,trophicmetacommunitytheoryissimplisticinkeywaysthat preventsusfromapplyingcurrenttheorytonaturalcommunities.Metacommunitytheoryusesfourparadigmsthat representmechanismsofcoexistenceincompetitivecommunitiesanditviewstraitssuchasdispersalascommunitywidetraits.Weproposeanewmetacommunityframeworkthat:i)breaksdownthebarrierbetweenthefourtraditional metacommunityparadigms,byacknowledgingthatalltypesofmetacommunitydynamicscanoperateinconcert,varying instrengthacrossspaceandbetweenspecies,andii)allowsvariabilityoftraitsbetweentrophiclevels.Wehighlightkey traitsthatareimportantfortrophicmetacommunities.Foranygivenspeciesinafoodweb,populationdynamicsarethe resultinginteractionbetweentheenvironmentaltolerance,theirdispersal,theirspeciesinteractionsanddemographic stochasticity.Whileallofprocessaretrophicdependent,theyresultindifferencesintheutilizationofspaceateach trophiclevel.Forexample,inaquaticfoodwebswecanexpectthatpredatorsforageoverlargerspatialextents,while simultaneouslydispersingfurther.Therefore,wecanusethesetraitgradientstocharacterizefoodwebs.Usingthis frameworkwecantesttheroleofsinkpopulationsonweakinteractionsandthereforethestabilityandcomplexityof spatialfoodwebs.Ourframeworkallowsustobridgethegapbetweenrealfoodwebsandtrophicmetacommunity theory. Keywords:Trophicinteraction,Foodweb,Scale,Methods,Interactions. Foraging TUESDAY11:00,ROOM:SIDNEY Behaviour of animals in wild populations within urban vs suburban habitats JESSEHACKER,DEPAULUNIVERSITY,[email protected] LYDIAHOPPER,LINCOLNPARKZOO;SETHMAGLE,LINCOLNPARKZOO;JALENELAMONTAGNE,DEPAULUNIVERSITY Urbanizationisassociatedwithfragmentedhabitats,human-associatedfoodsources,noise,andanincreaseinnovel objects.Despitethis,somespeciesarehighlyadaptedtourbanareas.Weinvestigatedneophobia,whetheranimal behaviouraroundanovelobjectandrelativelevelsofexploratorybehaviour,isrelatedtolivinginurbanvssuburban environments.WoodenboxescontainingfoodrewardswereplacedinfiveurbanareaswithinChicago,ILandfive exurbanareasoutsidethecity.Activityatthesesiteswasmonitoredforfourweeks:twoweekswithfoodabsentfromthe boxes’surface,followedbytwoweekswithfoodpresent,usingamotion-triggeredcamera,taking1-mindurationvideos. Atotalof1,624videosweretakeninexurbansitesand1,603videosinurbansites.Videofootagewasanalyzedforspecies identification,city,numberofanimalspresent,andtimespentateachlocation.Animalbehaviourwasmonitoredonand aroundeachbox.Overall,15speciesinteractedwiththeboxes,themostcommonbeingeasterngraysquirrels(Sciurus carolinensis)andraccoons(Procyonlotor).Interactionswiththeboxesincreasedinfrequencyanddurationwhenfood wasavailable.Patternsinbehaviouraldatawillbediscussedintermsofhabitattypes.Understandinghowanimalsreact tothepresenceofanovelobjectcaninformourunderstandingofwhatmakessomespeciessuccessfulinhighlyurban areas. Keywords:Behaviourecology,Urbanecology,Neophobia,Foraging. Conservationchallengesassociatedwithaquaticsoundscapessymposium MONDAY13:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Marine mammal vocalizations in a changing Arctic soundscape: Impacts of decreased sea ice and increased ship traffic WILLIAMD.HALLIDAY,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA,[email protected] STEPHENINSLEY,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA;XAVIERMOUY,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA;TYLERDEJON, WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA WeusepassiveacousticmonitoringtodetermineseasonalpatternsinmarinemammalvocalizationsnearSachsHarbour, NorthwestTerritories,andexamineenvironmentalcorrelatesrelatedtothetimingofvocalizations.Wethenexamine howdecreasedseaiceandincreasedshiptrafficwillimpacttheacousticenvironmentforthesemarinemammals. Lifehistories:reproduction,senescence TUESDAY10:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Variation in the timing and magnitude of peak reproductive effort affects rate of senescence ANNIHÄMÄLÄINEN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] Individualsfacetrade-offsregardingenergyallocationintoself-maintenanceandreproduction,whichdictates reproductiveinvestmentamongreproductiveopportunities.Reproductiveinvestmentisinfluencedbytheindividual's statesuchastheirage,and/ortheenvironment.Influctuatingenvironments,adjustmentsininvestmentcreate heterogeneityintheagetrajectoriesofreproductionwhensuchadjustmentsfollowchangesinenvironmentalconditions, affectingtheageatwhichreproductiveperformancepeaks,aswellasthemagnitudeofreproductiveeffortatthispeak. Importantly,thepeakoftheagetrajectoryiscloselyassociatedwiththeslopessurroundingit:thetimingandnotheight ofthehighestpointoftheindividual'sreproductiveperformancecurveiscloselyassociatedwiththerateofdecline followingthepeak,i.e.reproductivesenescence.However,insteadofassessingindividualageprofiles,theonsetof senescenceisoftenconsideredtobetheageatwhichthespeciesaveragereproductiveoutputbeginstodecline.This approachmis-estimatesratesofsenescenceforalargepartofthepopulationthatmaximizetheireffortatadifferentage withimplicationsforunderstandingmicroevolutionaryprocessescreatingvariationinsenescence.Wetestedtheroleof fluctuatingenvironmentalconditionsincreatingvariationinage-specificoffspringproductionofredsquirrels,focusing onthetimingandmagnitudeofindividualmaximumreproductiveoutput.Wefindthatvariationintheonsetof senescenceislargelydeterminedbyadjustmentsinreproductiveefforttoresourcepulses,andtherateofsenescenceis stronglyinfluencedbyboththemagnitudeofthemaximumreproductiveinvestmentaswellastheageatwhichitoccurs. Keywords:Reproduction,Lifehistory,Senescence,Evolution,Phenology. Biodiversity TUESDAY10:45,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Competing taxa suppress each other’s diversity ABDELHALLOWAY,UNIVERSITYOFILLINOIS,MOFFITTCANCERCENTER,[email protected] JOELS.BROWN,UNIVERSITYOFILLINOIS;CHRISTOPHERJ.WHELAN,UNIVERSITYOFILLINOIS Competition,alongwithpredationandmutualism,influencesthedistribution,origination,andextinctionofspecies. Thoughviewedasmostintensebetweencloselyrelatedspecies,moredistantly-relatedtaxamaycompetewithoften profoundimpactsonthecompetingspeciesdistributionandabundance.Thisisbecausethekeyadaptationsand evolutionarytechnologiesthatdefineataxon/cladestronglyaffectsitsfundamentalandultimatelyitsrealizedniche. Hereweproposethatcompetitionamongentiretaxaaphenomenonwecallmacrocompetitionmayalsosuppresseach taxonsdiversityinadditiontodistributionandabundance.Byoccupyingandthusdenyingtoothertaxaregionsofthe nichespace,competingtaxamaypreventorconstraintheother'sadaptiveradiationandoverallspeciesrichness.Using evolutionarygametheory,weseehowcompetingtaxamayreduceeachother'spotentialdiversificationwhilestill increasingoverallspeciesrichnessamongalltaxa.Factorslikechangesingrowthrateshouldallowforinvasionby competingtaxa,whilechangesincarryingcapacityshouldaffectoveralldiversity.Wepresentananalysisofconvergent nectarivorefamilieshummingbirds(Trochilidae)andhawkmoths(Sphingidae)thatprovidesempiricalevidencefor macrocompetition.Eachfamilysegregatesgeographicallyalongclimaticvariablesthatreflectthestrengthofeachtaxons evolutionarytechnology.Wesuggestthatmacrocompetitionmaycontributetoglobalpatternsofdiversity,distribution, andabundanceoftheworld’sbiota. Keywords:Birds,Insects,Competition,Biodiversity,Speciesdistribution,Evolutionarygametheory. Communityecology TUESDAY14:45,ROOM:WCOAST Harnessing ecological networks to understand anticancer immunity in the tumor microenvironment PHINEASHAMILTON,BCCANCERAGENCY,[email protected] BRADH.NELSON,BCCANCERAGENCY,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Tumorsarenothomogenousentities,butratherharbordiversepopulationsoftumorcells,supportivestromalcells,and tumor-infiltratingimmunecells(TIL)thatinteractinthetumormicroenvironment.TheseTILcanhaveimportantrolesin limitingandeliminatingcancer,andformthebasisofanewgenerationofpotentimmunotherapiesforcancer.Theyare alsocomplexcommunitiesofdiverseimmunecelltypes,andthoughtheantitumoreffectsofcertainTILcomponentsare well-characterized,theemergentpropertiesofTILcommunitiesthatdriveantitumorimmunityarelargelyunclear.Here, wemodelTILcommunitiesacrossdiversecancersusingnetworkapproachesdrawnfromacommunityecology framework,andassociatethesenetworkswithenvironmentalandgenomiccharacteristicsoftheTME.Wefirstusein silicoapproachestoestimatetheabundanceofindividualTILcomponentsfromthousandsoftumortranscriptomes.We thenconstructTILco-occurrencenetworkstoidentifyTILcommunitymodulesthatrecurrentlyassemblewithinand acrosscancers,andidentifypotentialkeystoneTILthatformnetworkhubs.WelinkTILnetworkpropertiestopatient outcomes,andfindthatinmanycasesthesepropertieshavethepotentialtopredictoutcomessubstantiallybetterthan measuresbasedonothersingleaspectsoftheTILcommunity.Collectively,networkapproachespromisetorevealcritical axesofinteractioninTILcommunitiesthatmaybetherapeuticallytargetabletoimprovepatientoutcomesandinformthe nextgenerationofcancerimmunotherapy. Keywords:Cancer,Modeling,Ecologicalfocus,Disease. ECOLOGICAL,EVOLUTIONARYANDENVIRONMENTALSYNTHESISINTHE21STCENTURYSYMPOSIUM TUESDAY13:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Ecological, evolutionary and environmental synthesis in the 21st century STEPHANIEE.HAMPTON,WASHINGTONSTATEUNIVERSITY,[email protected] JOHNN.PARKER,ARIZONASTATEUNIVERSITY Scientificsynthesishastransformedecologicalresearch,andpresentsopportunitiesforadvancementsacrossthe sciences.Overthepast20years,theproliferationofsynthesisworkinggroupsacrossecology,evolution,andbroader environmentalresearchnowallowsamorerigorouselucidationoftheantecedentsofsuccessinsynthesis.Concordant withfindingsfromdetailedresearchonsocialinteractionsinsynthesisgroups,analysesoflarge-scaledataonworking groupcompositionandresearchproductsdemonstratesthatface-to-faceinteractionhasbeenavitalcomponentof successinsynthesisgroups,facilitatinggenerativesocialinteractionsthatboostproductivity.Moreover,whilemultiinstitutionalcollaborationhaspreviouslybeenshowntohamperproductivityinmoretraditionalresearchprojects,by creatinggreatercoordinationcosts,multi-institutionalparticipationinsynthesisworkinggroupshasbeenpositively associatedwithproductivity.Finally,participationinsynthesisgroupssignificantlyincreasedscientists'collaborative propensityandvisibility.High-impactsynthesisresearchproductshavehelpedtodemonstratetherewardsofdata sharingandlarge-scalecollaboration,positivelyaffectingscientificcareersandpotentiallyincreasingcapacityofthe scientificcommunitytoleveragesynthesisforenhancedscientificunderstandingandhumanwell-being. Speciesinteractionsinawarmingworldsymposium TUESDAY14:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Dynamics at the warm edge: Species interactions vs. species distributions ANNAHARGREAVES,MCGILL,[email protected] Along-standingbutcontroversialbiogeographichypothesisproposesthatspeciesinteractionsincreaseinintensity towardlowlatitudesandelevations,whereabioticconditionsaregenerallymorebenignandbiodiversityishigher.A resultinggeographicpredictionisthatspeciesinteractionsplayagreaterroleinsettingspecies'warmvs.coldrange limits,whichcouldresultincontrastingresponsestoclimatewarmingatcontrastingrangelimits.However,neitherthe componentprocesses(e.g.geographicpatternsininteractionintensity)northeresultingpatterns(e.g.greaterrolefor interactionsatwarmrangelimits)havebeenwelltested.Idiscussaseriesofwork,includingreciprocaltransplants, experimentalmanipulationsofplant-animalinteractions,anarctic-to-equatorseedherbivoryexperiment,andglobaldata syntheses,thattestthesepatterns,andtheirimplicationsforspeciesandcommunityresponsestoclimatechange. Biodiversity TUESDAY08:45,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Using environmental DNA to monitor winter aquatic biodiversity JORIB.HARRISON,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] SEANM.ROGERS,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY TheuseofenvironmentalDNA(eDNA)metabarcodingtodescribeaquaticbiodiversityandspeciesdistributionisa rapidlydevelopingtechnique.However,manyassaysthatfocusonwideecosystemcoveragecannotresolveclosely relatedspecies.Inaddition,thecapabilitiesandlimitationsoftheapplicationhavenotbeenwellcharacterizedover varyingenvironmentalconditions,suchasduringwintermonths,whichleavesuncertaintyintheinterpretationofeDNA results.Thisstudyaimstodevelopanassaycapableofdistinguishingcloselyrelatedsalmonidspecies,andtotest predictionsaboutthepresenceofeDNAinalargescalereplicated,naturalizedsystem.NoveleDNAprimers,capableof distinguishingbetweenBrooktrout(Salvelinusfontinalis),RainbowTrout(Oncorhynchusmykiss),andCutthroatTrout (Oncorhynchusclarkii)salmonidspecies,weredevelopedandacontrolledwinterexperimentwasconductedatthe AdvancingCanadianWastewaterAssets(ACWA)sresearchstreams.Thisfacilitycontains12naturalizedstreams320 metersinlength,withinflowfromacommonheadwaterpond.Thethreespecieswerecagedatthestartofeachstreamat differentrelativedensitiesandafter10daysofacclimatization,2Lwatersampleswerecollectedfromthestart,middle, andendofeachstreamandfilteredthrough0.7μmfilterstocollectDNA.Samplingwasrepeatedthreetimes,andall filterswerefrozenat-80degreesCforlaterDNAextraction.EarlyresultssuggesteDNAfromthefisheswasrecoverable fromallpointsalongstreams.Toourknowledge,thisisthefirsteDNAexperimentunderacontrolled,replicateddesign withinasemi-naturalsystemandshouldadvanceourunderstandingofthispromisingecologicalapplication. Keywords:Freshwater,Fish,Experiment,EnvironmentalDNA. Grasslandtrophiccascades TUESDAY09:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Songbirds and small mammals cause trophic cascades in montane grassland ecosystems WILLIAMHARROWER,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Predatorsandplantsareinextricablylinkedbytheflowofenergyinecosystems.However,westilllackgooddescriptions ofhowpredatorsaffectthediversity,function,andstabilityoffoodwebsunderdifferentenvironmentalconditions.If wateravailabilitytoplantsmodifiestheinteractionsbetweenpredatorsandplants,andchangesinthesespecies interactionsleadtoamodificationoftrophicstructureinterrestrialsystems,thenthedirectionandstrengthoftrophic cascadesmustdependontheavailabilityofwatertoplants.Iexcludedsongbirdsandsmallmammalsalongagradientof wateravailabilityinthemontanegrasslandsofcentralBCtodeterminehowsmallvertebratepredatorsstructurethefood websonwhichtheydepend.Usingstableisotopeanalysisandexperimentalevidence,Ifoundthatchangesinthe abundanceofbothsongbirds,smallmammalsandtheirpreyaltersfeedingbehaviorandrestructurescommunities.The strongesttrophiccascadesoccurredwhenwaterwasscarceandplantsgrewpoorly.Aswaterandsubsequentlyfood becamemoreabundant,foodchainsshortenandpredatorsbeganfeedingatlowertrophiclevelsandonawidervarietyof prey.Theseinteractionsbetweensmallpredatorsandplantsregulatethediversityofplantsandarthropodsinthese grasslands.Aswaterbecomesmoreabundant,foodwebsbecomeshorter,broader,andmorereticulate.Thesemore complexfoodwebsaremoreresistanttotheeffectofspecieslossesanddrought.Myresultssuggestthecascadingeffects ofgrasslandsongbirddeclinesmaybemoreprofoundindryecosystemsorwhendroughtismoreintenseormore prevalent. Keywords:Invertebrates,Trophicinteraction,Resourcelimitation,Predatorfunctionalresponse,Experiment. Populationdynamics TUESDAY09:15,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Why most studied populations should decline STEPHENHEARD,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK,[email protected] AURIELFOURNIER,UNIVERSITYOFARKANSAS;TREVORBRANCH,UNIVERSITYOFWASHINGTON;SEANANDERSON,UNIVERSITYOF WASHINGTON;DAVIDSKELLY,YALEUNIVERSITY Populationdeclinesofwildspeciesarewidelyreportedanddeeplytroubling.Diagnosingdeclineswithconfidenceiseasy inprinciple,butverydifficultinpractice,inpartbecausesimpleandnear-universallogisticalconstraintsfavourthe appearanceofdeclineseveninpopulationsthatareactuallyfluctuatingaroundstablemeandensities.Apparentdeclines resultwhenlong-termstudiesbegininpopulationsthatareatunusuallyhighdensities,aswillbetruewhenresearchers discoverorchoosestudysitesbecauseafocalspeciesiscommonthere.Weusesimulationstoshowthatthis'declinebias' isreal,andtomeasureitspotentialstrength(oftensubstantial)foravarietyofpopulationdynamicsandsampling regimes.Thedeclinebiasisseldommentionedintheliterature,althoughaseminalpaperintheliteratureonamphibian declines(Pechmannetal.1991Science253:892)explicitlywarnedofit.Citationanalysisrevealsnegligibleinfluenceof thedecline-biaswarning.Inorderforrealpopulationdeclinestobedetected,managed,andreversed,long-termstudies ofputativelydecliningpopulationsneedtobedesignedand/orinterpretedinlightofthedeclinebias. Keywords:Populationdeclines,Populationmodels,Bias,Simulationmodel. Communityecology TUESDAY13:30,ROOM:WCOAST Population responses of rodent species to agriculture on the Great Plains of Canada LEANNEHEISLER,[email protected] CHRISSOMERS;RAYPOULIN ConversionoftemperategrasslandsforagriculturehasmadetheGreatPlainsofCanadaoneofthemostthreatened ecosystemsintheworld.Lessthan20%ofCanada'sprairieremains,ofteninadeterioratedstate,andcontinuesto declineata2%rateofannualloss.Consequentially,thedistributionsofmanyprairiespecieshavechanged;however, effectsonrodentcommunitiesarenotwellstudied.Iexaminedtheinfluenceofgrasslandlossandfragmentationdueto agricultureonrodentspeciesdistributionsacrosstheGreatPlainsofCanada.Iexpectedrodentspeciesabundancesto respondaspertheiraffinitytowardsgrasslandhabitat;negativeresponsesfromgrasslandspecialistsandneutralor positiveresponsesfromhabitatgeneralists.Toobservespeciesresponsesataspatialscalerelevanttopopulation persistence,Iestimatedrodentspeciesabundancesusingpreyremainsdissectedfromgreathornedowl(Bubo virginianus)andburrowingowl(Athenecunicularia)pellets.Grasslandlosswascharacterizedusingpercentgrassland, whilegrasslandfragmentationwascharacterizedusingedgedensity,patchshape,patcharea,patchdensity,andpatch cohesion.Grasslandspecialists(i.e.,sagebrushvoles,Richardson'sgroundsquirrels,andprairievoles)showednegative responsestograsslandlossandfragmentation;however,sagebrushvolesshowednegativeresponsestograsslandpatch size.Habitatgeneralists(i.e.,deermice,northerngrasshoppermice,andnorthernpocketgophers)showedmixed responsestobothgrasslandlossandfragmentation.Thisisthefirststudytoprovidealandscape-levelperspectiveonthe effectsofhabitatconfigurationonrodentpopulationpersistenceacrosstheGreatPlainsofCanada. Keywords:Smallmammals,Agriculture,Landusechange,Speciesdistribution,Fragmentation,Habitatloss,Habitatselection. Conservationchallengesassociatedwithaquaticsoundscapessymposium MONDAY14:15,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Tracking marine mammals in the presence of human induced ocean noise BENJAMINHENDRICKS,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] AARONGULLIVER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;HUSSEINALIDINA,WWF-CANADA;CHRISPICARD,GITGA'ATFIRSTNATION;JANIEWRAY, NORTHCOASTCETACEANSOCIETY;HERMANNMEUTER,NORTHCOASTCETACEANSOCIETY Wheredoesawhalegowhenitdives?Whatsoundslikeaquestionfromakeengradeschooler,isaproblemthatcangive criticalinsightsforconservationeffortsinmarineenvironmentswithincreasinganthropogenicnoisepollution.Thescope ofourprojectistouseacousticdatafromlong-baselinearraysofhydrophonestodetect,locate,andtrackmarine mammalsbasedontheirvocalization.Incooperationwithourindustrypartners---theGitga'atFirstNation,WWFCanada,andtheNorthCoastCetaceanSociety---wewillusetheresultstoanalyzethedetailedmovementpatternfora broadrangeofvocalizingmarinemammalsandtheirinterdependencywithhumanactivities,suchasshiptraffic.The workisconductedfortheculturally,ecologically,andeconomicallyimportantmarineenvironmentaroundGilIslandin northernBritishColumbiaandwillmakeuseofthesophisticatedhydrophonearrayinstalledinSquallyChannel.Ourgoal istoprovideanefficient,widelyapplicabletoolforautomatedtransientsignaltrackingforlongbaselinehydrophone arrays.Theapplicationsforsuchtrackingtoolsrangefromfacilitatingportsecuritytostudiesofmarinehabitatusage,or trackingspeciesatrisk.InmytalkIwillintroducetheprojectandthestrategiesweuse.Iwillpresentfirstresultsand giveabriefoverviewofthechancesandchallengesassociatedwithpassiveacousticmonitoringofaquaticsoundscapes. Livingintheeco-evolutionarytheatre:researchguidedandinspiredbyintensivefieldobservationssymposium TUESDAY17:15,ROOM:THEATRE A decade of spatial variation in Darwin's finches ANDREWP.HENDRY,MCGILLUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Speciationwithinadaptiveradiationsoftenbeginsassmall-scalespatialdifferencesamongconspecificpopulationsthat onlylateraccumulateandmagnifytospecies-leveldifferences.Hence,understandingtheoriginsofadaptiveradiation benefitsfromthestudyofsmall-scalepatternsandhowtheychangethroughtime.Suchanalyseshavebeenlimitedbya rarityofreplicatedtimeserieswithinongoingadaptiveradiations.Hereweconductedananalysisoftenyearsofdataon fourGalapagosgroundfinchspecies(Geospizaspp.)atthreesites:thesmallislandofDaphneMajor(DM)andtwosites (AcademyBay,AB,andElGarrapatero,EG)onthenearbylargeislandofSantaCruz.Themaineffectofspace(i.e.,among sites)madethestrongestcontributiontophenotypicvariationandselection,suggestingthatevolutionisshapedmostly bylocalfactors.Themaineffectoftime(i.e.,amongyears)wasoftensignificant,yetcomparativelyweak,suggestinga smallinfluenceofcommon(parallel)across-siteresponsestoregionalclimatechange.Ofintermediateimportancewas theinteractionbetweenspaceandtime,indicatingthattemporalresponseswerenon-parallelacrosssites.Asanticipated forsmallerislands,effectsofenvironmentalchangewerestrongerforDMthanforbothsitesonSantaCruz.Wediscuss howshorttermchangesmayaccumulateintolong-termtrends,andtowhatextentspatialandtemporalvariationcan aligntofacilitateadaptiveradiation. HERB MONDAY16:00,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Grazing Arctic tundra: Plant to ecosystem responses GREGHENRY,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Tundrasystemsarecriticalforagehabitatforahostofherbivores,includingmigratorymammalsandbirds.The responsesofthesesystemstoherbivoryhavebeeninvestigatedacrosstheArctic,althoughonlyatafewsitesinthe CanadianArctic,andgenerallyshowtheyareresilienttovaryinggrazingpressure.Attheplantlevel,somewetsedge specieshavebeenshowntomaintainleafandbiomassproductionatmoderategrazinglevels,partlythroughincreased productionofroots,rhizomesandramets.Attheecosystemlevel,thesamewetsedgesystemsshowgreaterCO2fluxes withgrazingwhichappearstobesupportedbygreaterNavailability.Inshrubtundra,grazinghasagreatervarietyof impacts,andsomeecosystemresponsestoexperimentalgrazingappeartobemuted.Inthispresentation,Ireviewthe responsesfromexperimentalandobservationalstudiesofherbivoryintundrasystems,focussedmainlyongrazingby muskoxenandcaribouintheCanadianArctic,anddevelopageneralframeworkfortundraresponsestograzing. ConsequencesofRapidEcologicalChangeinMountainEcosystemsSymposium TUESDAY08:45,ROOM:SIDNEY Are coastal mountains responding to climate change differently? LUISEHERMANUTZ,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY,[email protected] LAURASIEGWARTCOLLIER,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY;ROBERTWAY,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA Alpineandtundraecosystemsarehighlyvariableintheirresponsestoenvironmentalchange.Inadditiontoawarming climate,northerncoastaltundraecosystemsareinfluencedbythepresenceofseaice,andabundantprecipitation throughouttheyear.WestudiedtheresponsesofcoastaltundraecosystemstoclimatechangeinnorthernLabrador.Over thepasttwodecadesseaiceintheadjacentLabradorSeahasdramaticallydecreased,resultinginearlierseasonal warmingandlongergrowingseasons.Therehasbeen~2degreesCsummerwarmingsince1993.Afterseventenyears ofexperimentalwarming,mesictundrahasexperiencedgreaterchangesinvegetationstructureandabundancethanwet anddrytundraduetoheightgrowth/densityofdeciduousshrubs(Betulaglandulosa)coincidingwithdecliningberry productionofallspecies(Empetrumnigrum,Vacciniumvitis-idaea,V.uliginosum).Mossesandlichenshavedeclineddue theexplosiveshrubgrowthinbothcontrolsandwarmingtreatments.Incontraststructuralchangeshavelaggedinwet sedgeanddrylichentundratypeswithaverageandmaximumvegetationheightremainingsimilarthroughtimeand betweentreatments,whileabundancehasshiftedawayfromcryptogamstowardsshrubsandgraminoids.WarminginducedshrubificationofnortherncoastalLabradorhashadanegativeimpactonpermafrostintheregionbyincreasing snowaccumulation,andwarminggroundtemperaturesatthegroundsurfaceandtodepthsexceeding4m.These permafrost-shrub-snowinteractionsareprominentincoastalmountainsbecauseofhighwinterprecipitationandwindy conditions,whichfurtherintensifyshrubificationbeyondwhatisfoundinnon-coastalareas. Lifehistories:phenology,sex,sexratio TUESDAY08:00,ROOM:WCOAST Differences in early life history traits between sexual and asexual Easter daisies favor the establishment of asexuals EVANHERSH,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] ALBERTORUIZ-LARREAMEDINA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;JEANNETTEWHITTON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Closerelativesoftenhavedifferentranges,despitetheirsharedevolutionaryhistory.Townsendiahookeri(Townsend's Easterdaisy)exhibitsaclassicpatternofgeographicalparthenogenesis,wherecloselyrelatedsexualandasexual (apomictic)formsholddisparategeographicranges.T.hookeripopulationsoccurthroughouttheEasternRocky Mountains,withthesexualrangecenteredinColorado/WyomingtotheSouthoftheasexualrange,whichextends northwardfromWyomingtosouthernAlberta.Oneoftheprimaryhypothesesexplainingpatternsofgeographical parthenogenesispositsthatasexualsachievebroaderrangesthantheirsexualcounterpartsbybeingbettercolonizers.In ordertotestfordifferencesincolonizationabilitybetweensexualandasexualEasterdaisies,wecollecteddataonearly lifehistorytraitsusinglabandfield(reciprocaltransplantgarden)experiments.Seedgerminationtrialsinthelabusing seedsfromtwelvepopulationsrevealedthatasexualseedsgerminatedmorequicklyandhadhigheroverallgermination successthansexualseeds.Seedsfromthesesamepopulationswerealsosewnintotransplantsitesinthefield,where asexualswerealsofoundtohaveoverallhigherestablishmentsuccessthansexuals.Inaseparateexperiment,the dispersalpotentialofseedsfromsexualandasexualpopulationswasassessed.Wefoundthatasexualseedsstayedaloft longerthansexualseeds,andthatthiscorrelatedwithfeaturesoftheseedsdispersalstructures(pappus).Theseresults suggestthat,differencesinearlylifehistorytraitsmaypromotedispersalandearlyestablishmentofasexualEaster daisies,andcontributetothedifferencesintherangesofthereproductivetypes. Keywords:Plants,Evolution,Geographicalparthenogenesis,Colonization,Experiment,Dispersal. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY11:45,ROOM:SAANICH Patterns in salmon dynamics in space and time on the Central Coast of British Columbia ERICHERTZ,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] WILLATLAS,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;BRENDANCONNORS,ESSATECHNOLOGIES,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;JOHNREYNOLDS, SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Pacificsalmonhaveakeyeconomic,ecologicalandculturalrolethroughouttheirrange.However,thefactorsdriving spatialandtemporalvariationintheabundanceofsalmonpopulationsremainpoorlyunderstood.Understandingthese patternsinabundanceisimportantforcoastalFirstNations,whoinrecentyearshavetakenonanincreasedroleofthe managementofsalmonintheirtraditionalterritories.Usingdatafrom200uniquespawninglocationsontheCentral CoastofBritishColumbia,wequantifiedsharedpatternsinabundanceofsalmonoverspaceandtime,andmeasuredthe extenttowhichportfolioeffectsstabilizevariationinstocksovertime.WefoundstrongdeclinesinSockeyeSalmon abundanceacrossthecentralcoast,whichwasaccompaniedbyanincreaseinthecovariationamongstocks.Chumand PinkSalmonalsoshowedgenerallysimilarpatterns,thoughtheodd-yearlineageofPinkSalmonincreasedinabundance inrecentyears.Wesuggestthatoceanconditionsoperatingonbroadscalesmayberesponsibleforthespatialand temporalpatternsobserved.ThisresearchfacilitatedacommonunderstandingamongFirstNations,fisheriesmanagers, biologists,andnon-governmentalorganizationsofpatternsandknowledgegapsrevealedbyexistingdata.Thisisafirst andcriticalsteptowardsunderstandingpotentialdriversofthedynamicsofsalmonpopulations,andtheregional economiesthatdependonthem. Keywords:Salmon,Management,Marine,Populationdynamics. ConsequencesofRapidEcologicalChangeinMountainEcosystemsSymposium TUESDAY09:30,ROOM:SIDNEY Canada’s mountain ecosystems: Towards a better integration of biotic and abiotic drivers of rapid change DAVIDHIK,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] Accumulatingevidencesuggeststhattheextentandphenologyofseasonalsnowcoverplaysacriticalroleindetermining thedemography,behavior,growthanddistributionsofplantsandanimalslivinginalpineenvironments.Stochastic, periodicanddirectionalvariationintemperatureandprecipitationmayhaveverydifferenteffectsonalpinespecies, dependingupontheirlifehistorystrategiesandcapacitytoadapttovariableandchangingconditions.InthistalkIwill summarize(i)observedandpredictedclimatetrendsinsomewesternCanadianmountainranges;(ii)responsesofsome vertebrateandinvertebrateherbivores(e.g.pikas,marmots,groundsquirrels,sheep,caterpillars)toseasonal, interannualanddecadalchangesoftemperatureandprecipitation;(iii)changesinplantcommunities,especiallywoody shrubs,thatmayleadtomorecomplicatedtrophicinteractions;and(iv)approachesforintegratingobservationsof changingweatherandclimateatscalesrelevantforunderstandingdynamicsofalpinespeciesandecosystems.Predicting theseresponsesisstilldifficult,butemergingconservationandmanagementchallengesinwarmingmountainswithless snowrequiresmoreattentionandacoordinateresearcheffortacrossCanada. Habitatselectionanduse WEDNESDAY08:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT House Hunters: Petrel edition RIELLEHOEG,ACADIAUNIVERSITY,[email protected] INGRIDL.POLLET,ACADIAUNIVERSITY;DAVESHUTLER,ACADIAUNIVERSITY Manyseabirdsnestathighdensitiesonislandstoescapemammalianpredatorsandtotakeadvantageofgroupdefence. Somespeciesnestundergroundwhichmayprotectagainstaerialpredatorsandprovideastablemicroclimate.However, costsofbreedingonislandsmayincludecompetitionfornestsites.Ifgroupdefenceprovidesanetbenefit,nestswith shorternearestneighbourdistancesshouldhavehighernestsuccess.Inaddition,burrowingseabirdsshouldfavour intermediatesoilmoisturetoavoidburrowcrumblingorflooding.Weinvestigatednestsiteselectionandreproductive successinLeach'sstorm-petrels(Oceanodromaleucorhoa),acolonialseabirdthatnestsinburrowsonoffshoreislands.A totalof396burrowsweremonitoredonBonPortageIsland,NovaScotia,Canada.Soilmoisturewashigheratcontrol pointsthanattheentranceofburrows,buttherewasnodifferenceinmoistureatoccupiedversusunoccupiedor successfulversusfailedburrows.Nearestneighbourdistancedidnotappeartobeassociatedwithnestsuccess.These resultssuggestthatnestinginLeach'sstorm-petrelsmaybedrivenbyeffectsofresourcessuchassoilmoisture,andthat theremaybeanoptimalsoilmoisturerangeforexcavatingburrows. Keywords:seabirds,habitatspecialization,reproduction,populationdynamics,competition. EcologicalandEvolutionaryDynamicsinFluctuatingEnvironmentsSymposium MONDAY09:15,ROOM:THEATRE Niche conservatism and evolution in fluctuating environments ROBERTHOLT,UNIVERSITYOFFLORIDA,[email protected] Lifehistories:phenology,sex,sexratio TUESDAY08:15,ROOM:WCOAST Diet-dependent sex ratios in Tigriopus californicus: Evidence for ESD in a system with stable PSD ERINHORNELL,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] Bycontrollingtheinheritanceofsex,thesexdeterminationmechanismrepresentsaconstraintonsexallocation strategiesandsexratioadaptation.However,theevolutionofthesexdeterminationmechanismisalsosubjecttosex ratioselection.Muchofthesexdeterminationliteraturefocusesonhowsexdeterminationmechanismstransition betweengeneticandenvironmentalfactors(i.e.GSDvs.ESD),andifgeneticsexfactorsareinvolved,howmany(e.g. chromosomalvspolygenicsystems).Thestudyofsexallocationlargelyfocusesondeviationsfromatheoretically1:1 evolutionarilystablestrategy,suchaswhensexratiosareadaptive(whenthereareenvironmentalfactorsrelevantto fitnessesofthesexes).Tigriopuscalifornicusisatidepoolcopepodwithpolygenicsexdetermination,andshowswide variabilityinsexratiosinthefieldandlabthatcannotbeexplainedbygeneticandstochasticprocessesalone.This suggeststhatanenvironmentalvariablemightinfluencesexratio.Femalesandtheiroffspringwerefedtwodietsof differentnutritionalquality,inacrosseddesign,andthesexratioofeachclutchwasrecordedforupto8clutchesfroma givenfemale:thisdesignallowedtheinfluenceoffemalevs.heroffspringtobedistinguished.Theclutchsexratio changedoverthecourseofthe8clutchesaccordingtotheoffspring'sdiet,whichisevidenceforenvironmentalsex determinationinthisspecies.Thereisalsoevidencefortheinfluenceofmaternaldietonsexratio,consistentwithsex allocationtheory,althoughwhetheritispassiveoractivecannotbedeterminedfromthiswork. Keywords:Intertidal,Geneticvariation,Experiment,Reproduction. SeagrassecologyandconservationalongPacificandAtlanticcoastssymposium TUESDAY11:15,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Seagrass genetic diversity enhances production at multiple life history stages A.RANDALLHUGHES,NORTHEASTERNUNIVERSITY,[email protected] TORRANCEC.HANLEY,NORTHEASTERNUNIVERSITY;FORESTR.SCHENCK,NORTHEASTERNUNIVERSITY;CYNTHIAG.HAYS,KEENESTATE COLLEGE Geneticdiversitycaninfluenceecologicalprocessesthroughoutontogeny,yetwhetherdiversityatearlylifehistorystages isimportantinlong-livedtaxawithoverlappinggenerationsisunclear.TheseagrassZosteramarina(eelgrass)provides compellingevidencefortheecologicaleffectsofgeneticdiversityamongadultshoots,withpositiveeffectsofincreased diversityonprimaryproduction,associatedspeciesabundanceanddiversity,anddisturbancerecovery.However,wedo notknowifthegeneticdiversityofseedsandseedlingsalsoinfluencesseagrassecology.Wetestedtheeffectsofeelgrass seeddiversityandrelatednessongerminationsuccess,seedlingmorphology,andseedlingproductionbycomparing experimentalassemblagesofseedscollectedfromsinglereproductiveshoots(siblings,or"monocultures")to assemblagesofseedscollectedfrommultiplereproductiveshoots(non-siblings,or"polycultures").Therewasno differenceinseedlingemergence,yetseedlingsfrompolycultureshadlargershootsaboveandbelowgroundthan seedlingsfrommonoculturesattheendoftheone-yearexperiment.Geneticrelatednessoftheseedlingspredictedsome aspectsofshootmorphology,withmoreleavesandlongerrootsandshootsatintermediatelevelsofrelatedness, regardlessofseeddiversity.Ourresultssuggestthatpriorstudiesofseagrassadultlifehistorystagesmayhave underestimatedtheimportanceofgeneticdiversityifthebenefitsatearlylifehistorystagescontinuetoaccrue throughoutthelifecycle. Matechoice,hybridization MONDAY14:00,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Female preference for alternative male morphs in the Kribensis cichlid (Pelvicachromis pulcher) PETERHURD,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] NATHANJBRANDWEIN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA MalesofthecichlidPelvicachromispulcherexistinoneoffourdifferentmorphs.Thetwomostcommonmorphs,redand yellowshowdifferencesingrowthrate,aggressivebehaviour,andreproductivestrategy,andhypothalamicexpressionof thenonapeptidesisotocinandvasotocin.Redmalesgrowslowerbutaremoreactivethanyellowmales;theyalsotendto usemoreescalatedaggressivebehavioursthanyellowmales.Bothmorphswillbreedmonogamously,butredmalesshow preferencetoharemicbreeding,whileyellowsdonotbutmayfollowastrategy.Hereweexaminefemalechoicebetween thesetwomalemorphsinadichotomousmatechoicetask.Wefoundasignificantpreferenceforyellowoverredmales. Sinceyellowmaleshavemorespotsthanredmalestherewasacorrelatedpreferenceformoretailspots.Weconclude thatfemales’preferencefortheyellowmorphovertheredpersistsaftertakingintoaccountthedisparityintailspot number,meaningthatpreferenceformoretailspotsnumberisnotdrivingtheyellowmalepreferenceeffect.Wediscuss theprobableinfluencesoffemalechoicerelativetootherselectionpressuresinmaintainingthispolymorphism. Keywords:Fish,Reproduction,Phenotypicvariation,Polymorphism. Parasitismandsymbiosis TUESDAY14:00,ROOM:SIDNEY Host allometry influences the evolution of parasite host-generalism AMYL.HURFORD,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY,[email protected] JOSEPHINEWALKER,UNIVERSITYOFBRISTOL;JOANNECABLE,CARDIFFUNIVERSITY;AMYELLISON,CARDIFFUNIVERSITY;STEPHENPRICE, UNIVERSITYCOLLEGELONDON;CLAYTONCRESSLER,UNIVERSITYOFNEBRASKA Parasitesvarywidelyinthediversityofhoststheyinfect:someparasitespeciesarespecialists-infectingjustasinglehost species,whileothersaregeneralists,capableofinfectingmany.Understandingthefactorsthatdriveparasitehostgeneralismisofbasicbiologicalinterest,butalsodirectlyrelevanttopredictingdiseaseemergenceinnewhostspecies, identifyingparasitesthatarelikelytohaveunidentifiedadditionalhosts,andassessingtransmissionrisk.Here,weuse mathematicalmodelstoinvestigatehowvariationinhostbodysizeandenvironmentaltemperatureaffecttheevolution ofparasitehost-generalism.Wepredictthatparasitesaremorelikelytoevolveageneraliststrategywhenhostsarelargebodied,whenvariationinhostbodysizeislarge,andincoolerenvironments.Wethenexplorethesepredictionsusinga newlyupdateddatabaseofover20,000fish-macroparasiteassociations.Withinthedatabaseweseesomeevidence supportingthesepredictions,butalsohighlightmismatchesbetweentheoryanddata.Bycombiningthesetwo approaches,weestablishatheoreticalbasisforinterpretingempiricaldataonparasites'hostspecificityandidentifykey areasforfutureworkthatwillhelpuntanglethedriversofparasitehost-generalism. Keywords:Evolution,Parasitology,Mathematicalmodel,,Environmentalvariation,Morphology. Movement,activity,wildlifemanagement WEDNESDAY08:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Scale dependent behavioral responses of snowshoe hare in western conifer forests post-fire JENNAHUTCHEN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN,[email protected] KARENE.HODGES,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN WildfiresareagrowingconcerninmuchofNorthAmericabecauseclimatechangehasledtotheincreaseinlarge,severe fires.Recently,advancesinfireecologysuggestwestudywithin-burnheterogeneitybecausesuchanalysescanelucidate strongerpatternsofmammalresponsetofirethancoarsercomparisonsofburned/unburnedstands.Weconductedthis studytocomparestandarddisturbanceecologycontrasts(burn/unburnedandopen/regrowing/maturestands)andto evaluatethebehavioralresponsesofsnowshoeharestofire.Weusedsnowshoehareforagingbehaviortotestthese contrastsbyquantifyingharetortuosity,speed,andbrowsealongforagingpathwaysinburnedandunburnedforestand comparedtheseresultstotherelationshipsfoundinopen/regrowing/maturecontrasts.Burn/Unburnedcomparisons underperformedintheirabilitytodistinguishsignificantdifferencesinbrowsinghares.Haresmovedfasterinburned standsthantheydidinunburnedstands,howeverwhenopen/regrowing/maturecomparisonsweremadewefoundthat haresonlymovedfasterinopenburnedstandsandnotregrowingburnedstands.Nodifferenceswerefoundinhare tortuositybetweenburn/unburnedoropen/regrowing/maturestands.Wefoundthatsnowshoehareresponseto wildfireiscomplexandthatastand-basedvegetationapproachidentifiesstrongerpatternsofsnowshoehareresponse post-firethandoesusingacontrol-impactapproach. Keywords:Fire,Mammals,Forest,Foraging. Thetensionbetweenscienceandadvocacyinecology,evolution,andconservationbiologysymposium TUESDAY09:15,ROOM:SAANICH The distinction between advice and advocacy in science JEFFREYA.HUTCHINGS,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Decision-makersusesciencetoguideregulatoryandpolicydevelopmentandtoevaluatethepotentialoutcomesof alternativedecisionoptions.Scientists,atvariousstagesoftheircareer,areincreasinglycalledupontoimpartscientific knowledgethatfallswithintheirpurview.Thismosttypicallycomesintheformofadviceoradvocacy.Ideally,science adviceisimpartialandindependentfromvestedinterests.Givenpeer-reviewbasedlevelsofconsensusanduncertainty, scienceadvicecontributestoobjective,informedevaluationsoftheimplicationsofpolicyoptionsfromascience perspective.Science-basedadvocacyreflectspersonalinterests.Anadvocateselectivelyframesinformationwiththe intentoffavouringonepolicyoutcomeoveranother.Advocacybyscientistsisnotalwaysreadilydetectablebythemedia, bydecision-makers,orbysociety.Someindividualsarenotasvigilantorastransparentastheyshouldbeastowhether theyarescience-basedadvocates.Whoaretheprimarybeneficiariesofscienceadviceandscience-basedadvocacy?Are theythesame?Doessocietybenefitequallyfromscienceadviceandscience-basedadvocacy?Atitscore,advocacy reflectselementsofpersonalvaluesystems:socialideology;culturaltradition;employmentexperience;religiousbeliefs; education;familyupbringing.Thepersonalvaluesystemsofscientistshavenointrinsicallygreatermeritthanthoseof decision-makerswhomtheyadviseorthecitizenrywhomightbeaffectedbytheadvice.Governmentdecisionswill alwaysbepolitical;politicianswilloftenconflatefactsandvalues.Toestablishandmaintainsocietaltrust,scientists profferingadvicetogovernmentshoulddoneither. SeagrassecologyandconservationalongPacificandAtlanticcoastssymposium TUESDAY13:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Biotic homogenization of seagrass fishes associated with coastal anthropogenic activities JOSEPHINEC.IACARELLA,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] JULIAK.BAUM,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,EELGRASSFISHESNETWORK Anthropogenicactivitiesthatmodifyhabitatsacrossaland-orseascapecansubsequentlycausebiotichomogenizationof residentcommunities.Coastalsystemsaresubjecttointensehumanactivitiesthatrangefromlocalizedperturbationsto large-scalehabitatdegradation.Activitiesthatlocallyaffecthabitat-forming,foundationspeciesmaycreate heterogeneouslandscapesforfaunadependentonthosefoundationspecies,inturnaffectingspatialpatternsof biodiversityinmarineseascapes.Wetestedthehypothesisthatfishbeta-diversityislowerinareasofgreaterhuman impactacrossseagrassmeadowsonthePacificcoastofCanada.Wequantifiedfishdiversityacross89sitesspanning6 latitudetotestforpatternsofspatialhomogenizationofbiodiversityamonghabitatsandtoattributesignalsof homogenizationtotheintensityofhumanactivities.Weassessedwithinandacrossregionbeta-diversityatsiteswithin low,medium,andhighanthropogenicintensitycategoriesbyaccountingforbeta-diversitycausedbytherandom assemblageofcommunitiesanddifferencesinspeciesrichnessusingnullmodels.Ourresultsareconsistentwithbiotic homogenizationoffishesinhighanthropogenicintensityareas(i.e.lowerbeta-diversityrelativetolowintensityareas), bothwithinandacrossregions.Bioticcharacteristicsweremoredifferentiatedamonghighintensitysites,potentially indicativeofaperturbedenvironmentthatismoreconducivetogeneralistspecies.Indeed,indicatorspeciesassociated withlowandhighintensitysitesrepresentediconicexamplesofathreatened,specialistspeciesandahighlyadaptive, generalistspecies,respectively.Theseresultssupporttheimportanceoftargetingconservationeffortsinlow anthropogenicintensityareasacrossland-andseascapes. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY13:45,ROOM:COLWOOD Geographic variation in the genetic structure of a mussel hybrid zone DAVIDJ.INNES,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY,[email protected] NORAHP.SAARMAN,YALEUNIVERSITY;RAYMONDJ.THOMPSON,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY Geneticallydifferentiatedpopulationsofcloselyrelatedspeciesoftencomeintosecondarycontactduringrange expansions,allowingtheopportunityforgeneflowifreproductiveisolationisincomplete.Researchonthepopulation geneticstructureofsuchhybridzonesprovidesawindowintoprocessesimportantforreproductiveisolationtohelp understandtheevolutionarysignificanceofreproductiveincompatibilityandintrogressionforspeciationandadaptation. Duringthelastglaciation,MytilusedulissurvivedinAtlanticrefugiaandM.trossulusinthePacific.Thetwospecieshave beenisolatedforapproximately3-5millionyears.M.edulisrecolonizedtheNWAtlanticOceanfollowingthelastglacial maximumfromice-freerefugia~18,000yearsagoandM.trossulusinvadedtheAtlanticfromthePacificthroughthe ArcticformingthepresenthybridzoneinAtlanticCanada.Widevariationinthefrequencyofhybrids(0-58%,mean= 17%)wasfoundbasedonthreespecies-specificdiagnosticnuclearmarkers(Glu,ITS,MAL).Ofthe17%hybrids, genotypesconsistentwithF1andbackcrossestoM.trossulusshowedthegreatestfrequency(3.5and5.5%,respectively). ThesehybridgenotypesalongwithpureM.trossulusalsoshowedaslightincreaseinfrequencywithlatitude.One exceptionwastheoccurrenceofM.edulisandM.edulisbackcrosshybridssampledinHudsonBay.Atonelocationin southernLabradoralowfrequencyofhybridswasconfirmedwithlimitedintrogressionbasedon~200speciesdiagnosticsinglenucleotidepolymorphicloci(SNP).TheSNPanalysisofadditionalsitesisinprogresstomoreprecisely determinegeographicvariationinreproductiveincompatibility. Keywords:Genomicsequencing,Geneticvariation,Marine,Hybridization. Conservationchallengesassociatedwithaquaticsoundscapessymposium MONDAY14:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Ambient noise from natural sources and shipping in the western Canadian Arctic STEPHENINSLEY,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA,[email protected] CASEYHILLIARD,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA;TYLERDEJONG,WILDLIFECONSERVATIONSOCIETYCANADA Oceanambientnoiseisacrucialhabitatfeatureformarineanimalsbecauseitrepresentsthelowerthresholdoftheir acousticallyactivespace.Ambientnoiseisaffectedbynaturalnoisesourceslikewindandice,andbyanthropogenic sourceslikeshippingandseismicsurveys.AmbientconditionsintheArcticaregenerallyquieterthanconditionsinother regionsduringtheice-coveredseasonduetothedampeningeffectofseaice.Climatechange-inducedArcticwarmingis expectedtoinfluencenoisethroughbothdecreasedseaiceandincreasedhumanactivity,whichmaynegativelyaffect severalspeciesofmarinemammalsandotheracoustically-sensitivemarinefauna.Wedocumentambientnoiseoffthe westcoastofBanksIslandnearSachsHarbour,NorthwestTerritories,toprovidebaselinenoiselevelsintheeastern BeaufortSea.NoiselevelswerecomparabletootherstudiesfromtheCanadianArcticandAlaska,andweretypically muchquieterthanlevelsfromfarthersouth.Windcausedincreasednoise,whereasincreasediceconcentration decreasednoise,dampeningtheeffectofwindspeed.Wemodelvesselnoisepropagationintheproposedwestern CanadianArcticshippingcorridorinordertoexamineimpactsonmarinemammalsandmarineprotectedareas(MPAs). WecomparemodeloutputtotheacousticdatacollectednearSachsHarbour,NWT.Ourmodelpredictsthatloudvessels areaudibleunderwaterwhen>100kmaway,couldaffectmarinemammalbehaviourwhenwithin7kmand consequentlycouldcausesubstantialimpacttomarinemammalsduringmigrationandinMPAs. SensoryandBehaviouralEcologySymposium WEDNESDAY08:00,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Marine visual ecology: Insights from flatfish and decapod shrimp TOMIWANICKY,,[email protected] Thefundamentalmolecularunitofvisionistheopsin,agenethatencodesalight-sensitiveproteinfoundintheretina. Thereistremendousdiversityinopsinrepertoiresamonganimaltaxa.Fishhavelargeopsinrepertoires,andto understandwhy,wecharacterizedthevisualsystemofthestarryflounder(Platichthysstellatus)usingmolecularand physiologicaldata.Wefoundjuvenilestarryflounderexpresseightvisualopsinsintheretina.Directconnectionsbetween opsinexpressionandquantitativebehavioursarerare.Wetestedwhetherornotvaryingopsinexpressionaffectsvision. Weheldstarryflounderinaquariaforsixweeksexposedtoeitherbroad-spectrumsunlightorgreen-filteredlightand predictedachangeinopsinexpression.Wemeasuredopsinexpressionandtestedvisualperformancebyquantifyingthe camouflageresponsetoavarietyofcolourfulcheckerboards.Opsinexpressionwasdifferentbasedonlightenvironment. Surprisingly,thisdifferencewaslostafteronlythreehoursunderwhiteLEDillumination.Imageanalysisofcamouflage responsesuggestfishwithmoreUV-andblue-sensitiveopsinsdetectgreatercontrastincolouronblue-green checkerboards.Wearealsoinvestigatingnovelvisualsystemsinadeep-seaOplophoridshrimp.Oplophoridsproducea bioluminescentsecretionfromtheirmouthtodeterordistractpredators.Someoplophoridsalsopossessbioluminescent producingorgans(photophores)intheircuticle.Speciescapableofbothformsofbioluminescence(secretionand photophore)possessuniquevisualsystems,involvingmultipleopsinspresumablyforcolourvision.Wepredictfeatures oftheuniqueoplophoridvisualsystemsfunctiontodiscriminatebetweenthetwotypesofbioluminescenceforcongener recognitionandcommunication.Furthermore,preliminarydatarevealedgenesassociatedwithphoto-transductionare expressedinthephotophoressuggestingperhapsthey'see'withthesebioluminescentorgans. LinkingEnvironmentalLawandScienceSymposium WEDNESDAY08:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Canada's crossroads for sustainable development and the environment AERINJACOB,YELLOWSTONETOYUKONCONSERVATIONINITIATIVE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] JONATHANW.MOORE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;CAROLINEH.FOX,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY,RAINCOASTCONSERVATION FOUNDATION;EMILYSUNTER,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN;ADAMT.FORD,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Environmentalassessmentisthetooltoevaluatepositiveandnegativeconsequencesofplans,policies,programs,or infrastructureprojects.However,inthelastfiveyears,thousandsofscientistsinCanadaandaroundtheworldhave repeatedlyexpressedconcernabouttheerosionofcapacityandlackofscientificrigourinfederalenvironmental legislation.In2015,theGovernmentofCanadacommittedto"ensur[ing]thatdecisionsarebasedonscience,facts,and evidence,andservethepublic'sinterests",includingpublicconsultation.Weevaluated400writtencontributionstothe 2016ExpertPanelReviewofEnvironmentalAssessmentProcesses,categorizingsubmissionsbysectorandevaluating theirsupportforkeypillarsofscienceandenvironmentaldecision-making.Wediscoveredremarkableconsensuson majorissues,includingconsistentsupportforimprovedtransparencyindecision-making,considerationofcumulative effects,andpubliclysharingdata.Divergenceappearedregardingtheindustrysector'spositiononscientificrigourand independence,andtoalesserdegreeIndigenoussector'spositionondefaultopenaccesstodata.Overall,theroad-map forupdatingfederalenvironmentalassessmentprocessesisclear:thegovernmentwillhavetoweighperspectivesof industryagainstpublic,scientific,non-profit,andIndigenoussectors.Canadaispoisedtoundergoarenaissancetorealign environmentaldecision-makingwithfoundationalscientificprinciples.Asenvironmentalprotectionandincorporationof scientificinformationintodecisionscrumblesintheUnitedStates,Canadacouldprovideaglobalexampleenvironmental decision-makinginformedbyscience. Keywords:Management,Sciencepolicy,Survey,Scienceoutreach. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY14:00,ROOM:COLWOOD Landscape community genomics in the mountain pine beetle outbreak system PATRICKJAMES,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL,[email protected] CATHYCULLINGHAM,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Investigationintothespatialstructureofcommunity-leveladaptivegenomicvariationcanilluminateimportantecoevolutionaryrelationships.Inparticular,improvedunderstandingofintra-andinter-specificinteractionsthrough communitygenomicscanbeusedtobetterunderstandtheevolutionarydeterminantsofthespatialpopulationdynamics ofinvasiveandirruptivespecies.However,itremainsunclearhowtoidentifygroupsofintra-andinter-specificadaptive locithatmaybeinteractingwithoneanotherandtoquantifytheseinteractions.Wepresentaframeworktointegrateand modelspatialadaptivegenomicvariationinmultipletaxausingthemountainbeetle(MPB)outbreaksystemasacase study.WesearchedforclustersofputativelyadaptiveSNPlociintheMPB,itsmainhostlodgepolepine,andtwospecies ofsymbioticfungiusingamodifiedKendall’sKstatistic.Ourgoalwastofirstidentifygroupsoflocifromdifferenttaxa thatarefoundtogether(outbreaksyndromes)moreoftenthanexpectedbychanceandthentoidentifywhich,ifany, environmentalfactorspredictthesegroupings.Wefoundthatspatialgenomicvariationinpine,beetles,andfungiareall associatedwithclimate,whichsuggeststhatadaptationmaybeinvolvedastheMPBexpandsintonewregions.Wealso identifiedspatiallystructuredcorrelationsamonglociinthepine,MPB,andfungiwhichmayreflectongoingcoadaptationalongoutbreakexpansionaxes.Thisintegratedframeworkhasthepotentialtoimproveourunderstandingof spatialcommunitygeneticsandtobettercharacterizethespatialevolutionaryprocessesinfluencingrangeexpansions andpopulationoutbreaks. Keywords:Pinebeetle,Genomesequencing,Geneticvariation,Interactions,Co-adaptation. Phylogenetics MONDAY08:45,ROOM:WCOAST What’s in the box: Preliminary data from genomic signatures of adaptive diversification in box-ironbark eucalypts JASMINEJANES,UNIVERSITYOFNEWENGLAND,AUSTRALIA,[email protected] TIMOTHYCOLLINS,UNIVERSITYOFNEWENGLAND;JAMIESONGORRELL,UNIVERSITYOFNEWENGLAND,VANCOUVERISLAND UNIVERSITY;NORMANWHARTMANN,AUSTRALIANATIONALUNIVERSITY;REBECCAJORDAN,UNIVERSITYOFMELBOURNE;JUSTIN BOREVITZ,AUSTRALIANATIONALUNIVERSITY;ROSEANDREW,UNIVERSITYOFNEWENGLAND Theimportanceofancientstandingvariationandintrogressedallelesinrecentlydivergedspeciesisbecomingan increasinglypopularareaofresearch.Teasingapartthepatternsofhistoricalversuscontemporarygeneflow,andnew mutations,isfundamentaltoourunderstandingofadaptiveandevolutionaryprocesses.Forexample,thesourceofraw geneticmaterialforevolutioncanhavesignificantimpactsonthespeedandsuccesswithwhichapopulationcanadapt, andonthegenomicsignaturesresultingfromselection.Ourworkaddressestheimportanceofintrogressioninthe diversificationofaniconicAustraliangenus,Eucalyptus.Usingwhole-genomeshotgunsequencing,wewillidentify genomicregionscorrespondingtohistoricalintrogressionandadaptivedivergence.Quantifyingthesegenomicsignatures willfacilitateimprovedspeciesresolutioninthischallenginggroupandsignificantlyenhanceourunderstandingofthe selectivepressuresdrivingevolutionaryprocesses. Keywords:Genomesequencing,Plants,Geneticvariation,Evolution,Selection. Dispersal WEDNESDAY10:45,ROOM:THEATRE Gene expression associated with dispersal ability under different temperature conditions in the alpine butterfly, Parnassius smintheus MARYAMJANGJOO,WESTERNUNIVERSITY,[email protected] STEPHENF.MATTER,UNIVERSITYOFCINCINNATI;JOSHUABENOIT,UNIVERSITYOFCINCINNATI;NUSHAKEYGHOBADI,WESTERN UNIVERSITY Dispersalisacriticalprocessaffectingthedynamics,persistenceandevolutionarytrajectoriesofspatiallystructured populations.Flightcapacityisapotentiallyimportantdeterminantofdispersalinanimalscapableofflightand,ininsects, maybestronglyaffectedbyambientandbodytemperature.Thegeneencodingthemetabolicenzymephosphoglucose isomerase(PGI),involvedinprovidingenergyforflight,isawell-endorsedcandidategenefordispersalininsects.We usedRNAseqtechnologytoprepareanadulttranscriptomeforthealpinebutterfly,Parnassiussmintheus.Ourgoalswere to(i)identifythecodingsequenceofPgi,and(ii)profilegeneexpressionpatternsamongindividualswithdiffering dispersalhistoriesandcaughtflyingunderdifferenttemperatureconditionswithinanetworkofinterconnected populations.WefirstpooledRNAseqreadsfromallindividualstoassembleadenovoreferencetranscriptomeusing multipledifferentassemblers(Trinity,CLCandOases),andthenidentifiedthePgicodingsequence.Weareassessing sequencevariationatthePgilocustoexplorewhetherspecificgenotypesareassociatedwithflightatdifferent temperaturesandwithgreaterdispersal.Wearealsoconductingdifferentialexpressionanalysistocomparedisperser andnon-disperserindividuals,aswellasindividualscapturedduringflightwithhigherversuslowerbodytemperatureas comparedtoairtemperature.Ourexperimentalanalysisprovidesinsightsintogeneticandenvironmentalfactors underlyingflightanddispersalinthisalpineinsect. Keywords:Insects,Dispersal,Temperaturemodulation,Geneticvariation,Populationgenetics. Forestecology WEDNESDAY09:00,ROOM:WCOAST Impacts of deciduous and coniferous canopies on moss associated N-fixation: Implications for boreal N-cycling MELANIEJEAN,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN,[email protected] MICHELLEC.MACK,NORTHERNARIZONAUNIVERSITY,CENTERFORECOSYSTEMSCIENCEANDSOCIETY;JILLF.JOHNSTONE,UNIVERSITY OFSASKATCHEWAN Inborealforests,mossesandtheirassociatednitrogen-fixing(N)microbesareimportantsourcesofNinputs,andare potentiallyimportantinregulatingecosystemproductivity.Mossesdominatetheunderstoryofconiferousforests,while deciduousstandssupportalowermossabundance,likelybecauseofleaflitterinputs.Weaimtoquantifytheimpactsof canopycompositionanddeciduousleaflitteronN-fixationassociatedwithtwomosses(Hylocomiumsplendensand Pleuroziumschreberi)usingafield-basedexperimentnearFairbanks,Alaska.In2012,weestablished30studyplotsin paperbirch(Betulaneoalaskana)andblackspruce(Piceamariana)stands.Hylocomiumdominatedmosscores(n=90) wererandomlytransplantedfromsprucestandsintotheplotsandassignedtoatreatment:birchleaflitterexclusion, litteraddition,andambientlitterdeposition.Weidentified30proceduralcontrols(naturalHylocomiumpatches).We measuredmossgrowth(1200individuals)andenvironmentalcovariates(e.g.temperature,moisture)annually.In2015, wemeasuredN-fixationratesusingstableisotopelabelling(15N2).Ourpreliminaryresultssuggestthatnaturallyoccurringandtransplantedmossesinbirchstands,andmosseswithexperimentalandambientleaflitterinputs presentedlowerN-fixationthantheothers.Aleaflittercoverof60%eliminatedN-fixationandsignificantlyreducedmoss growth.Resultsfromthisstudygiveusinsightsinthefunctioningofthemoss-microbeassociationandfactorsaffectingit. UnderstandingN-cyclinginborealforestsisimportantinacontextofchangingforestcompositiontowardsamore deciduous-dominatedlandscape,asleaflitterimpactsonmossmayhavecascadingimpactsonforeststructureand composition. Keywords:Boreal,Mosses,Plants,Experiment,Nitrogenfixation. StudentSymposium MONDAY14:00,ROOM:THEATRE Looking through the bottleneck: Genomic analysis of historical and contemporary population genetic variation in the Pinzón Island Galápagos tortoise EVELYNL.JENSEN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN,[email protected] ADALGISACACCONE,YALEUNIVERSITY;MICHAELA.RUSSELLO,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN Inthemidstofthecurrentbiodiversitycrisis,thereareafewinspiringexampleswhereconservationactionshavebeen effectiveatrescuingaspeciesfromtheverybrinkofextinction,aswasthecaseforthePinzónIslandGalápagostortoise. Pinzóntortoisesnearlywentextinctduringthe20thcenturyduetohumanexploitation,withnaturalrecoveryimpeded bycompletedepredationofhatchlingsbyintroducedblackrats.Throughextensiveconservationinterventionsanda50yearlonghead-startprogram,thePinzóntortoisepopulationhasbeguntorecover,andremarkably,appearstohavehigh geneticdiversity.Inthisstudy,weinvestigatehowgeneticdiversityhasbeenimpactedbythesedemographicchanges overthelastcentury.Weusedrestrictionsiteassociated(RAD)sequencing,RADcapture,andwholemitochondrial genomecapturetocollectgenomiclevelinformationfromthecontemporarypopulationonPinzón,aswellasfrom78 museumspecimenscollectedin1906.Bytakingadvantageofthesetemporalsamples,thisstudycanuniquelyevaluate patternsofgeneticdiversitythroughpopulationdeclineandrecovery.Findingsbasedon2,500SNPsindicatesignificant changesbetweenthehistoricalandcontemporarysamples,includingadramaticreductionineffectivepopulationsize. Nevertheless,observedpatternsofspatialandtemporalhomogeneityinthecontemporarypopulationsuggestthatthe head-startprogramwassuccessfulincapturingandmaintainingextantgeneticdiversity.Thisstudyuniquelypieces togetherthehistoryofaspeciesthroughdeclineandrecovery,providingempiricalinsightsintoabottleneckandarare retrospectiveevaluationofahead-startprogram. Keywords:Genomicsequencing,Galapagostortoise,Geneticvariation,Geneticbottleneck. Stress,Antipredatorbehaviour MONDAY11:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Exploring stress biomarkers in an avian model GILLIANJOHNSTONE,ACADIAUNIVERSITY,[email protected] MARKMALLORY,ACADIAUNIVERSITY;RUSSELLEASY,ACADIAUNIVERSITY Biomarkersaremeasurablesubstancesthatcanbeusedasindicatorsofstressinanimals.Presently,thereislittle understandingofstressbiomarkersinbirds.Theobjectiveofthisstudywastoidentifychangesinuniqueproteinsinan avianmodeltofurtherourunderstandingofthestressresponseinaves.Themodelschoseninthisstudywerethe HerringGullandGreatBlack-BackedGull.SpecimenswereobtainedfromtheSt.John’sInternationalAirport, Newfoundland,CA.Samplesoflivertissueweregroundinamortarandpestleundersterileconditionstoextractsoluble proteins.Proteinconcentrationswerenormalizedand1DSDS-PAGEfollowedbyamodifiedsilverstainingmethodwere usedtoidentifyindividualproteinprofiles.GelswereimagedanddigitizedusingaFluor-STMMultimager.Proteinspots wereexcisedfromthegelsandfurtheranalysedusingtandemMS(LC-MS/MS).PreliminaryMSdatashowsknownstress proteinssuchasheatshock-70,heatshock-90,anti-oxidantssuchassuperoxidedimutaseand,pyridoxinephosphate oxidasewhichisanessentialenzymeinvitaminB6metabolism.Theseproteinswillbequantifiedusingimmunoblotting andusedastargetstoidentifytheeffectsofenvironmentalstressorsonthegulls.Asourknowledgeofstressinavesis limited,thisdatawillcontributetothebroaderunderstandingofstressinaves. Keywords:Birds,Stress,Biomarkers,Gull. ConsequencesofRapidEcologicalChangeinMountainEcosystemsSymposium TUESDAY09:00,ROOM:SIDNEY Where fast is slow: Experimental effects of changing soil temperature and nutrients on a subarctic, alpine plant community JILLJOHNSTONE,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN,[email protected] KIRSTENALLEN,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN;SARAKULEZA,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN;JONATHANHENKELMAN,UNIVERSITY OFSASKATCHEWAN Environmentalchangesinarcticandalpineregionsareproceedingatarapidpaceandmountainecosystemsathigh latitudesmaybeespeciallyvulnerabletothesechanges.Itiswidelybelievedthatoneoftheprincipaleffectsofachanging climateontundraplantcommunitieswillbeexpressedviatheindirecteffectsthatwarmingtemperaturesmayhaveon microbialactivityandsoilnutrientavailability.Wehavebeentestingthesepredictionsina5-yearfieldexperimentinan exposed,lowshrubplantcommunitytypicalofsubarctic,alpinetundrainsouthernYukon.After5years,controlledsoil warmingof2degreesC(achievedwithsoilheatingcablespoweredbyaphotovoltaicsystem)hadnodetectableeffectson mineralandtotalNinthesoil.Plantcommunitiesshowedlittleresponsetoeithersoilwarmingordirectnitrogen fertilization(2gNpersquaremperyear)forthefirst4yearsoftheexperiment.Inthefifthyear,wearejuststartingto seesignsofchange,largelyintheformofincreasedgraminoids.Theseresultscontraststronglywiththeresultsof fertilizationandairwarmingexperimentsinlowlandtundracommunities.Timewilltellwhetherthesetundraplantswill remainresilienttosustainedenvironmentalchanges.Atthemomentitappearsthatthepaceofvegetationresponsesto climatewarmingonalpinecommunitiesmaybeslowerthanexpected,possiblyduetoconstraintsimposedbywinter conditionsinexposedenvironments. Keywords:Experiment,Environmentalvariation,Plants,Climatechange,Resilience. Conservationchallengesassociatedwithaquaticsoundscapessymposium MONDAY13:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 The effects of anthropogenic and biological noise on fish behavior and physiology: A meta-analysis FRANCISJUANES,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] KIERANCOX,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;LAWRENCEP.BRENNAN,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;SARAHDUDAS,VANCOUVERISLAND UNIVERSITY Aquaticnoisehasthepotentialtotravelextremedistancesandassuchmanyspeciesrelyonthesoundscapeforauditory informationregardinghabitatselection,predatororpreylocations,andcommunication.Certainsoundshavethe potentialtonegativelyaffectaquaticspeciesresultinginunbalancedpredator-preyinteractionsanddisrupted communication.Todeterminetheimplicationsthatchangestothesoundscapemayhaveonfishes,weconductedametaanalysisfocusingonhowaquaticnoisemayalterfishbehaviorandphysiology.Wereviewed3,174potentiallyrelevant papersofwhich44metourcriteriaandwereusedintheanalysis.Ourreviewindicatedthataquaticnoisescanbedivided intofourdistinctcategories;anthropogenicnoise,tonesorpulses,biologicalnoise,andmusic.Eighteenofthe44studies focusedontheeffectsofanthropogenicandindicatedadverseeffectsforfishbehaviorandphysiology.Studiesfocusingon theeffectsofenvironmentalandbiologicalnoise,indicatedthatnoisefromthesesourceshasapositivebutnotsignificant effectonfishbehaviourandphysiology.Thesefindingssuggestthatthevastmajorityoffishhavethepotentialtobe negativelyaffectedbynoisepollution,whilebiologicalandenvironmentalnoisesmaynothavethesamenegative consequencesforfishbehaviorandphysiology. Keywords:Fish,Aquaticnoise,Habitatselection,Meta-analysis. EcologicalEpigeneticsSymposium TUESDAY08:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Ants and plants: Epigenetic responses to multiple mutualist partners REBECCAKARTZINEL,PRINCETONUNIVERSITY,BROWNUNIVERSITY,[email protected] BRIDGETTM.VONHOLDT,PRINCETONUNIVERSITY;CORINAE.TARNITA,PRINCETONUNIVERSITY;ROBERTM.PRINGLE,PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Long-livedtreesrelyonplasticityforphenotypicadjustmentsthroughouttheirlifetimestomaximizefitnessinchanging environmentalconditions.Plasticresponsestobioticinteractionscanbecomplex,dependingonthecontextandduration oftheinteraction.Inthistalk,Iwilldiscusstheepigeneticunderpinningsofphenotypicplasticityinawell-described mutualismbetweenanant-plantanditsobligateantpartners.Acacia(Vachellia)drepanolobiumassociateswithfourant species,eachofwhichexhibitsuniquebehaviorstowardsthetreerangingfrommutualistictoantagonistic.Using reduced-representationbisulfitesequencing,weshowthatratherthanhavingauniversalepigeneticsignatureofant occupancy,eachantspeciesinducesuniquemethylationpatternsinhosttrees.Treessubjectedto~3yofcontinuousant removalconvergetowardsmoresimilarmethylationpatternsbutretainthesignaloftheirmostrecentantoccupant.The uniquemethylationsignaturesinducedbyeachantvarybothinnature(genesaffected)andextent(totalnumberofsites affected).Functionalanalysisofgenesaffectedbyantoccupancyisconsistentwithourecologicalknowledgeofthe mutualism:forexample,antsrequiringhighenergyinputsfromthetree(e.g.,nutritionfromextrafloralnectar) disproportionatelyaffectgenesrelatedtophotosynthesisandenergymetabolism.Wealsoidentifyseveralgenes,strongly affectedbyantoccupancy,relatedtopathogendefenseandabioticstressthatmaygiveadditionalinsightintotheantplantinteractions.Thisworkcomplementsourextensiveecologicalknowledgeofmutualismbyprovidingafirstlookat themolecularbasisofhostresponsetocomplexecologicalinteractionsinnaturalsettings. Policyandplanning MONDAY16:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Prioritizing management actions when data is scarce and systems are complex LAURAKEHOE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] JULIABAUM,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;TARAMARTIN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Conservationresearchhaspredominantlyfocusedonidentifyingwhereandwhyspeciesorhabitatsareunderthreat. Whilethisisacrucialfirststep,itdoesnottellushowtooptimizetheallocationofresourcesinordertoconserve threatenedbiodiversity.Thetimeisripetofocusonidentifyingthekeymanagementactionsneededtorespondto multiplethreatsandemergingrisks.Usingstate-of-the-arttechniquesinconservationdecisionscience,prioritythreat managementassessment,andexpertelicitation,weidentifythemostecologicallyeffectiveandatthesametime,least costlymanagementactionsneededtoensurethelong-termpersistenceofatriskbiodiversityoftheFraserRiverEstuary. Thisestuaryisthemouthofthelargestsalmonbearingriverintheworldandastopoverpointformorethanonemillion migratorybirds.Manyspeciesontheestuaryareatriskduetowaterpollutionandlossofhabitatresultingfrom industrialandurbandevelopment,exploitationoffishstocks,andclimatechange.Thisstudyregionservesasaprime exampleofacomplexsystemundersiegefrommultiplethreatsbutwithlimitedscientificdata.Weshowthatsuch systemscanbeanalyzedtogeneratemanagementactionsrankedaccordingtoestimatedcost,ecologicalbenefits,the probabilityofsuccess,andco-benefitsincludingjobcreationandcarbonsequestration.Importantly,thisanalysiscan clarifywhatcanandcannotbeachievedfordifferentlevelsofconservationinvestment,andcanbeusedtoleverage increasedinvestmentinconservationmanagement. Keywords:Conservationpractitioners,Reservedesign,Spatialmodel,Management,Landscapeconfiguration. Plantecology MONDAY14:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Drivers of variation in the sugar maple (Acer saccharum) leaf and root microbiome along environmental gradients STEVENKEMBEL,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECÀMONTRÉAL,[email protected] ISABELLELAFOREST-LAPOINTE,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECÀMONTRÉAL;JESSICAWALLACE,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECÀMONTRÉAL Plant-associatedmicrobialcommunitieshavemanyimpactsonhostfitnessandfunction.Globalclimatechangeis impactingplantspeciesdistributions,aphenomenonthatwillaffectplant-microbeinteractionsbothdirectlyand indirectly.Inordertopredictplantresponsestoglobalclimatechange,itwillbecrucialtoimproveourunderstandingof plant-microbeinteractionsalongenvironmentalgradientswithinandattheedgeofplantspeciesnaturalranges.Inthis study,wequantifythemicrobialcommunitiesoftheleavesandrootsofseedlingsofthesugarmaple(Acersaccharum Marsh)alonggradientsofcanopycompositionwithinitsnaturalrangeandatthespecies'rangeedgealonganelevational gradient.Usinghigh-throughputDNAsequencing,wedemonstratethatthebacterialandfungalcommunitiesofA. saccharumseedlingsdifferacrosscanopycompositiongradientsandelevationalrangelimitsforleafandroot compartments.Wealsoshowthatdistinctmicrobialcommunitiescolonizeleavesandroots,thoughthemicrobial communitiesinsideaplant'sstructure(endophytes)werefoundtobeasubsetofthecommunitiesfoundoutsidethe plant'sstructure(epiphytes).Variationinmicrobialcommunitiesdifferedamongplantstructures,suggestingthe importanceofeachcompartment'sexposuretochangesinbioticandabioticconditions.Ourfindingssuggestthepotential forbioticinteractionsbetweenplantsandtheirassociatedmicrobiotatoinfluencethedynamicsofplantrangeedge boundariesandresponsestoglobalchange. Keywords:Climatechange,Forest,EnvironmentalDNA,Speciesdistribution,Microbes. Beeecologyandbehaviour WEDNESDAY10:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 The at-risk yellow-banded bumblebee (Bombus terricola) shows signs of inbreeding and selection for pathogen resistance: Results from population genomics CLEMENTF.KENT,YORKUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ALIVIADEY,YORKUNIVERSITY;TANUSHREETIWARI,YORKUNIVERSITY;NADIATSVETKOV,YORKUNIVERSITY;HARSHILKUMARPATEL, YORKUNIVERSITY;JAMESGURTOWSKI,COLDSPRINGHARBORLABS;MICHAELSCHATZ,COLDSPRINGHARBORLABS;SHEILACOLLA, YORKUNIVERSITY;AMROZAYED,YORKUNIVERSITY SeveralNorthAmericanbumblebeeshavedeclinedradicallyinrecentyears,withoneextinctionandonenear-extinction. Theyellow-bandedbumblebeeBombusterricolawascommon100yearsagoandnowisextirpatedinmanystatesandin thesouthofOntario.Wedevelopedagenomeandsequenced22beesfromnorthernOntarioandQuebec.Population geneticanalysesshowclearsignsofinbreeding,strongdeclineofeffectivepopulationsize,andindicationsofrecent selectiononimmunedefensegenes.Takentogethertheseareconsistentwiththepathogenspilloverhypothesisof Bombussensustrictodeclines.Conservationmeasuresandtopicsforfutureresearchareoutlined. Keywords:Invertebrates,Pollinators,Bumblebees,Speciesatrisk,Populationdeclines,Pathogens,Populationgenetics. Thetensionbetweenscienceandadvocacyinecology,evolution,andconservationbiologysymposium TUESDAY08:45,ROOM:SAANICH Scientific integrity and contributions to policy: Seeing the limits JEREMYKERR,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA,[email protected] Ecologistsandevolutionarybiologistscontributescientificinformationthatcanchangethecourseofsociety.The opportunitytomakeadifferencewithsuchpolicyissues,suchasconservingspeciesandecosystemsorlimitingantimicrobialresistance,motivatesmanytopursueresearchcareers.Itisafictionthatscientistsmustremainoutsidesocietal debates,arecentviewthatreflectsivorytowerprivilege.Scientificinformationcansometimesbepersuasive,even definingtheboundarieswithinwhichpoliciesmustbedevelopediftheyaretobeeffective,andgovernments,including ours,oftenappointchiefscientificadvisorspreciselybecausestrongscienceiscriticalforsoundpolicy.Whiletheirroleis vitaltomanydecisions,scientistsseekingmustremaincautiousaboutthedistinctionbetweeninformingandadvocacy. Policiesaredevelopedinresponsetotheneedsofmanyconstituenciesandscientistsrepresentjustoneofthem.Insuch circumstances,itiseasytocrossthelinefrominformingtoadvocating.Therise,orreturn,ofstronglyideological decision-makinginwesterndemocraciesplacesscientistsinaprecarioussituation.Whathappenswhenfactual informationiscasuallydisregardedwhenpoliciesarelaiddown?Iarguethatthisisathresholdwherescientistscan makethetransitiontoadvocacywithoutcompromisingtheirintegrity:wehavearoleindefendingtheuseofevidencein makingdecisions.Otherwise,scientistsseekingtoinfluencepolicyshouldguardtheircredibilitycarefully:“It’salong roadtowisdom,butit’sashortonetobeingignored." LifeOntheEdge:MechanismsofAdaptingtoClimateChangeSymposium TUESDAY10:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Evolutionary traps: A role for niche conservatism in limiting species' responses to global change JEREMYKERR,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA,[email protected] Globalchanges,includinglanduseintensificationandclimatewarming,contributestronglytoacceleratingextinction rates.Formanyspecies,geographicalrangesareexpandingtowardthepolesinresponsetoclimatechange,while remainingstablealongrangeedgesnearesttheequator.Usinglong-termobservationsacrossEuropeandNorthAmerica over110years,wetestedforclimatechange-relatedrangeshiftsinbumblebeespeciesacrossthefullextentsoftheir latitudinalandthermallimitsandmovementsalongelevationgradients.Wefoundcross-continentallyconsistenttrends infailurestotrackwarmingthroughtimeatspeciesnorthernrangelimits,rangelossesfromsouthernrangelimits,and shiftstohigherelevationsamongsouthernspecies.Bumblebeespeciesevolvedincool-temperateconditions approximately40Mya,andtheirlossesfromthewarmestareastheyhistoricallyoccupiedincludeastrongphylogenetic signal.Thatis,speciessharinggreaterevolutionaryhistoryweremorelikelytoshowcorrelateddeclinesfromsouthern andhotlocalities.Bumblebeespeciesmaybetrappedbytheirevolutionaryoriginsandsubsequentnicheconservatismin tolerancetohotconditions.Theseevolutionarymechanismsmayhelpidentifytaxathataresusceptibletorapiddeclines duringclimatechange. Keywords:Climatechange,Landusechange,Evolution,Bumblebees,Rangeexpansion,Evolutionarytrap. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY15:45,ROOM:COLWOOD Genomic patterns of parallel ecological speciation in Littorina saxatilis ecotype pairs TONYKESS,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] JUANGALINDO,UNIVERSITYOFVIGO;ELIZABETHBOULDING,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH ThemarinesnailLittorinasaxatilisisastrongcandidatesystemforecologicalspeciationduetoobservedformationof ecotypepairsdespiteongoinggeneflowinmultipleshoresitesacrosstheAtlantic.Theseecotypepairsexhibit adaptationsinshellmorphologyinresponsetowaveactionorcrabpredationdependingonlocationinwave-shelteredor wave-exposedregionsofsharedintertidalranges.Weinvestigatedpatternsofparallelmorphologicalandgenomic differentiationintheseecotypepairsfromthreeseparateshoresinSpaintoidentifytheextentandevolutionarycontext ofparallelevolutioninthissystem.UsingrestrictionassociatedDNAsequencingtoperformagenomescanforregions underselectionwefoundsubstantialsharingofdifferentiatedregionsintwopopulationsandmoderatesharingwitha third,geographically-distantpopulation.Wethenperformedagenome-wideassociationstudyofadaptiveshellshape differencesbetweenecotypepairsandcomparedidentifiedvariantsiteswithregionsshowingsignaturesofselection. Last,weinvestigatedtheevolutionarycontextofparallelgenomicdifferentiationusingpopulationgeneticclusteringand analysesofmolecularvariancetoidentifytheevolutionaryindependenceofeachpopulation,andthedriversofgenetic differentiationforselectedandneutralsetsofgeneticmarkers.Wefoundgreatergeneticsimilarityandlessstructure betweenclosepopulations,andthesepopulationsalsosharedpatternsofgenomicdifferentiationbetweenecotypes.We identifiedsubstantialandnearlyequalcontributionsofisolationbyadaptationandbydistancetopopulationstructure, indicatingindependenceofecotypeorigin,andstronggeneticbarrierstogeneexchangebetweenecotypesateachsite. Keywords:Invertebrates,Adaptation,Populationgenetics,Geneflow,Europe,Marine. Museumcollectionssymposium MONDAY09:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Climate change, phenology and species interactions: Opportunities and challenges of natural history collections HEATHERM.KHAROUBA,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA,[email protected] MARKVELLEND,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE Theannualtimingoflifestages(i.e.phenology)hasbeenfrequentlyobservedtoshiftinresponsetorecentclimate change.Whilemanyoftheseeventsnowoccurearlierduetowarmertemperatures,thereisconsiderablevariationinthe directionandmagnitudeoftheseshiftsacrossspecies.Thisvariationcouldhaveconsequencesforspecies’interactions andecologicalcommunities,especiallywhentherelativetimingofkeylifecycleeventsamongspeciesisdisrupted.Asa firststeptobetterunderstandthecausesandconsequencesofvariationinspeciesphenologicalresponsestoclimate change,Iusednaturalhistorycollectionstoquantifyandcomparebroad-scalepatternsinphenology-temperature relationshipsforCanadianbutterfliesandtheirnectarfoodplantsoverthepastcentury.Thephenologyofbothgroups advancedinresponsetowarmertemperatures-bothacrossyearsandsites.Acrossbutterfly-plantassociations,flowering timewassignificantlymoresensitivetotemperaturethanthetimingofbutterflyflight,howeverthesensitivitieswerenot correlatedacrossassociations.Thesefindingsindicatethatwarming-drivenshiftsinthetimingofspeciesinteractionsare likelytobeprevalent.Theopportunitiesandchallengesassociatedwithusingnaturalhistorycollectionsfordetectingand linkingphenologicalresponsestoclimatechangewillalsobediscussed. Sticklebackecologyandevolution MONDAY11:00,ROOM:SAANICH Morphological responses of threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) to two non-native predators HANNAHM.KIENZLE,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] STEVENVAMOSI,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY Nativepopulationsthatarethreatenedbyaninvasivepredatorareoftenabletocoexistthroughadaptation.Threespine stickleback(Gasterosteusaculeatus)arewell-knownfortheirabilitytoadapttochangingconditions,andadverseeffects havealreadybeenobservedinafewsticklebackpopulationsconsistingoflimneticandbenthicspeciespairs,which collapsedintoahybridswarmfollowingintroductionsofnon-nativepredatoryfish.Althoughtheeffectsofnon-native specieshavebeenstudiedinspeciespairlakes,littleisknownaboutthemorphologicalresponseofsolitarystickleback populationswhichconsistofasinglephenotypethroughoutthepopulation.OnVancouverIsland,signalcrayfishand smallmouthbassaretwointroducedpredatorscurrentlysharinglakeswithsolitarythreespinestickleback,anditis unclearifthesesticklebackarerespondingtonon-nativepredatorpressures.Forthisreason,weareinvestigating whetherthepresenceofsmallmouthbassandsignalcrayfishisassociatedwithspecificmorphologicaldifferencesin threespinesticklebackpopulations.Sticklebackfrom10lakesintheVancouverIslandregionwerecollected,each containingacombinationofone,both,orneithernon-nativepredator.Traitsthathavebeenpreviouslyassociatedwith sticklebackadaptationweremeasuredandquantified.Analysisforthisresearchisongoing,butweaimtodetermine whetherthepresenceofmultipleinvadershasanaddedorconfoundingeffectonsticklebackmorphologicalresponse. Understandinghowthesepredatorscollectivelyandindependentlyaffectsticklebackmorphologyisimportantasitcan addtoourcomprehensionofadaptationandpersistenceofnativespeciesinthepresenceofmultipleinvaders. Keywords:Invasion,Predation,Morphology,Fish,Selection. Socialsystems MONDAY15:45,ROOM:THEATRE Competitive interactions and the mechanisms behind negative frequency-dependent selection on aggression JULIAKILGOUR,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] RYANNORRIS,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;ANDREWMCADAM,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH Variationinaggressionpersistsinpopulations,inspiteofpotentialcompetitiveadvantagestoaggressiveindividuals,and potentialcompetitivecoststonon-aggressiveindividuals.Theoreticalandempiricalevidencedemonstratethatboth aggressiveandnon-aggressivestrategiescanbeselectedthroughnegativefrequency-dependentselection.However,the mechanismbywhichthisoccursremainsunclear.Toaddressthis,wetrackedcompetitiveinteractions,orcontests, betweenaggressiveandnon-aggressivestrainsoffruitflies(Drosophilamelanogaster),usingsurvivalasourfitness metric.Wetestedtwohypotheses:1)individualsofthesamestrainwillcompetemorestronglythanindividualsof differentstrainsresultinginhigherfitnessforrarestrains;2)Themechanismthatproducesthesefitnessadvantagesis theaggressivebehaviouritselfandthecostofaggressionsuchthat:i)rareaggressiveflieswinmorecontestsagainstthe commonnon-aggressivefliesprovidingafitnessadvantagewhenrare,andii)whencommon,contestcostsbetween aggressivefliesexceedthoseexperiencedbynon-aggressiveflies,providingafitnessadvantagetonon-aggressiveflies.To testthesehypotheses,wecreatedgroupsof30individuallymarkedfliesfromaggressiveandnon-aggressivestrains mixedat1:3and3:1ratiosandvideo-recordedinteractionsunderstressoflimitedfoodavailability.Weexaminedthe effectsofsex,strainandfrequencyoncompetitivecontestoutcomesandsurvival.Ourdataarethefirstoftheirkindto experimentallyexplorethebehaviouralmechanismbehindnegativefrequency-dependentselectiononaggressiondueto resourcecompetitionandprovideevidenceonthemaintenanceofalternativephenotypesinnature. Keywords:Competition,Aggression,Selection,Evolution,Experiment. Host-associatedmicrobes:fromprotectivemicrobestopathogenssymposium MONDAY08:00,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Rapid evolution of microbe-mediated protection KAYLAC.KING,UNIVERSITYOFOXFORD,[email protected] Manyplantsandanimals,includinghumans,harbourmicrobeswhichprovidethemwithprotectionagainstpathogen infection.Theseprotectivemicrobescanbeasignificantcomponentofhostdefence.Usingexperimentalevolutionofa novel,tripartiteinteraction,wedemonstratethatmildlypathogenicbacteria(Enterococcusfaecalis)livinginworms (Caenorhabditiselegans)canrapidlyevolvetodefendtheirhostsagainstinfectionbyamorevirulentpathogen (Staphylococcusaureus),therebycrossingtheparasitism-mutualismcontinuum.Wealsorevealthatprotectivemicrobes canalsodrivepathogenevolutionresultinginhigherburdens,butlowervirulencelevels.Ourresultsindicatethat bacteriainthehostmicrobiomeareimportantindetermininginfectionoutcomes. Livingintheeco-evolutionarytheatre:researchguidedandinspiredbyintensivefieldobservationssymposium TUESDAY17:30,ROOM:THEATRE Fishing for the secrets of evolutionary change in vertebrates DAVIDKINGSLEY,STANFORDUNIVERSITY,[email protected] LifeOntheEdge:MechanismsofAdaptingtoClimateChangeSymposium TUESDAY11:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Preserving adaptive capacity under intensifying ocean acidification TERRIEKLINGER,UNIVERSITYOFWASHINGTON,[email protected] Theimpendingeffectsofoceanacidification(OA)onmarinespeciesandecosystemsremainpoorlyresolved,dueinpart tothedynamicnatureofmarinesystemsandtotheadaptivecapacityinherentamongmarinetaxa.Asaconsequence,the selectionlandscapethatwillshaperesponsestooceanacidificationisdifficulttoascertain,challengingmanagersto understandandmanageforfuturechangesinmarineecosystemsunderconditionsofsubstantialuncertainty.Resilience approachesofferaframeworkforshapingpracticalresponsestothelikelybiologicalandecologicaleffectsofOA.Such approachescanbeimplementedundermanyexistingmanagementregimes,therebyavoidinglengthydelaysassociated withtheacquisitionofnewknowledgeandestablishmentofnewregulations.Forexample,intheU.S.,existingprovisions forecosystem-basedfisheriesmanagement,spatialprotections(e.g.,MPAs),andcoastalecosystemmanagementallcan beusedtosupportecologicalresilienceandpreserveadaptivecapacity.IusespecificexamplesfromtheU.S.westcoast toillustratetheutilityofthisapproachandconcludewithpragmaticrecommendationsforactionstopreserveadaptive capacityunderadvancingoceanacidification. Plantecology MONDAY14:00,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Fungal bio-fertilizers can affect local plant communities VASILEIOSKOKKORIS,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN,[email protected] MIRANDAHART,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN Bio-fertilizersareincreasinglyappliedtocropsaroundtheglobe.Whilewearelearningabouttheeffectthesecommercial microbialinoculantshaveoncropyieldswedonotknowhowtheyaffectwildplantcommunities.Duetotheintimate connectionbetweenplantsandtheirrootfungalcommunities,weaskedwhethercommercialinoculantsinteract differentlywithnativeplantsversuscropplants.Wehypothesisedthatcommercialinoculantswouldstimulatecrop plantsbutsuppresswildplants,whichshouldperformbetterwithlocallyadaptedfungi.Inordertotestthat,wegrew twoisolatesofthesamespeciesoffungusthatformmycorrhizas(awildandacommercialisolate)with10different plants(fivecultivarsandfivewildplants).Plantgrowthwasdeterminedbymeasuringplantbiomass,seedweightand numberandtotalleafphosphoruscontent,whilefungalperformancewasmeasuredby(sporenumber,mycelium abundanceandfungalstructures).Resultsindicatethatthecommercialisolatefunctionedmoreparasiticallywiththe majorityoftheplants.Thatfact,combinedwiththecommercialisolatesintensesporulationabilitiesmayleadtoinvasion ofthecommercialinoculantandadulterationoflocalplantcommunities. Keywords:fungus,experiment,symbiosis,plants,productivity. Parasites,parasitoids,pathogens WEDNESDAY10:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 You’re the one: Parasite infectious stages choose the most susceptible host individuals JANETKOPRIVNIKAR,RYERSONUNIVERSITY,[email protected] LUCIAM.SANTOS,RYERSONUNIVERSITY Bothinnateandenvironmentalfactorsinfluencewhetheranindividualbecomesinfectedwithparasites,includinghost susceptibilitydrivenbyimmunocompetenceandtheprobabilityofencounterwithinfectiousstages.However,even thoughevolutionarytheorypredictsthatthereshouldbestrongselectivepressureonparasiteswithmotileinfectious stagestochooserelativelysusceptiblehostsifpossible,moststudiesfocusonhostbehaviourandnotthatofparasites. Wereducedlarvalamphibian(tadpole)immunocompetencethroughexposuretoastresshormoneandthenexamined whethertrematode(flatworm)parasiteinfectiousstagesshowedapreferencefortheseindividuals,aswellasparasite useofhostcues.Parasitespreferredanesthetizedtadpolesovernegativecontrols,suggestinguseofhostchemicalcues, butweremostattractedtocontrolandimmunocompromisedtadpoles,indicatinganimportantroleforphysicalcues relatedtoactivity.Whileparasitesdidnotpreferimmunocompromisedtadpolesoverthecontrols,theinitialnumberthat choseeachtadpolewasasignificantpositivepredictorofindividualparasiteloadafterasecondroundofexposure allowinghostcontact.Thisindicatesthatparasitesweremostattractedtothosetadpoleswhichwereultimatelythemost susceptibletoinfection,suggestingthatindividualhostselectionbyparasitesmaybeanimportantconsiderationforthe ecologyandevolutionofinfectiousdiseases. Keywords:Parasitology,Behaviouralecology,Interactions,Experiment. Foraging TUESDAY11:15,ROOM:SIDNEY Applying the functional response framework to human-pest interactions MÉLODIEKUNEGEL-LION,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] Thefunctionalresponseframeworkcharacterizespredator-preyinteractionsbytherelationshipbetweenpreydensity andthenumberofpreycapturedbyapredator.Inthefunctionalresponseliterature,researchersusuallystudypest managementintwoways:biologicalcontrolandindirecteffectsofmanagementonapredator-preysystem.Anotherway wouldbetoconsidermanagers,thepersonsthatphysicallyremove/controlapestfromtheenvironment,aspredators themselves.Applyingfunctionalresponseliteraturetohuman-pestmanagementwouldbeextremelypowerfulasthereis anextensivefunctionalresponsetheoreticalbackground.Theobjectivesofthistheoreticalworkare1)toshowthatthe ideaoffunctionalresponsescanbeextendedtoapplytotheeffectofmanagementontheabundanceofpestspeciesand 2)toderivesimplefunctionsthatdescribedthenumberofpestindividualsthatmanagerscontrolasafunctionofpest density.Weusedmathematicalmodelsandsimulationstoexplorethefunctionalresponsetypesobtainedunderthe assumptionthatmanagersareequivalenttopredators,pestsareequivalenttoprey,andmonetarycostsrestrain managersinthesamewaytemporalcostsrestrainspredators.Weinvestigateddifferentscenarii,whicharecombinations ofpestspatialpatterns(random,clusteredorregulardistributions)andmanagementpestremovalstrategies(random searchoradaptiveclustersampling),andshowedthatweareabletomakeananalogybetweenfunctionalresponsesin predator-preyinteractionsandinhuman-pestmanagement. Keywords:Predatorfunctionalresponse,Mathematicalmodel,Behaviouralecology,Management,Spatialdistribution. Usingexperimentalevolutiontorevealtheeco-evolutionaryimpactsofglobalchangesymposium WEDNESDAY09:45,ROOM:THEATRE Eco-evolutionary simulation models as a way of experimenting evolution ANNAKUPARINEN,UNIVERSITYOFHELSINKI,[email protected] Longgenerationtimesandregulationslimitingmanipulationsofnaturalpopulationsarejusttwoexamplesofsituations, inwhichexperimentalinvestigationofevolutionaryprocessesandtheirecologicalfeedbackscanbedifficult.Simulation modelsdescribingeco-evolutionarydynamicsprovideamethodtoexplorethenatureandrateofevolutionunder alternativescenariosforselection,andhowevolutionarychangesinphenotypesmightalterpopulationdynamics.Iwill presenttwocasestudies,whereeco-evolutionarysimulationmodelsareutilizedtoexploreevolutionaryprocessesin situations,whereexperimentalapproacheswouldnothavebeenfeasible.Thefirstcase-studyillustrateshowforest adaptationtowarmingtemperaturescanbemuchslowerthanthepredictedrateofglobalwarming.Thus,borealforests mightnotbeabletotakefulladvantageofimprovedgrowthconditions.Thesecondcase-studyinvestigateshowrecently discoveredgeneticarchitectureoftheageatmaturityinAtlanticsalmoncanleadtodivergentanddisruptive evolutionaryresponsestosize-selectivemortalityandfurtherdestabilizepopulationgrowth.Thechosencase-studies illustratehowknownlife-historyanddemographicparameterscoupledwithknowledgeaboutthegeneticbasisof phenotypictraitscanbeutilizedtopredictlargeandlongscaleeco-evolutionarydynamics.Similarly,suchsimulation studiescanserveasbasisfordesigningexperimentalset-ups. Socialsystems MONDAY16:00,ROOM:THEATRE The effect of individual variation of sociality on reproductive success and body condition in a Canadian population of black-tailed prairie dogs JILLIANM.KUSCH,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN,[email protected] JEFFREYE.LANE,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN Socialsystemsbalancethecostsandbenefitsofconspecificaffiliation.Todate,mostresearchinthesesocialsystemshas focusedonpopulation-levelcostsandbenefits,withlessattentionpaidtovariablecostsandbenefitstotheindividual. Socialnetworkanalysis(SNA)providesatooltoextendtheseanalysestotheintraspecificlevelandtointerpret behaviouralinteractionsbetweenindividualsofapopulation.Previousstudieshavesuggestedthatlargenumbersof socialconnectionsmaycontributetohighersurvival,foragingsuccess,andreproductivesuccess.Thesestudiesprimarily usemeasurementsofcontact(oftenproximity)thatignorethelikelyimportanceofdetailedsocialbehavioursin estimatesofsocialitybenefits.Black-tailedprairiedogs(Cynomysludovicianus)liveinhighlysocialcoloniesanddisplay anelaboraterangeofsocialbehaviours.Asprairiedogsarehighlysocial,Ihypothesizethatthebenefitsofsocial interactions(reproductivesuccessandsurvival)outweighthecosts.Ihaveconstructedasocialnetworkofmembersofa prairiedogcolonyfromsouthernSaskatchewanthroughbehaviouralobservationandexaminedcomponentsoffitness (bodyconditionandreproductivesuccess)ofeachprairiedoginthenetwork.Bycomparingthesecomponentsoffitness withindividualmetricsofsociality,Iwilldeterminehowsocialityinfluencesvariationinfitness.Byfocusingonastudy specieswithdiverseandeasilyobservedsocialinteractions,thisresearchshouldbothimproveourunderstandingofthe utilityofSNAforwildpopulationsandprovideinsightintotheecologicalconsequencesofnaturalindividualvariationin socialityinblack-tailedprairiedogs. Keywords:Socialbehaviour,Interactions,Reproduction,Smallmammals,Socialnetworkanalysis. Forestecology WEDNESDAY09:15,ROOM:WCOAST Plant functional groups, hydrological conditions and climate interact to affect carbon accumulation in peatlands TERRILACOURSE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] KYLEBEER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Peatlandsplayadisproportionateroleinthecarboncycle:theycover~3%ofthegloballandsurfacebutstoreaboutonethirdofglobalsoilcarbon.Inordertounderstandtheeffectsofclimatechangeontheseimportantcarbonsinks,more researchisneededonpastpeatlanddynamics,long-termCaccumulation,andconnectionstochangesinvegetationand hydrology.Weobtainedapeatsequencespanningthelast11,000yrfromacentralVancouverIslandwetland.Pollen, plantmacrofossil,testateamoebaeandphysicochemicalanalysesofthepeatwereusedtodocumentchangesin vegetation,wetlanddevelopmentandCaccumulationthroughtime.Ourresultsindicatethatsurroundingforestswere dominatedinitiallybyPinuscontortaandthenbyPseudotsugamenziesii~9500yrago.AtransitiontoTsugaheterophylladominatedforestsoccurred~7500yrago.ThroughthisearlyHoloceneperiod,relativewatertabledepthdecreasedand thewetlandbecameincreasinglydominatedbySphagnummossesandericaceousshrubs.Carbonaccumulationwas highestintheearlyHolocene,whensummerswerewarmerandwinterswerecolder,relativetothepresent.Greater seasonalitywouldhavefavoredprimaryproductioninsummerandreduceddecompositionduringwinter,increasing peataccumulationandCstorage.OverallCaccumulationissimilartoratesatapeatlandonnorthernVancouverIsland butsignificantlylowerthanincontinentalpeatlands,underscoringtherolethatseasonalityplaysindrivingC accumulation,bothonlongtemporalscalesandatlargespatialscales.Ourstudyshowsthatchangesinplantfunctional groups,localhydrologicalconditionsandmacroscaleclimateinteracttoaffectCaccumulationinwetlandsonlong ecologicaltimescales. Keywords:Peatland,Historicalrecords,Pollen,Carbonstorage. StudentSymposium MONDAY11:15,ROOM:THEATRE Leaf bacterial diversity mediates plant diversity-ecosystem function relationships ISABELLELAFOREST-LAPOINTE,UNIVERSITEDUQUEBEC,[email protected] ALAINPAQUETTE,UNIVERSITEDUQUEBEC;CHRISTIANMESSIER,UNIVERSITEDUQUEBEC,UNIVERSITEDUQUEBECENOUTAOUAIS; STEVENW.KEMBEL,UNIVERSITEDUQUEBEC Researchonbiodiversity-ecosystemfunctioninghasdemonstratedlinksbetweenplantdiversityandecosystemfunctions suchasproductivity.Atothertrophiclevels,theplantmicrobiomehasbeenshowntoinfluencehostplantfitnessand function,andhost-associatedmicrobeshavebeenhypothesizedtoinfluenceecosystemfunctionthroughtheirrolein definingtheextendedphenotypeofhostorganisms.However,theimportanceoftheplantmicrobiomeforecosystem functionhasnotbeenquantifiedinthecontextoftheknownimportanceofplantdiversityandtraits.Weaddressthislack ofknowledgeusinghigh-throughputsequencingoftheleaf(phyllosphere)bacterialcommunitiesofahigh-densitytree diversityexperimentthatvariedplantcommunitycompositionalongagradientoffunctionaltraitdiversity.Weasktwo questions:1)whatistherelativeinfluenceofhostspeciesidentity,neighborspeciesidentity,hostfunctionaltrait diversityandhostspeciesrichnessonleafbacterialcommunitystructureanddiversity?;and2)whatistherelationship betweenleafbacterialdiversityandtreeproductivity?Usinganoveltreebiodiversity-ecosystemfunctioningexperiment, weprovidestrongsupportforthehypothesisthatleafbacterialdiversityispositivelylinkedwithecosystemproductivity evenafteraccountingfortheroleofplantdiversity.Ourresultsdemonstratethathostspeciesidentity,functionalidentity andfunctionaldiversityarethemaindeterminantsofleafbacterialcommunitystructureanddiversity.Ourstudy providesevidenceofapositivelinkbetweenplant-associatedmicrobialdiversityandterrestrialecosystemproductivity, andanewmechanismbywhichmodelsofbiodiversity-ecosystemfunctioningrelationshipscanbeimproved. Keywords:Ecosystemfunction,Genomicsequencing,Plants,Bacteria. HERB MONDAY16:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Climate and land use inform range expansion of a large boreal herbivore in a novel agro-ecosystem MICHELP.LAFORGE,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY,[email protected] RYANK.BROOK,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN;NICOLEL.MICHEL,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN,NATIONALAUDUBONSOCIETY Large-scaleclimaticfluctuationshavecausedspeciesrangeshifts.Moose(Alcesalces)haverecentlyexpandedtheirrange southwardintoagriculturalareaspreviouslynotconsideredmoosehabitat.Understandinglong-termshiftsinbroadscaledistributionrequiresaknowledgeofproximatemechanismsdrivinggeographicrangeshifts.Weproposetwo mechanismsthatmaydrivemooseencroachmentandfurtherexpansionintoagro-ecosystems:accessto thermoregulatorycoverhabitat(pondsandwetlands)andaccesstohigh-qualityforage(i.e.,crops).Totestthese hypotheses,weusedverifiedcropdamagerecordstoquantifymoosepresenceacrosstheCanadianPrairies.We regressedlatitudeofcropdamageagainstNorthAtlanticOscillation(NAO;aproxyforwintertemperatureand precipitation)valuesatmultipletimelagstotestthehypothesisthatNAO-mediatedwetlandrechargewouldresultin morefrequentoccurrencesofcropdamagebymooseatsoutherlylatitudes.Weexaminedlocal-scalelanduseby generatingahabitatsuitabilitymodeltotestourhypothesisthatmooseselectedforareasofhighcropcoverinagroecosystems.Wefoundthatcropdamagebymooseoccurredfarthersouthduringcold,drywinterstwoyearsafterwarm, wetwinters.Thissuggeststhatsnowpackmaylimitforageavailabilityatthesouthernlimitoftheirrangebutimprove habitatinfutureyearsbyincreasingavailablethermoregulatoryhabitat.Ourresultsindicatedthatmooseselectedfor cropsandwetlandhabitat,supportingbothhypotheses.Elucidatingproximatecausesofshiftsinspeciesabundanceina novelecosystemiscriticaltounderstandinghowanthropogenicclimatechangewillinfluencefuturespeciesrangeshifts. Keywords:Moose,Foraging,Climatechange,Habitatselection,Speciesdistribution. Lifehistories:reproduction,senescence TUESDAY11:00,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Morphological changes in offspring associated with parental senescence ROBERTLAIRD,UNIVERSITYOFLETHBRIDGE,[email protected] ERICANKUTOWICZ,UNIVERSITYOFLETHBRIDGE Senescence,commonlycalled'aging'ischaracterizedbyprogressivephysiologicaldeteriorationresultinginincreased riskofdeathanddecreasedreproductivecapacitywithadvancingchronologicalage.Recentworkhasdemonstrateda thirdcomponentofaging:decreasedoffspringquality.Inthecurrentstudy,wefocusedonchangesinoffspringfrond morphologyassociatedwithparentalageinthesmallaquaticplantLemnaminor.Wehypothesizedthatoffspringofolder parentalfrondswouldbesmallerandlessbilaterallysymmetricalcomparedtooffspringofyoungerparentalfronds.We tracked400offspringof30parentfronds,photographedthemneartheendoftheirlife,andperformeddigital morphometricanalysesusingpurpose-codedsoftware.Asameasureofsymmetry,weusedanindexcalledthe 'continuoussymmetrymeasure',whichdoesnotrequiretheidentificationoflandmarksandisthereforesuitablefor relativelyfeaturelessshapessuchasLemnafrondoutlines.Wefoundstrongevidencethatsuccessiveoffspringare smallerastheirparent'sageincreases.Wealsofoundweaker,butstillsuggestiveevidencethatoffspringofolderfronds arelessbilaterallysymmetricalthanthoseofyoungerfronds.Theseresultsmayhelptoexplainthereductioninfrond fitnesswithincreasingparentalagethatwehaveobservedinpreviousstudiesonLemna. Keywords:Morphology,Senescence,Reproduction,Plants. Biodiversity TUESDAY09:00,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Diversity productivity relationships across scale ERICG.LAMB,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN,[email protected] GORDONG.MCNICKLE,PURDUEUNIVERSITY Theshapeofthediversity-productivityrelationshiphasendlesslyfascinatedplantecologists.Thinkingonthissubjecthas shiftedandexpandedfromGrimesoriginalhump-shapedconceptionthroughdebatesonthepredominantshapeofthe relationship,tocurrentacceptancethatapluralityofshapesarepossible.Hereweinvestigatehowdiversity-productivity relationshipschangeacrossscalewithinindividualcommunitiesusingcasestudiesfromaCanadianmixedgrasslandand atropicalforest.Ineachcasewehavecontinuousstemmapsandmeasuresofindividualplantbiomassorproductivity. Bydroppingvirtualquadratsofvaryingsizeonthesecommunitiesweareabletofitspecies-productivityrelationshipsat multiplescales.Twogeneralpatternsemergefromthiswork.First,withineachscalethereisageneraltrendforhumpshapedrelationshipsatsmallerspatialscalestransitioningtopositivelinearrelationshipsatlargerscales.Second,across scalesthereisagenerallog-linearrelationshipbetweendiversityandproductivity.Theseresultsdemonstratethat samplingscalemaybeakeydriveroftheshapeoftheproductivity-diversityrelationship. Keywords:Plants,Productivity,Simulationmodel,Scale. Movement,activity,wildlifemanagement WEDNESDAY08:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Where the rubber meets the road: The influence of roads on grizzly bear density CLAYTONT.LAMB,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] GARTHMOWAT;AARONREID;LAURASMIT;MICHAELPROCTOR;BRUCEN.MCLELLAN;SCOTTE.NIELSEN;STANBOUTIN Humanactivitiesarehavingdramaticeffectsonthedistributionandabundanceofwildlife,includinggrizzlybears.As roaddensitiesincreasesodoeshumanpresenceandassociatedhabitatavoidanceandhuman-causedmortalityofbears. Managementagenciesfrequentlymanagegrizzlybearsbymanagingroaddensity,althoughtheeffectivenessofthese actionsarerarelyassessed.Wecombinedsystematic,DNA-basedmark-recapturetechniqueswithspatiallyexplicit capturerecapture(SECR)modelstoestimatepopulationsizeofathreatenedgrizzlybearpopulation(Kettle-Granby) followingmanagementactionstorecoverthispopulation.Specifically,wetesttheeffectofroadsonpopulationdensity andassessroaddensitythresholdsandthesuccessofcurrentaccessmanagement.Wedocumentadoublingofthe populationsince1997duetoincreasedlandscapeandspeciesconservation.However,beardensitywaslowerwhereroad densitiesexceeded0.6km/squarekmbutbeardensitywashigherwheremotorizedvehicleaccesshadbeenrestricted. Ourdatademonstratethatpopulationrecoveryispossibleinamulti-uselandscapewhenmanagementactionstarget priorityareas,butthelandscapewouldlikelysupportmorebearsiftherewerefewerroads.Reducingroadswillincrease grizzlybeardensityandrestrictingvehicleaccesscanalsoachievethisgoal.Inaddition,wedemonstratethatapolicy targetofreducingroaddensitybelow0.6km/squarekm,inareaswheregrizzlybearrecoveryisagoal,isareasonable compromisebetweentheneedforroadaccessforsocialandeconomicreasonsandgrizzlybearrecoverygoals.Targeting closurestoareasofhighesthabitatqualitywouldbenefitgrizzlybearrecoverythemost. Keywords:Landusechanges,Management,Grizzlybears,Protectedareas,Populationdynamics,Roads. Plantecology MONDAY14:15,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Mast seeding patterns in five North American conifer genera (1912-2014) JALENELAMONTAGNE,DEPAULUNIVERSITY,[email protected] IANS.PEARSE,USGS,CORNELLUNIVERSITY;MICHAELLORDON,DEPAULUNIVERSITY;WALTKOENIG,CORNELLUNIVERSITY Avarietyofperennialplantspeciesundergomastseeding,thetemporallyvariableandspatiallysynchronousproduction ofseedcropsbypopulationsofplants.Theseseedsarekeyforforestregenerationandasafoodsourceforavarietyof consumersincludinginsects,smallmammals,andbirds.Mastseedingcanoccuracrosslargeareas,uptoacontinentin scale.Theproximatecauseofmastyearsisbelievedtobeweathercues,whichcouldbeimpactedbyclimatechange.Our objectivewastoassesspatternsofmastingoverspaceandtimeduringthepastcenturyforconifertreesinCanadaand theUSAintermsofmastingfrequencyandsynchrony.WesearchedforquantitativedatasetsonreproductionforNorth Americanconifertreespeciesduringthe20thand21stcenturythatwasatleast6yearslong.Wecompiledadatasetthat included191timeseriesrecords,spanned1912-2014,andincludedfiveconifergenera(Abies,Picea,Pinus,Pseudotsuga, Tsuga)and23species.Wehypothesizedthattreesintheborealandmontaneareas(cold-tolerantspecies)wouldhavea strongerchangesintheirmastingdynamicovertime,comparedtocoastalareastrees(cold-intolerantspecies),because higherlatitudeandhigherelevationregionsaremorevulnerabletoclimatechange.Spatialandtemporalpatternsin mastingbasedonreproductivetiming(1vs.2yearsforconedevelopment)andconemorphology(e.g.,serotiny)willbe investigated.Alteringthepatternsofweathercuesduetoclimatechangecouldimpactmastseedingandhavecascading impactsinecosystems. Keywords:Plants,Reproduction,Mastseeding,Spatialdistribution. Usingexperimentalevolutiontorevealtheeco-evolutionaryimpactsofglobalchangesymposium WEDNESDAY08:45,ROOM:THEATRE Experimental evolution in the wild using long-term ecological experiments to study the evolution of mutualism JENNIFERLAU,MICHIGANSTATEUNIVERSITY,[email protected] DYLANWEESE,ST.AMBROSEUNIVERSITY;KATYHEATH,UNIVERSITYOFILLINOIS Long-termecologicalexperimentscanbeidealsystemsfortestingforrapidevolutionbecauseputativeselectiveagents havebeenexperimentallymanipulatedinreplicatedpopulations(fieldplots)fordecades.Ourpreviousworkonthe legume-rhizobiumresourcemutualisminwhichleguminoushostplantsexchangephotosyntheticallyfixedcarbonfor nitrogenfixedbybelowgroundrhizobiumsymbiontsshowedthat20+yearsofnitrogenfertilizationhascausedthe evolutionoflesscooperativerhizobia.Theorypredictssuchanevolutionaryresponse,butdifferentevolutionary mechanisms(e.g.,directionalselectionforlowqualityrhizobiavs.relaxedselectionfavoringhighqualityrhizobia)may underliethisobservedevolutionarychange.Herewemeasurethefitnessofbothplantsandrhizobiaacrossanitrogen gradientanduseselectionanalysesandreciprocaltransplantexperimentstodifferentiatebetweenthesemechanisms. Weinvestigatehownitrogeninfluencesselectiononrhizobiumandwhetherrhizobiumpopulationsareadaptedtolocal soilnitrogenenvironments.Wefindlimitedevidenceforlocaladaptation.RhizobiastrainsisolatedfromN-addition treatmentsproducedmorenodules(onecomponentofrhizobiumfitness)acrossallsoilnitrogenconcentrations, althoughthemagnitudeofthiseffectvariedacrosssoilnitrogenconcentrations.Wealsofindevidencethatselection favorslesscooperativerhizobia,butthatrhizobiumstrainsthathavelostknownsymbiosisgeneshadlowerfitnessacross allsoilnitrogenenvironmentsthanstrainswiththefullcomplementofsymbiosisgenes.Theseresultssuggestthat directionalselectionforlowerqualityrhizobiamaybecommonandopposedbyalternativemechanismsmaintaining cooperationonlywhendiverserhizobiumstrainsinteractsimultaneouslywithaplanthost. Habitatselectionanduse WEDNESDAY08:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Human shields mediate sexual conflict in a top predator MARTINLECLERC,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE/CEN,[email protected] SAMM.J.G.STEYAERT,NORWEGIANUNIVERSITYOFLIFESCIENCES,UNIVERSITYCOLLEGEOFSOUTHEASTNORWAY;JONASKINDBERG, SWEDISHUNIVERSITYOFAGRICULTURALSCIENCES,NORWEGIANINSTITUTEFORNATURERESEARCH;SVENBRUNBERG,NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITYOFLIFESCIENCES;JONE.SWENSON,NORWEGIANUNIVERSITYOFLIFESCIENCES,NORWEGIANINSTITUTEFORNATURE RESEARCH;ANDREASZEDROSSER,UNIVERSITYCOLLEGEOFSOUTHEASTNORWAY,UNIVERSITYOFNATURALRESOURCESANDLIFE SCIENCES;FANIEPELLETIER,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE/CEN Selectingtherighthabitatinariskylandscapeiscrucialforanindividual'ssurvivalandreproduction.Inpredator-prey systems,preyoftencananticipatethehabitatuseoftheirmainpredatorandmayuseprotectiveassociates(i.e.typically anapexpredator)asshieldsagainstpredation.Althoughnevertested,suchmechanismsshouldalsoevolveinsystemsin whichsexualconflictaffectsoffspringsurvival.Here,weassessedtherelationshipbetweenoffspringsurvivalandhabitat selection,aswellastheuseofprotectiveassociates,inasysteminwhichsexuallyselectedinfanticide(SSI),ratherthan interspecificpredation,affectsoffspringsurvival.WeusedtheScandinavianbrownbear(Ursusarctos)populationwith SSIinahuman-dominatedlandscapeasourmodelsystem.Bears,especiallyadultmales,generallyavoidhumansinour studysystem.WeusedresourceselectionfunctionstocontrasthabitatselectionofGPS-collaredmothersthatwere successful(i.e.survivinglitters,n=19)andunsuccessful(i.e.completelitterloss,n=11)inkeepingtheiryoungduring thematingseason(2005-2012).Habitatselectionwasindeedapredictoroflittersurvival.Successfulmothersweremore likelytousehumansasprotectiveassociates,whereasunsuccessfulmothersavoidedhumans.Ourresultssuggestthat principlesofpredator-preyandfearecologytheory(e.g.non-consumptiveandcascadingeffects)canalsobeappliedto thecontextofsexualconflict. Keywords:Largecarnivores,Brownbears,Predation,Infanticide,Europe,Habitatselection. Phylogenetics MONDAY09:45,ROOM:WCOAST Environmental marginality and range limits in Arabidopsis lyrata JULIELEE-YAW,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] MARCOFRACASSETTI,UNIVERSITATBASEL;YVONNEWILLI,UNIVERSITATBASEL Understandingthefactorsthatgovernthedistributionofspeciesisacentralgoalofevolutionaryecology.Itiscommonly assumedthatgeographicrangelimitsreflectecologicalnichelimitsandthatspeciesexperienceincreasinglymarginal conditionstowardstheedgeoftheirranges.Usingspatialdataandecologicalnichemodelswetestedthesehypothesesin Arabidopsislyrata.Specifically,weaskedwhetherrangelimitscoincidewithpredictednichelimitsinthissystemand whetherthesuitabilityofsitesdeclinestowardstheedgeofthespecies'rangeinNorthAmerica.Wefurtherexplored patternsofenvironmentalchangetowardstheedgeoftherangeandaskedwhethergenome-widepatternsofgenetic diversitydeclinewithincreasingperipheralityandenvironmentalmarginality.Ourresultssuggestthatlatitudinalrange limitscoincidewithnichelimits.Populationsexperiencedincreasinglymarginalenvironmentstowardstheselimits thoughpatternsofenvironmentalchangeweremorecomplexthanmosttheoreticalmodelsforrangelimitsassume. Genomicdiversitydeclinedtowardstheedgeofthespecies'rangeandwithincreasingdistancefromtheestimatedcentre ofthespecies’nicheinenvironmentalspace,butnotwiththesuitabilityofsitesbasedonnichemodelpredictions.Thus whilelatitudinalrangelimitsinthissystemarebroadlyassociatedwithnichelimits,thelinkbetweenenvironmental conditionsandgeneticdiversity(andthustheadaptivepotentialofpopulations)islessclear. Microbialecology MONDAY09:15,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Microbial ecology of seaweed MATTHEWLEMAY,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] LAURAPARFREY,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Marinemacroalgae(i.e.seaweed)provideessentialhabitatfordenseassemblagesofmarineorganismsandarea significantsourceofenergyandnutrientsformarinefoodwebs.Thesurfacesofmacroalgaesupportdiversecommunities ofmicrobialsymbiontsthatareessentialforthedevelopment,metabolicfunctioning,anddefenseoftheirhosts,andfor facilitatingthetransferofcarbonfromalgalprimaryproductiontohighertrophiclevels.Therehasbeenmuchinterestin understandingtheco-evolutionaryrelationshipsbetweenseaweedsandtheirmicrobialsymbionts,yetmulti-species researchcomparingpatternsofmicrobialdiversityacrossmacroalgalcommunitieshavebeenlacking.Inthisstudy,we quantifiedthediversityofhost-associatedmicrobes(bacteriaandmicro-eukaryotes)presentamong>40sympatric speciesofseaweedfromasinglesiteonthecentralcoastofBritishColumbia.Wefoundthatsympatricspeciesofseaweed haveahighproportionofsharedbacteria,yetalsoshowsignificantdifferencesinthestructureoftheirbacterial communitiesamonghost-species.Bacterialcommunitystructuredoesnottrackhostphylogeny,butisinstead significantlycorrelatedwithhost-morphology.Thisstudyprovidesthefirstcommunity-levelinvestigationofseaweedassociatedmicrobialcommunities,andsuggestsanovelmechanism(hostmorphology)thatmaystructurebacterial communitiesacrossalgalhosts. Keywords:Marine,Seaweed,Morphology,Symbiosis. Canadianprotectedareasinachangingclimate:Across-ecosystemapproachsymposium TUESDAY13:30,ROOM:SAANICH Integrating static and dynamic spatial management for biodiversity persistence under climate change SHAWNJ.LEROUX,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY,[email protected] CHRISTOPHERBLACKFORD,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;CINDYCHU,ONTARIOMINISTRYOFNATURALRESOURCESANDFORESTRY;JANELLE CURTIS,DEPARTMENTOFFISHERIESANDOCEANSCANADA;CASSIDYDALOIA,WOODSHOLEOCEANOGRAPHICINSTITUTION;EMILY DARLING,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;MARIE-JOSEEFORTIN,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;FREDERICGUICHARD,MCGILLUNIVERSITY; ALEXANDREMARTENSEN,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;ILONANAUJOKAITIS-LEWIS,ENVIRONMENTANDCLIMATECHANGECANADA; BRONWYNRAYFIELD,ISFORT,UNIVERSITEDUQUEBECENOUTAOUAIS;JENNIFERSUNDAY,BIODIVERSITYCENTRE,UNIVERSITYOF BRITISHCOLUMBIA;AMANDAXUEREB,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Climatechangeisaffectingbothspeciesdistributions(e.g.,rangeshift,expansions,contractions)andthelandscapesand waterscapesthattheyoccupy.Anumberofrecentclimateadaptationstrategieshavebeenproposedtoaccountfor climatechangeinconservationplanningandspatialmanagement.Commonclimateadaptationstrategiesincludespecies translocations,protectionofgeophysicalfeaturesorclimaterefugia,establishmentofmoreandlargeprotectedareas,and enhancementoflandscapeconnectivityviacorridorsandsteppingstones.Rarely,however,aredynamicspatial managementactions(i.e.,temporaryprotectedareas)proposedorimplementedasastrategytopreservebiodiversity underchangingclimate.Inthistalk,wewillreviewexamplesofcurrentdynamicspatialmanagementinmarine, freshwater,andterrestrialecosystems.Wewilloutlinetheadvantagesandlimitationsofapplyingsuchdynamic managementactionsforbiodiversityconservationunderchangingclimate.Whilenotapanacea,wearguethatdynamic spatialmanagementactionscanplayacriticalroleinnetworksofprotectedareasforthelong-termpersistenceof biodiversity. Microbialecology MONDAY09:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT What's on your skin: New insights into the overall function and variation of skin microbiome in amphibians DAVIDLESBARRERES,LAURENTIANUNIVERSITY,[email protected] BRANDONVARELA,MCGILLUNIVERSITY;ROBERTOIBANEZ,SMITHSONIANTROPICALRESEARCHINSTITUTE;DAVIDM.GREEN,MCGILL UNIVERSITY Theinteractionsbetweenvertebratehostsandtheirmicrobialcommunitieshaverecentlybecomeasubjectofinterest.In particular,researchonamphibianskinmicrobiotahasfocusedonidentifyingbacterialtaxacapableofdeterringa pathogenicchytridfungusresponsibleformassivemortalityevents.However,itremainsunclearhowsoilpHandrainfall patterns(twofactorsknowntoshapeenvironmentalbacterialcommunities)affecttheamphibianskinbacterial communities,andtheoverallfunctionoftheamphibianskinmicrobiotaremainsunexplored.Wesampledskinmicrobial communitiesfromthreesympatricfrogspeciesbeforeandaftertheonsetofthewetseasoninonesite,andwesampled onefrogspeciesacrossanenvironmentalgradientinthePanamaCanal.AftersequencingallDNAsamplesonanIllumina MiSeq,weusedtheQuantitativeInsightsIntoMicrobialEcology(QIIME)pipelinetocreateanOperationalTaxonomic Unit(OTUs)tableincluding27458bacterialtaxa.Wefoundthatfrogskinmicrobialcommunitystructurevariedacrossa soilpHgradientandwasassociatedwiththeonsetofthewetseason,andthatthesecommunityshiftscorrespondedwith changesinmicrobialfunctionalgroup.Wealsofoundthatalphadiversitydoesnotalwayscorrelatewithmicrobial functionalgroupdiversity,challengingwidespreadassumptionslinkinghigherbacterialalphadiversitytohigher bacterialfunctionalgroupsdiversity.Finally,ourresultssuggestthathost'smetabolicrequirementsfacilitatedbybacteria followseasonalpatternsandthattheserequirementsmaybesite-specific. Keywords:Microbes,Amphibians,Genomicsequencing,Symbiosis,Biodiversity. Exploringtherolesofmechanisticandphenomenologicalmodelsinecologysymposium MONDAY11:00,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Mechanistic and phenomenological models for animal movement patterns in ecology MARKLEWIS,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] Animalmovementpatternshavelongfascinatedmathematiciansandecologistsalike.Onetypeofprimarilymathematical investigationfocusesonpatternformation.Howdoindividualbehaviouraldecisionrulestranslateintomacroscale patternsofspaceuse?Heremechanisticmodels,usingrandomwalks,stochasticprocessesandpartialdifferential equationshaveconnectedpatterntoprocess.Anothertypeofprimarilyecologicalinvestigationcorrelatesspaceuse patternstounderlyingenvironmentalfeatures.Herestatisticalmodels,basedonresourceselectionhaveconnected patternstoenvironmentalfeatures.InthistalkIwillbuildabridgebetweenmechanismandresourceselectionusingthe conceptofcoupledstepselectionfunctions.Theapproachisbasedonamechanisticunderpinningforthemovement process,butisalsoamenabletoeasystatisticalinferenceregardingspaceuse.Applicationswillbemadetoaspectrumof differentanimalsrangingfromAmazonianbirdstocariboutocoyotes. Lifehistories:phenology,sex,sexratio TUESDAY09:15,ROOM:WCOAST Shifting birthdates in bighorn sheep: Can individuals track changes in local weather? RENAUDLIMOILOU-AMÉLIE,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,[email protected] Intemperate,arcticandalpineenvironments,herbivoresbornlatemisspartoftheshortsummerseasonandoften cannotstoreenoughresourcestosurvivewinter.Fitnessismaximizedwhenbirthistimedwithpeakfoodavailability,but thetimingofthatpeakcanvaryfromyeartoyear.Phenotypicplasticityisonewaybywhichanorganismcanrapidly adjustitsphenologytochangingenvironmentalconditions.Weinvestigatedphenotypicplasticityinbirthdatesofbighorn sheepusinglong-termdatafromtheRamMountainpopulationinAlberta.Averagebirthdateshasadvancedby16days overthelast21years.Sincenotallindividualsinapopulationexperiencethesameenvironmentalconditionsovertheir lifetime,itisunclearwhetherchangesinmeteorologicalandclimaticvariablestriggeraresponseatthepopulationor individuallevel.Weshowthatlocalweathervariablesaffectbirthdates.Warmersummertemperaturesresultinan advanceinsubsequentbirthdatesthefollowingspring,whileanincreaseinspringsnowdelaysthemthesameyear. Further,ewesshowaplasticresponsetorapidenvironmentalchanges,partlyexplainingthepopulationtrend.Recent studies,however,haveshownthattimingofbirthisadirectconsequenceofoestrusdates,suggestingthatautumn variablesmaybestrongerdriversofchangesthanspringvariables.Ourresearchcontributestounderstandinghowalpine ungulateswillreactinthefaceofrapidglobalclimatechange,andsuggeststhatadaptivephenotypicplasticitymayplay animportantroleinpopulationpersistence. Keywords:Reproduction,Climatechange,Bighornsheep,Phenologychanges. Invasivespecies TUESDAY16:30,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Non-native freshwater macroinvertebrates have density- and resource-dependent effects on ecosystem functioning CHELSEAJ.LITTLE,UNIVERSITYOFZURICH,EAWAGTHESWISSFEDERALINSTITUTEFORAQUATICSCIENCEANDTECHNOLOGY, [email protected] EMANUELA.FRONHOFER,UNIVERSITYOFZURICH,EAWAGTHESWISSFEDERALINSTITUTEFORAQUATICSCIENCEANDTECHNOLOGY; FLORIANALTERMATT,UNIVERSITYOFZURICH,EAWAGTHESWISSFEDERALINSTITUTEFORAQUATICSCIENCEANDTECHNOLOGY Freshwatercommunitiesarerapidlychangingwiththearrivalofnon-nativespecies.Thereisanurgentneedto understandhowthesespecieswillaffectecosystemfunctioning.Here,weexaminedtheeffectofnon-native macroinvertebrateshreddersontheprocessingofterrestrialleafdetritusbymanipulatingtheintraspecificdensityand speciesrichnessofnativeandnon-nativeamphipods(Crustacea)inaseriesoffeedingexperiments.Wefoundthatnonnativeamphipodsoftenconsumelessleaflitterthantheequivalentbiomassofnativespecieswould,butthatthispattern canreversedependingonthespeciesidentityofleavesavailable.Furthermore,co-existenceofnon-nativeandnative amphipodsinexperimentalmesocosmscommonlyledtosynergisticeffectsontotalleafconsumption,withecosystem functioningdeclininglessthanwouldbepredictedbasedonsingle-speciesleafconsumptionrates.Wealsofoundthat acrossspecies,biomass-adjustedleafconsumptionratesweresubstantiallyhigheratlowdensities,whileintraspecific interactionsreducedindividuals’leafconsumptionathighdensities.Thus,inpatchespreviouslyoccupiedbynative conspecifics,shiftsinrelativeabundancesofnativeandnon-nativespecieschangeecosystemfunctioningovertime.The mostprecipitousdeclineindecompositioncomeswithcompletespeciesreplacement.Inpatchesunoccupiedby conspecifics,theper-individualeffectofnewimmigrantsonecosystemfunctioningdecreasesastheinvasionfront becomesfullyoccupied.Weconcludethatextrapolatingeffectsofearlyinvadersonecosystemfunctiontoestimatethe effectslaterinaninvasion,withouttakinginter-andintraspecificinteractionsintoaccount,wouldleadtoincorrect predictionsofinvasivespecies’effectsonecosystemfunctioning. Keywords:Invasion,Freshwater,Experiment,Densitydependence,Invertebrates,Ecosystemfunction. Remotecameranetworkstoscaleupecologicalinsightsandconservationapplicationssymposium TUESDAY09:30,ROOM:THEATRE Advancing field conservation by developing new camera trap methods and collaborations in the Pacific Northwest ROBERTA.LONG,WOODLANDPARKZOO,[email protected] PAULAMACKAY,INDEPENDENTRESEARCHER WoodlandParkZoo’sFieldConservationDivision(FCD)iscommittedtoprojectsthatexemplifysoundscienceand contributetoappliedconservationoutcomes.Here,wediscusstwoFCDeffortstoincreasetheconservationeffectiveness ofcamera-trapprojectsinnorthwesternUSandSWCanada.Duringthepastdecadecamera-trappinghasemergedasa primarywildliferesearchtool.Despitethedramaticincreaseincamera-trapping,however,datacollectedarestilldifficult toshareacrossprojectsandburdensometoarchive.Further,manyprojectspossesstoofewcamerasorstafftocarry-out studiesthatwillprovidescientifically-usefulresults.Mostproblematic,however,isthatonlyimagesofspecies-of-interest aretypicallycodedindatabases,andinformationonnon-targetspeciesisoftennotretained.Toaddresstheseissues,we launchedWildlifeCameraNetworkNorthwest(WCN-NW).WCN-NWattemptstofacilitatecommunicationamong camera-trappingeffortssuchthatcoordinationandcollaborationispossible.Further,thenetworkpartnerswiththe SmithsonianInstitution'seMammalprogramtofacilitatecoding,open-access,andlong-termarchivingofremotecamera data.Wearealsopioneeringnewmethodsforsurveyinglow-densityspeciessuchaswolverines.Werecentlydevelopeda surveyprotocolforwolverinesthatenablestheoperationofover-winter,scentedcameratrapstationsfor68monthsin areaswithdeepsnowaccumulationandwithoutmaintenancebyresearchers.Themethodreliesonanovelcamera deploymentprotocolpairedwithanultra-lowpowerscentluredispenser.Weanticipatethatthisprotocolwhen combinedwithanappropriatesurveydesignwillenablethelong-termmonitoringofmultiplespeciesofconservation concern. UncertaintyinEcologyandConservationSymposium MONDAY09:00,ROOM:SAANICH Uncertainty in wildlife monitoring and management ANNEE.LOOSEN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] MARKS.BOYCE,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Wildlifemanagersarefrequentlyrequiredtomakemanagementdecisionsbythe‘seatoftheirpants’withfewdata.One ofthetenantsoftheNorthAmericanmodelofwildlifeconservationisthatmanagementisbasedonscience,yet, monitoringcanbecostlyanddataforscience-baseddecisionmakingcanbedifficulttoobtain.Suchisthecasefor Americanblackbears(Ursusamericanus)insouthwesternAlbertawheretherehasneverbeenanabundanceordensity estimateyethuntingisallowed.Weusedspatiallyexplicitcapture-recapturemodelsofDNAfromhairsamplesto estimateblackbeardensityinsouthwesternAlberta.Basedonourpopulationestimates,post-seasonharvestsindicated that14.2%and39.0%ofthepopulationwasharvestedduringthelicensedhuntin2013and2014.Theseharvestrates arehigh,yetapparentlysustainablebecausepopulationdensitiesareequaltoorgreaterthanadjacentblackbear populationsthatarebothhuntedandun-hunted.Despiteinadequatemonitoring,sustainabilityisobtainedbydensitydependentdemographicresponse,andharvestregulationsprotectingfemaleswithcubs.Monitoringhasbeenbased solelyonharvestestimatesthatmightallowgovernmentbiologiststoidentifyexcessiveharvests.Thisexampleillustrates acommonpatternforharvestedwildlifethatpopulationresilience,harvestregulations,andcoarsemonitoringhavebeen adequatetoensurelong-termviabilityofhuntedpopulationsofwildlifeinNorthAmerica. Marineecology TUESDAY16:15,ROOM:SIDNEY Variation in intimacy between sea stars and their associated bacteria ANDREWLOUDON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] LAURAWEGENERPARFREY,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Allanimalslivecloselywithbacteria.Thelevelofintimacyanddependencybetweenahostandabacteriumcanvary, wheresomebacteriaareobligateresidentsandcanprovidespecificfunctions;othersaretransientsandmaynotaffect thehostatall.Weseektounderstandtherelationshipsbetweenakeystoneseastar,Pisasterochraceus,anditsassociated bacteria.WesurveyedthebacterialcommunitiesassociatedwiththesurfacesandcecaofP.ochraceusatthreeB.C. locationsusingcultureindependentampliconsequencing.ASpirochaeteoperationaltaxonomicunit(OTU)wasabundant, ubiquitous,andspecifictoP.ochraceus.WepredictthatthisbacteriummayhaveastrongrelationshipwithP.ochraceus andisacandidatetoprovideaconstantandnecessaryfunction;thisbacteriummaybesub-cutaneoussincecuticleswere disturbedwhilesamplingandsomeechinodermshavesuchbacteria.Incontrast,therearemanyotherbacterialOTUson seastarssurfacesthatarelessfrequentandabundant,andmanyarelikelyacquiredneutrallyfromtheenvironment;we predictthatmanyofthesebacteriahaveweakerrelationshipstrengthswithseastars.Cecabacterialcommunitiesare OTUpooranddominatedbyaMollicutesbacteriumthatwaspresentatalllocations,butnotallindividuals.Wepredict thatthisbacteriummayhaveamoderatelystrongrelationshipwithP.ochraceusthatiscontextdependentandnot necessaryforseastarsurvival.Toelucidatethestrengthandimportanceoftheserelationshipsweareusing metagenomicstodevelophypothesesonthefunctionsoftheSpirochaeteandMollicutesbacteria. Keywords:Seastars,Bacteria,Marine,Genomicsequencing. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY11:00,ROOM:COLWOOD The effect of landscape on genetic differentiation in western Alberta populations of the alpine butterfly Parnassius smintheus MELISSALUCAS,WESTERNUNIVERSITY,[email protected] GORDANARAIC,UNIVERSITYOFMELBOURNE;ARYHOFFMANN,UNIVERSITYOFMELBOURNE;NUSHAKEYGHOBADI,WESTERN UNIVERSITY Landscapeisanimportantfactorindeterminingthespatialgeneticstructureofpopulations.Landscapefeaturessuchas landcovertype(e.g.meadow)mayfacilitateorinhibitdispersalandconsequentlygeneflow,shapingpopulationgenetic structure.ThealpinebutterflyParnassiussmintheusprovidesanexcellentsystemtoexaminetheeffectsoflandcoveron patternsofgeneticdifferentiation.Thesebutterfliesmovefreelywithinmeadowhabitatbuttheirmovementisrestricted intheforestmatrixsurroundingmeadowpatches.Inpreviousstudies,patternsofisolationbydistancedifferedinregions thathadhighversuslowforestcover.Myresearchinvestigateswhethertheseregionaldifferencescanbeexplainedby theproportionandarrangementoflandcovertypes.IappliedrestrictionsiteassociatedDNAsequencing(RADseq)to identifySNPsinindividualsfromseveralpopulationslocatedineachofthreeregionsofwesternAlberta,whichdifferin theirproportionsofmeadowandforestcover.Iusedtheresistance-mappingsoftwareCircuitscapetoestimateresistance distancesrelatingtolandcoverbetweenpopulations,whichwerecomparedwithgeneticdistancestodeterminethe effectoflandcoverongeneticdifferentiation.Understandinghowthesepopulationsaregeneticallystructured,andhow thisstructureisaffectedbythelandscape,iscriticaltopredictingtheirpersistenceandabilitytoadapttoachanging environment. Keywords:Populationgenetics,Resistancedistance,Landscape,Alpinebutterfly. Forestecology TUESDAY14:15,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Vegetation dynamics in SpaDES: The recoded LANDIS-II biomass succession model YONGLUO,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] ELIOTJ.B.MCINTIRE,NATURALRESOURCESCANADA;ALEXM.CHUBATY,NATURALRESOURCESCANADA;DAVIDANDISON, BANDALOOPECOSYSTEMSERVICES;STEVEG.CUMMING,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL TheLANDISIIbiomasssuccessionmodel(LBM)isapowerfultooltosimulateforestresponsestochangesinmanagement practices,disturbanceregimeandclimate.Tofacilitateitsbroaderuseinecologicalmodellingapplications,werebuilt LBMwithinSpaDES(SpatialDiscreteEventSimulator),anRpackageforsupportspatialsimulation,takingadvantageofR featuresfordatamanipulation,statisticalandspatialanalysesandbugdetection.Weintroducedhashingandcaching algorithmsintotherecodedmodeltoimproveefficiency,andunittestingtofacilitatebugdetection.Indeterministic simulationsofmono-specificstands,LBMRandLMBhadperfectagreementingrowthandmortality.Withstochasticity, LBMRreproducedLBMregenerationwithin95%confidenceintervals.Wealsoidentifiedandcorrectedabuginthe originalLBMtoallowforconcurrentgrowthandmortalityofallspecieswithinaspatialunit,whichtheoriginalmodel handledinanarbitrarysequentiallyorderwhichaffectedoutcomes.ThesimulatedabovegroundbiomassinLBMand LBMRdifferedbyonly0.03%~0.05%.LBMRimprovedsimulationefficiencyasmeasuredbysimulationtimeand scalabilitytoverylargestudyregions.WeconcludethattherevisedLBMRcanactinplaceoftheoriginalmodelinLANDIS II.Inadditiontobeingcomputationallyfasterthantheoriginal,implementationinSpaDESpermitstheintegrationof simulationandparameterestimation,andopensupthecodebasetoabroadercommunityofusersandresearchers.We brieflydiscusscurrentusesofthisLBMRmodule. Keywords:forest,disturbance,modelling,succession. Habitatselectionanduse WEDNESDAY09:00,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Land-use change and species occupancy in tropical bird communities LEITHENM'GONIGLE,FLORIDASTATEUNIVERSITY,[email protected] LUKEFRISHKOFF,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;DANIELKARP,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIADAVIS;CHASEMENDENHALL,STANFORD UNIVERSITY Land-usechangeand,specifically,conversiontoagriculturethreatensmanygroupsofspecies.Usingalong-termdata-set fromCostaRica,weshowthatconversionfromforesttoagriculturereducesthephylogeneticdiversityofinhabitantbird communities.Usingmulti-speciesoccupancymodels,weshowthatthisisaresultofreducedratesofbetween-season persistenceforphylogeneticallyuniquebirds(i.e.,speciesonthetipsofthelongestbranchesinthephylogeny).Wealso showthatthemostnegativelyaffectedspeciesarethosethatpreferhabitatswithwetmicro-climates.Becauseclimate changeinthisregionisforecastedtoleadtodrying,land-usechangeandclimatechangecouldactsynergisticallyto homogenizebirdcommunities. Keywords:Birds,Landusechange,Agriculture,Modeling,Habitatselection,Biodiversity. Fishecology TUESDAY16:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Lowering the detection threshold: eDNA detection of low density juvenile salmon in a controlled experiment JEFFREYC.MACADAMS,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] MORGANHOCKING,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;BENKOOP,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;BRIANM.STARZOMSKI,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Conventionalfishmonitoringrequiresconsiderableinvestmentsofequipmentandlabour,andoftenharmfultechniques. EmergingmethodsallowdetectionofaquaticanimalsbycollectingwaterandextractingDNAthathasbeenshedtothe environment(eDNA).Presentknowledgegapsincludeminimumdensitiesnecessaryforconsistentdetection,and persistenceofeDNAafteratargetspecieshasleftasite.WeconductedtwoexperimentsatasalmonhatcheryinBritish Columbia(BC)toanswerthesequestions.Watersamplesweretakenfromflow-throughtankswithjuvenilecohosalmon densitiesrangingfrom35.7g/kLto0.5g/kL.Tosimulatefieldsurveysinrecentlyabandonedhabitats,wesampledwater fromtanksafterremovingfish,atflow-throughvolumesrangingfrom20kLto160kL(effectivefishdensitiesof1.2g/kL0.2g/kL).WatersampleswerefilteredandtheeDNAtrapped,isolated,andanalyzedforpresenceofcohoDNAbyPCRand gelelectrophoresis.WealsoundertookafieldvalidationofthemethodatfivestreamsintheGreatBearRainforestofBC. Watersamplesweretakenfromeachstreamandtestedforpresenceofcohosalmonandsalmonid(coastalcutthroat trout)eDNA.Resultswerecomparedtothosefromconventionalmonitoringtechniquesforconsistencyofdetection,as wellassamplingeffort.Inthetankexperiments,watersamplesfromtankscontainingoneormorefishtestedpositivefor cohoDNAatleast70%ofthetime,increasingathigherdensities.Samplestakenafterremovingthefishhaddetection probabilitiesof66%and40%atrespectiveflow-throughvolumesof20kLand40kL.Cohodetectionfailedatflowthroughvolumesgreaterthan40kL(effectivedensitylowerthan0.6g/kL).Instreamsamples,allsiteswithcohoor salmonidpresenceconfirmedbytraditionaltrappingalsotestedpositivefortargetspecieseDNA.Onesitetestedpositive forcohoeDNAwhereconventionalmethodsfailed,indicatingapossiblehighersensitivityofeDNAsampling.Wealso mappedthedistributionofjuvenilecohosalmonthroughmultipletributariesofaproductivesalmonsystemwith conventionalandeDNAdetections.Thisstudyimprovesonanemergingmethodwithanewspeciesbyaddressing existinguncertaintiesregardingeDNAdetectionthreshold,andsignalpersistencethroughdilutioninasimulated freshwaterhabitat.ItalsodemonstratesthateDNAmethodscanbeusedtoassesscoastalstreamsforjuvenilesalmonid presence. Keywords:Fish,EnvironmentalDNA,Salmon,Experiment,Methods,Monitoring. Populationdynamics TUESDAY09:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT What causes cyclical population dynamics? The roles of disease and fecundity in the western tent caterpillar PAULMACDONALD,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] JUDITHMYERS,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;JENNYCORY,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Manyspeciesofforestinsectsexhibitregularperiodiccyclesinabundance.Explicitmechanismsforsuchdynamics remainasubjectofdebate.Weusedlong-termfielddatafromcyclicalpopulationsofthewesterntentcaterpillar (Malacosomacalifornicumpluviale)inthesouthernGulfIslandsofBritishColumbia,toidentifytheunderlyingcauseof thesepopulationdynamics.Thelengthofthedataset(1975-2016)andcomprehensivesetofpopulationmeasures allowedustocomparetherelativeimportanceofmultiplefactorsovertime.Usinganinformationtheoreticapproach,we revealedthatchangesinfecundity,diseaseprevalence(nucleopolyhedrovirus)andpopulationabundance(butnot temperature)hadthegreatestcontributionstoannualrateofpopulationincrease.Weusedtherelationshipsbetween thesefactorsandtherateofpopulationincreasefromonepopulationinasecond-orderdelayeddensity-dependent modeltopredictthedynamicsofaseparatepopulation.Thismodelgeneratedstablelimitcyclesthatcorresponded closelytotheobservedfielddynamics.Includingadelayedmaternaleffectofdiseaseprevalencegreatlyimprovedthe modelperformance.Collectively,theseresultssuggestthatviralinfection,throughdirectmortalityandmaternaleffects, contributesignificantlytothecyclicaldynamicsofnaturalpopulationsoftentcaterpillars Keywords:Insects,Populationdynamics,Modeling,Densitydependence,Disease. Biodiversity TUESDAY10:30,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Decoupling habitat fragmentation from habitat loss: Butterfly assemblages on lake islands support the habitat amount hypothesis ZACHARYG.MACDONALD,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] IRALEIGHANDERSON,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;JOHNH.ACORN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;SCOTTE.NIELSEN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Aprioriparallelsbetweenoceanicislandsandhabitatpatchesonterrestriallandscapessuggestthathabitat fragmentation(decreasingpatchsizeandincreasingpatchisolation)reducesspeciesdiversity.Incongruently,recent researchsuggeststhatnegativefragmentationeffectsareartefactsofhabitatlossbecausetotalhabitatareacorrelates positivelywithspeciesdiversity,andnegativelywithdegreeoffragmentation.Inthisstudy,weusedbutterfly assemblagesonislandsofLakeoftheWoods,Ontario,Canadatodecouplehabitatfragmentationfromhabitatlossand testtwocompetinghypotheses:(1)theislandeffecthypothesis,whichsuggeststhatdecreasingpatchsizeandincreasing patchisolationreducesspeciesdiversity;and(2)thehabitatamounthypothesis,whichsuggeststhatpatchsizeand isolationhavelittleeffectonspeciesdiversity,andonlytheaggregateamountofhabitatmattersbecausepatchedgesdo notdelimitpopulations.Wetestedthesehypothesesattwodifferentscalesbycomparingbutterflyspeciesdiversity acrosseightsetsofislandsthatmaintainedaggregatearealextentwhilevaryingthenumberandsizeofconstituent islands.Setsofseveralsmallislandswerefoundtocontainsimilarnumbersofbutterflyspeciestofewer/singlelarge islands,suggestingfragmentationdidnotreducediversityaftertotalhabitatareawascontrolledfor.Analysesofspecies accumulationcurvesacrosssetsofislandsandextrapolationsofspecies-arearelationshipssimilarlysuggestedneutral fragmentationeffects.Generalizedlinearmodelswereusedtotestthecombinedeffectsofislandisolation,plantdiversity, andhabitatdiversityonbutterflyspeciesrichness.Overall,observedpatternsinbutterflydiversitysupportedthehabitat amounthypothesis. Keywords:Butterflies,Habitatloss,Habitatfragmentation,Islandeffecthypothesis,Habitatamounthypothesis. Invasivespecies WEDNESDAY11:15,ROOM:SAANICH When outbreaks collide: Interactions between an invasive beetle and a native defoliator on red spruce MALLORYMACDONNELL,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK,[email protected] ROBJOHNS,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK,NATURALRESOURCESCANADA;STEPHENHEARD,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK Herbivoreinvasionsintonovelhabitatscanleadtosignificantimpactsonlocalecosystemsthroughdirectimpactonlocal plantsanddirectorindirecteffectsonco-occurringherbivores.Inthistalk,Iwilldiscussinteractionsbetweenaninvasive barkbeetle,thebrownsprucelonghornbeetle(BSLB),andanativedefoliator,thesprucebudworm.Bothspeciesare currentlyundergoingoutbreaksinseparateregionsofeasternCanada;however,thereisahighlikelihoodthatthese outbreakswilloverlapwithinthenextdecade.Itremainsunknownwhatimpactconcurrentoutbreaksofthese herbivoresmighthaveontreesoronoutbreaktrendsforeitherspecies.WeinvestigatedtheeffectsofBSLBon interactionsbetweensprucebudwormandredspruce,usingfieldexperimentsonredsprucenearHalifax,NovaScotia. Weestablishedfourstresstreatments,withfivebranchesoneachtreeassigneddensitiesofsprucebudworm.We measureddefoliationandexamineditsdependenceonbudwormdensity.Survivalofsprucebudwormonredspruce appearstobereducedasdensityrises,duepresumablytoreductionsintheavailabilityofthepreferreddeveloping foliage.Therearealsoearlyindicationsthat,ingeneral,moderatelystressedtreesallowhigherlarvalsurvivalthaneither loworhightreestress,althoughfurtheranalysesareneededtoconfirmthesignificanceofthistrend.Theserelationships willprovideinsightintothepotentialimpactsofthesetwoinsectsiforwhentheiroutbreakscoincide. Keywords:Invasion,Populationdeclines,Monitoring,Disease,Stress,Insects,Forest. Pollution TUESDAY11:00,ROOM:SAANICH Parasitic infection: A missing piece of the ocean acidification puzzle COLIND.MACLEOD,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Oceanacidification(OA)researchhasmaturedintoasophisticatedexperimentalandtheoreticalscientificdiscipline, whichnowutilizesmultiplestressor,mesocosmexperiments,andmathematicalsimulationmodelstopredictthenearfutureeffectsofcontinuedacidificationonmarineecosystems.TheseadvancedmethodologicalapproachestoOA researchalsoincludethestudyofinter-specificinteractionsthatcouldbedisruptedifparticipantspeciesexhibit differentialtolerancestostressorsassociatedwithOA.Thehost-parasiterelationshipisoneofthemostfundamental ecologicalinteractions,alongsidecompetitionandpredation,whichcanregulateindividuals,populations,and communities.TherecentintegrationofcompetitionandpredationintoOAresearchhasprovidedgreatinsightintothe potentialeffectsofdifferentialtolerancestoacidifiedseawater,andthereisnoreasontobelievethatexpandingOA researchtoincludeparasitologywillbelessfruitful.Thispresentationoutlinesourcurrent,limitedunderstandingofhow OAwillaffectparasitismasanecologicalprocess,describespotentialpitfallsforresearcherswhoignoreparasitesandthe effectsofinfection,andsuggestswaysofdevelopingparasitologyasasub-fieldofOAresearch. Keywords:Marine,Oceanacidification,Parasitology,Methods,Climatechange,Interactions. Anthropogenicinfluencesonhabitatselection TUESDAY15:45,ROOM:SAANICH Human activity at oil and gas well sites influences avoidance response and habitat use by caribou DOUGMACNEARNEY,FRIRESEARCH,[email protected] BARRYNOBERT,FRIRESEARCH;KARINEPIGEON,FRIRESEARCH;MARKHEBBLEWHITE,UNIVERSITYOFMONTANA;DAVEHERVIEUX, ALBERTAENVIRONMENTANDPARKS;FIONASCHMIEGELOW,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;LAURAFINNEGAN,FRIRESEARCH Woodlandcaribouareaspeciesatriskunderfederalandprovinciallegislation,dueinparttothedirectandindirect effectsofoilandgasdevelopmentandotherhumanactivitieswithinandadjacenttocaribouranges.Restorationof habitatisanticipatedtoplayacriticalroleincaribourecovery.Restorationeffortswillbemosteffectivewhendirected towardsactionsthatyieldquantifiableimprovementsincaribouhabitatquality.Tosupporttheidentificationofpriority areasforhabitatrestorationbasedoncontributiontoeffectivecaribouhabitat,weinvestigatedtherelationshipbetween caribouhabitatselectionandtheactivitystatusandproximityofoilandgaswellsitesforfivecariboupopulationsin westernAlbertaandeasternBritishColumbia.Wedefinedtheactivitystatusforwellsitesashigh,moderate,orlow, basedondaterangeswhenwellsweredrilled,producingoilorgas,orundergoingreclamation,respectively.We developedresourceselectionmodelsusingGPSlocationdatafromcollaredadultfemalecariboutodeterminetheeffectof wellsiteactivitystatusandproximityonhabitatselectionbycaribou.Wefoundthatcaribouavoidedareasclosetowell sitesmorethanexpectedbychance,regardlessofwellsiteactivitystatus.Avoidancewasgreaterforhighactivitywell sitesthanformoderateorlowactivitywellsites.Wediscusstheimplicationsofwellsiteactivitystatusonindirecthabitat lossforcaribou,andsuggestthatconsiderationofactivitystatusofindustrialfeatureswouldimprovetheefficiencyof habitatrestorationeffortstoincreaseeffectivecaribouhabitat. Keywords:Disturbance,Oilandgas,Caribou,Habitatselection,Speciesatrisk,Restoration. Parasites,parasitoids,pathogens WEDNESDAY11:00,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Epidemiological dynamics disrupt Red Queen cycles AILENEMACPHERSON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] SALLYOTTO,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Host-parasiteinteractionsintheformofinfectiousdiseasesareatopicofinterestinbothevolutionarybiologyandpublic health.Bothfieldshavereliedonmathematicalmodelstopredictandunderstandthedynamicsandconsequencesof theseinteractions.Yetfewmodelsexplicitlyincorporatebothepidemiologicalandcoevolutionarydynamics.By comparingamatching-allelesmodelofcoevolution,asusceptible-infected-recovered-susceptiblecompartmentalmodel fromepidemiology,andacombinedcoevolutionary-epidemiologymodelweassesstheeffectofthecoevolutionary feedbackontheepidemiologicaldynamicsandviceversa.WefindthatRedQueencyclesarenotrobustinan epidemiologicalframeworkandthatcoevolutionaryinteractionscanaltertheconditionsunderwhichepidemiccycles arise.Incorporatingbothexplicitepidemiologyandgeneticdiversitymayhaveimportantimplicationsforthe maintenanceofsexualreproductionaswellasdiseasemanagement. Keywords:Modeling,Reproduction,Epidemiology,Evolution,Interactions. Museumcollectionssymposium MONDAY09:00,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Discovering and archiving the tree of life WAYNEMADDISON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Whilewearenowresolvingphylogenywithanaccuracyunanticipateddecadesago,ourcurrentviewoftheTreeofLifeis patheticallyincomplete,lacking80%ormoreofitsleaves(thespecies).Mostofthesemissingspeciesareuncollected.Of thosespecieswehavecollected,many,perhapsmost,aretaxonomicallyundescribed.Ofthosespecieswehavedescribed, mostweknowfromonlyafewspecimensinafewpartsoftheirrangesweknowverylittleaboutthem,apartfromtheir existenceandafewdistinguishingfeatures.Howcanweclaimtoknowphylogeny,orbiodiversityingeneral,ifour knowledgeissosparse?Downstreamusesofspecimensandtheirdatainecologyandevolutionarybiologycannotthrive iftheupstream(andtraditional)partofthepipeline(sampling,taxonomy)isunattended.Formanyclades,themost urgenttaskiscollecting,aswemayhaveonlyafewdecadestosamplethepre-Anthropocenebiodiversity.Taxonomic workisvitaltoguidethesamplingandtogiverelevancetoourobservationsoforganismsbyprovidingtheanchoring contexts,species,towhichtheobservationscanbeattributed.Ourgreateststoreoflatentdataonbiodiversityresidesin naturalhistorycollections,butwearerunningoutoftimetosecureit.Weneedtochangehowwevalue,do,andteach biodiversitydiscovery. Parasites,parasitoids,pathogens WEDNESDAY11:15,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Parasitic wasp Sudoku: Field studies of host-parasitoid interactions in an urban forest CAITLINMADER,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] NADIRERBILGIN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;JIMWATTS,CITYOFCALGARY Europeanelmscale(Eriococcusspurius)isanimportantpestofurbanelmtreesinwesternNorthAmerica,butno effectivebiocontrolagenthasbeenfoundtomanageit.Abarriertothestudyofbiocontrolagentsspecifictotreepestsis thedifficultyofimitatingmature-treecentredsystemsinagreenhouse,whereinsectpopulationandlifehistorystudies canbemoreeasilycontrolled.Wepresentamethoddesignedtoaddresssomeofthechallengesofmovinglifehistory studiesfromthegreenhousetothefield,whereamorecompletestorycanbetold.Wedocumentedthelifehistoryof Coccophagusgossypariae,alittlestudiedAphelinidparasitoidofEuropeanelmscale.ThiswaspisnativetoEurope,butis establishedonEuropeanelmscaleinCalgary,Alberta.Wefoundthatinthissystem,therelativetimingofparasitoidand hostlifecyclesisespeciallykeytotheimpactsoftheparasitoidonitshost'spopulations,astheparasitoid'seffectsonhost fecundityaremoreimportantthanitseffectsonhostmortality.Theprojectalsoexaminesotherenvironmentalconditions requiredtomaintainEuropeanelmscalepopulationsatlevelsmeetingmanagementobjectives,asthissystemrequiresa suiteofapproachesavailabletourbanforesterstoeffectivelymanageEuropeanelmscale. Keywords:Forest,Urban,Invasion,Parasitology,Eriococcidae. Marineecology TUESDAY16:00,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Quantifying changes in the 3D structural complexity of coral reefs around Kiritimati following El Niño-induced mass coral bleaching JENNIFERM.T.MAGEL,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] JOHNH.R.BURNS,HAWAIIINSTITUTEOFMARINEBIOLOGY;JULIABAUM,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Coralreefsarehubsofmarinebiodiversityandproductivity,andprovidemanyimportantservicestocoastal communitiesaroundtheworld.However,overthelastthreedecadesourplanet'sreefshavebeenexposedtorising numbersofnaturalandanthropogenicdisturbances,leadingtounprecedenteddeclinesincoralcoverandincreasedreef degradation.Thesechangesarehighlyproblematicfororganismssuchasfishesandmobileinvertebrates,manyspecies ofwhichrelyonthestructureofcoralsforshelterfrompredators.Despitethisimportanceofphysicalstructureinreef ecosystems,fewstudieshaveevaluatedtheeffectsofspecificdisturbancesoncoralreefhabitatcomplexity.Inthewakeof therecentElNiñoandmasscoralbleachingevent,weaimtoquantifytheeffectsofbleaching-inducedcoralmortalityon thestructuralcomplexityofreefsaroundKiritimati(RepublicofKiribati),theworld'slargestatoll.Toaccomplishthis,we tookhigh-resolutionphotosofthereefsubstrateat9sitesaroundtheislandbefore,during,andafterthe2015-2016El Niño.Usingstructure-from-motionphotogrammetry,weconstructeddetailed3Dmodelsofthereeffromthesephotos, andanalyzedthemodelsinArcGIStoextractcomplexitymetricsandpreciselyquantifychangesinhabitatcomplexity throughoutthebleachingevent.Giventhepredictedincreaseinseverebleachingeventsduetorisingwatertemperatures andtheimportanceofphysicalstructureforthemaintenanceofhealthyreefecosystems,understandingtheeffectsof bleachingonreefstructuralcomplexityiscriticaltothefuturepreservationoftheseimportantbutfragileecosystems. Keywords:Coralreef,Landscapeconfiguration,Disturbance,Habitatcomplexity. ECOLOGICAL,EVOLUTIONARYANDENVIRONMENTALSYNTHESISINTHE21STCENTURYSYMPOSIUM TUESDAY15:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Making ecosystem science matter: Stakeholder-engaged research through co-design and integrated social-ecological synthesis ROXANEMARANGER,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL,[email protected] JEAN-FRANÇOISLAPIERRE,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL;TIMOTHEPOISOT,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL;PATRICKDUB,SOCIÉTÉ DESARTSTECHNOLOGIQUES;NICOLASFORTINST-GELAIS,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL;JANFRANSSEN,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL;JULIE TALBOT,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL Despitehugeeffortsonthepartofmanylargescientificprograms,thetimingfromrecognitionofanenvironmentalissue toanactionablesolutionis25yearsonaverage.Partoftheproblemisthatecosystemsciencewhichisatthefoundation ofhelpingtoresolvemajorenvironmentalissues-isoftenundermined1)bythepromiseofquickfixesthrough technology(regardlessiftheywillwork)and/or2)limitedbytheabilityofscientistsbeinvolvedinaprocessthatleads toactionablesustainablesolutions.Furthermore,giventhecomplexityofecologicalsciences,scientistsoftenlackthe abilitytodeliveraclearmessagetoservecollectiveconservationgoals.Inthecurrentclimateofthesocialinnovationand opensciencemovements,wesuggestaprocessthatcombinesboththroughasocial-ecologicalinnovationsystemcalled ReseauLab,whichwearecurrentlytestingintheLaurentianregionofQuebec.Althoughattheearlystages,facilitatedcocreationworkshopshaveidentifiedscientificknowledgeproductneedsofseveralregionalpartners,whilemultidisciplinaryscientificsynthesisisgeneratingtheseproductsusingthebestavailableknowledgeatthetime.Knowledge gapsareidentifiedandtheprocessisiterative,basedondesignprinciples.Regionalsocialinnovatorsarekeytothe processastheyhelpidentifythehighestsocial-ecologicalleveragepointstoeffectchange,whichstreamlinesactionable sustainablescientificsolutions.Wewillprovideaconcreteexamplearoundwaterqualityandbiodiversitymaintenanceat theregionallandscapescale,showinghowthisapproachhasthepotentialtoacceleratesustainabilitywhilegenerating highqualityfundamentalresearch Sticklebackecologyandevolution MONDAY08:00,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Convergent evolution of a color vision gene facilitates adaptive radiation of threespine stickleback into different light environments DAVIDA.MARQUES,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] DAVIDM.KINGSLEY,STANFORDUNIVERSITY;THOMASE.REIMCHEN,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Repeatedadaptationtoanewenvironmentoftenleadstoconvergentphenotypicchangeviaunknowngenetic mechanisms.Westudiedconvergentadaptationofcolorvisioninthreespinesticklebackwhichrepeatedlycolonizedlakes witheitherclearwaterorredlightdominatedblackwaterintheHaidaGwaiiarchipelago,Canada.Weusedwhole genomesfromnaturalpopulationsandaselectionexperiment,inwhichblackwater-adaptedsticklebackweretransferred intoanuninhabitedclearwaterpondandevolvedfor19years,totestforselectiononcolorvisiongenes.Wefounda selectivesweepcenteredontheblue-lightsensitiveopsinSWS2,ofwhichoneallelewithred-shiftedlightsensitivitywas favoredacrossblackwaterlakesandrapidlydisfavoredinclearwaterintheselectionexperiment.Remarkably,thesame aminoacidchangescausingared-shiftalreadyoccurred200MYagointheancestorofallspiny-rayedfishafterthe duplicationofSWS2andparalogdivergenceintoblue-andred-shiftedparalogs.Whileotherfishspeciesdivergently expressthesetwoparalogsinclear-andblackwater,sticklebackhavelostoneparalogbutre-evolvedthesame substitutionsforconvergentadaptationtothesehabitats.Convergentadaptationtothesameenvironmentcanthus involvethesamegeneticchangesonverydifferentevolutionarytimescales,byrecoveringlostvariationviadenovo mutationandsubsequentrepeatedusefromstandinggeneticvariation. Keywords:Evolution,Fish,Convergentevolution,Genomicsequencing,Experiment. Lifehistories:reproduction,senescence TUESDAY11:15,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Effects of urbanization on fish life history traits: Lessons from guppies PIATAMARQUES,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] LUISARESENDEMANNA,UNIVERSIDADEDOESTADODORIODEJANEIRO;ROSANAMAZZONI,UNIVERSIDADEDOESTADODORIODE JANEIRO;RANAEL-SABAAWI,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Currently,3.9billionpeopleliveincitiesworldwide,andtheurbanpopulationisexpectedtoincreaseto6.4billionpeople by2050.Thistrendsuggestsincreasesinthemagnitudeofthreatstourbanecosystemsinthenearfuture.Instream ecosystems,urbanizationisknowntodegradethehabitat,disruptecosystemprocesses,andalterbiologicalinteractions. Urbanizationmightalsoinducetraitchanges,butthemagnitudeandimpactsofthesechangesareunknown,especiallyfor invasivespecies.Inthisstudy,weassessedtheeffectsofurbanizationonlifehistorytraitsofguppyfish,Poecilia reticulata.Femaleguppieswerecaughtinurbanandnon-urbanstreamsinthecityofRiodeJaneiro,Brazil.Thenumber ofmatureeggsandembryosperfishwerecounted.Individualbodyweightandgonadweightwasusedtoestimate reproductiveinvestmentperfish.Theresultsindicateurbanizationincreasesguppyfecundityandreproductive investment.Thissuggeststhaturbanizationhasasynergisticeffectonthefitnessofinvasivespecies,andmightincrease theirimpactsonaquaticecosystems. Keywords:Fish,Selection,Urbanecology,Plasticity,Lifehistory,Freshwater. Stress,Antipredatorbehaviour MONDAY11:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Winter temperature experience affects cognitive responses in black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapillus) ROBERTJEFFMARTIN,UNIVERSITYOFWESTERNONTARIO,[email protected] DAVIDF.SHERRY,UNIVERSITYOFWESTERNONTARIO Non-migrantbirdsinhabitingnortherntemperatezonesendurestressfulclimaticconditions,oftenformonthsatatime. Oneyear-roundresidentofthesenortherntemperatezonesistheblack-cappedchickadee(Poecileatricapillus).The black-cappedchickadeesrangecoversalargeportionofNorthAmericaindicatingthatpopulationsofthesebirdscan experiencearangeofdifferentclimates.Ithasbeenshownthatblack-cappedchickadeesinhabitingharshclimateshave cognitiveadvantagesoverindividualsinhabitinglessharshclimates.Thesecognitivedifferenceshavebeenattributedto thegeneticdivergenceofpopulationsduetolatitudinalorelevationaldifferences,incontrasttopossibleexperiential effectsofclimate.Here,cognitiveperformanceofindividualsfromasingleOntariopopulationofblack-cappedchickadees weretestedfollowingdifferentwinterexperiences.Temperature,amajorcomponentofaharshclimate,wasmanipulated togiveindividualsdifferentexperienceoverthecourseofthewinterandcognitivescoresweretakenattheendofthe two-monthexperimentalheatingperiod.Birds’performanceoncognitivetasksandneophobiawerecollected. Preliminaryresultssuggestthatbirdssubjectedtowarmerwintersmaybemoreneophobicandhavecognitive advantagescomparedtobirdsenduringnaturaltemperatures. Keywords:Birds,Temperaturemodulation,Experiment,Cognition. Policyandplanning MONDAY15:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Timing of protection of critical habitat matters TARAG.MARTIN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,MONASHUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ABBEYE.CAMACLANG,MONASHUNIVERSITY;HUGHP.POSSINGHAM,THENATURECONSERVANCY;LYNNA.MAGUIRE,DUKE UNIVERSITY;IADINECHADÈS,THENATURECONSERVANCY Withmanyconservationissuesrequiringurgentaction,determininghowmuchdataareneededtoinformgooddecisions isacommonproblem.Weexaminethisprobleminrelationtotheprotectionofcriticalhabitat,thehabitatrequiredfor speciesrecoveryandpersistence.Theprotectionofcriticalhabitatisanessentialstepinthethreatenedspeciesrecovery process.Itisalsooneofthemostcontentiousandprotracteddecisionsfacedbyenvironmentalagencies.Uncertainty aboutwhatconstitutescriticalhabitat,andthechallengesofbalancingcompetingsocietalobjectivesandofprotecting criticalhabitatonceidentifiedarestallingtherecoveryprocess.Weofferinsightintothischallengebyinvestigatinghow longwecanaffordtospendidentifyingcriticalhabitatbeforeopportunitiestorecoveraspeciesarelost.Weillustrateour decisionmodelusingCanada’sthreatenednorthernabalone(Haliotiskamtschatkana).Ourmethoddeliversthestopping timeatwhichhabitatprotectionmustbegin,despiteuncertainty,inordertoavoidanunacceptableriskofextinction. Keywords:Conservationpractitioners,Management,Speciesatrisk,Spatialplanning. Policyandplanning MONDAY16:00,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Redefining ecological integrity by decoupling energy capture and conversion CHARLESMARTIN,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECÀTROIS-RIVIÈRES,[email protected] RAPHAËLPROULX,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECÀTROIS-RIVIÈRES Countlessecosystemmanagementdecisionsaremadeeveryyear.Yet,ecologistsstillhavenotagreedonadefinitionof "ecosystemhealth"thatisbasedontheoreticallysoundprinciplesandleadtomeasurablepredictions.Basedonthe thermodynamicsofopensystems,weknowthatecosystemdevelopmentprinciplesaresummarizedinthefollowing maxim:grabasmuchenergyaspossibleandholdontoitaslongaspossible.Theseprinciplesdefineadevelopment trajectorywhereenergyconversionisoptimalforagivenlevelofenergycapture.Wetherebydefineecologicalintegrity asthepositionofanecosystemrelativetothisoptimaldevelopmenttrajectory.Consequently,wedescribethedistanceto thistrajectoryasameasureofintegritydeficit.Wethentransposethisframeworktoplantcommunities,wherecapture capacityismeasuredwiththeleafareaindexandenergyconversionwithbiomassproduction.Bothmeasuresare connectedthroughlightuseefficiency(LUE).Weshowthat,althoughLUEisthoughttobeecosystemspecific,all ecosystemsessentiallyfollowthesamegeneralrelationship,albeitatdifferentlevelsofenergycapture.Ourresultspoint toasimplemeasureofintegritydeficitthatwouldallowcomparingplantcommunitiesincontrastedecosystems.The responseofourintegritymeasuretostressanddisturbancefactorsremainstobeexperimentallytested. Keywords:Ecosystemfunction,Plants,Productivity,Mathematicalmodel. ConsequencesofRapidEcologicalChangeinMountainEcosystemsSymposium TUESDAY08:15,ROOM:SIDNEY The conservation value of mountain environments to birds in North America KATHYMARTIN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] ALICEBOYLE,KANSASSTATEUNIVERSITYMANHATTAN About24%ofthecontinentallandbaseofNorthAmericaisclassifiedasmountainous,includingover75%oftheBCand Yukonlandbase.Temperatemountainsareconsideredtosupportrelativelylowdensityandspecializedbiodiversity. Whilethereareonlysixalpineobligatebirds,over55birdspeciesbreedacrosswideelevationgradients(upto4000m). Manyoftheseelevationgeneralistspeciesaredecliningintheirlowelevationhabitats.Usingfieldsurveysconductedin BritishColumbia,wedetectedaremarkablediversityofbirds(95speciesin30families)usingalpine,subalpine,and montaneforestforpost-breedingandmigrationstopovers.Fromanextensiveliterature-basedsurvey,wefoundthatonethirdofbirdspeciesbreedingincontinentalNorthAmericausemountainhabitatsforatleastonecriticalperiodoftheir annuallifecycle(breeding,migrationorwinter),andthatallmajorhighelevationhabitatsareimportantforthefulllifecycleconservationofouravifauna.Ourfindingshighlighttheimportanceofhighelevationhabitatstomigratingbirds fromwide-rangingbreedingdistributionsforatleastthreemonthsoftheyear,aperiodequivalenttothelengthofthe breedingseasonformostspecies.Onequarterofthespeciesareonlistsofconservationconcern.Theseresultsemphasize theneedforeffectiveconservationoffragilemountainhabitatsastherearenumerousthreatstohighelevationtaxa, includingcomplexresponsestochangingclimateandtheinteractionsbetweenmultipledirectandindirectanthropogenic disturbances. Dispersal WEDNESDAY11:00,ROOM:THEATRE Dispersive bird species are at greater risk than sedentary species when humancaused landscape change is rapid AMANDAE.MARTIN,CARLETONUNIVERSITY,[email protected] LENOREFAHRIG,CARLETONUNIVERSITY Human-causedlandscapechangeistypicallythoughttofavordispersivespeciesoversedentaryspecies,onthe assumptionthatadispersivespeciescanpersistinfragmentedhabitatthroughrecolonizationoflocalextinctionand rescueofsmallpopulations.However,empiricalstudieshavefoundbothlowerandhigherextinctionriskformore dispersivespecies.Wepreviouslyusedindividual-based,spatiallyexplicitsimulationstodevelophypothesestoexplain thesecontradictoryfindings.Thesesimulationssuggestthattheriskofbeingdispersive/sedentaryinahuman-altered landscapedependsonhowfastthelandscapeischanging.Specifically,oursimulationspredictedthat,whenhumancausedlandscapechangeisslow,dispersivespeciesshouldbeatlessriskofextinctionthansedentaryspecies. Conversely,whenlandscapechangeisrapid,dispersivespeciesshouldbeatgreaterriskthansedentaryspecies.We testedthispredictionforNorthAmericanbreedingbirds,comparingthecross-speciesdispersalabilityversusrisk relationshipsfor19BirdConservationRegions(BCR)withdifferentratesoflandscapechange.Aspredicted,wefound thatdispersivebirdpopulationshadslowerratesofpopulationdecline(lowerrisk)thansedentarypopulationsinBCR withslowlandscapechange,butfasterratesofdeclinethansedentarypopulationsinBCRwithrapidlandscapechange. Whenlandscapechangeisrapid,andthereislittlehabitatlefttorecolonizeorrescue,thehigherratesofdispersal mortalityfordispersivespeciesincreasestheirriskofextinction/extirpationrelativetosedentaryspecies. Keywords:Birds,Landusechange,Dispersal,Spatialmodel,Animalmovement. Lifehistories:phenology,sex,sexratio TUESDAY08:30,ROOM:WCOAST The effects of climate change on sex determination and growing time in a northern population of snapping turtles MELANIEMASSEY,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] GRAHAMNANCEKIVELL,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;RONALDJ.BROOKS,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;NJALROLLINSON,UNIVERSITYOF TORONTO Manyreptilesexhibittemperature-dependentsexdetermination(TSD),wheresexisdeterminedduringa thermosensitiveperiodofembryonicdevelopmentandisinfluencedbytemperature.Despitebeingdescribedas'canaries inthecoalmine'forclimatechangeduetothepotentialfordemographiccollapsecausedbyskewedsexratios,itis unclearwhatlong-termeffectsareactuallyoccurringinpopulationswithTSD.Toaddressthis,weexaminetwodecades oflong-termdataonTSDinapopulationofsnappingturtle(Chelydraserpentina)fromAlgonquinPark.Between19811999,andagainin2016,weexcavatedclutchesofknownsnappingturtlesshortlyaftertheywerelaid,measuredand weighedthem,andreburiedthemintheirnestswithtemperatureloggers.WeexcavatednestsinAugust-September,and sexedlate-termembryosviamacroscopicdissection.Inthislong-termstudy,weexploretheeffectofthermal environmentonsexratio,durationofthethermosensitiveperiod,andincubationtime,aswellashowthese developmentaleventshavebeeninfluencedbyclimatechange.ThesnappingturtlesinthisintriguingNorthern population,wheretheeffectsofclimatechangearethoughttobeexacerbated,provideinsightintohownaturalsystems arerespondingtoanthropogenicglobalwarming. Keywords:Reptiles,Climatechange,Populationdynamics,Reproduction,Selection,Temperaturemodulation,Lifehistory. Parasites,parasitoids,pathogens WEDNESDAY11:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 The relative contribution of direct and environmental transmission in a hostpathogen avian flu model MAYANNEMATA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN,[email protected] PRISCILLAGREENWOOD,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;REBECCATYSON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN Avianinfluenza(flu),aninfectiousdiseasecommonlyfoundinwildbirds,canspreadtoasusceptiblehostviacontact withaninfectedhost(directtransmission)orthroughcontactwiththevirusinacontaminatedaquaticenvironment (environmentaltransmission).Arecenthost-pathogenmodelforavianinfluenza,underaprobabilisticframework, capturesthedominantperiodofobservedrecurrentepidemics,whichrangesfrom2to8years,andwasusedtoshow thattheperiodicityofavianfluessentiallydependsontheintensityofenvironmentaltransmission.Thisfindingis, however,obtainedbasedonaquestionableassumptionthatthedirecttransmissionrateislow.Inthisstudy,weanalyse theavianflumodeltoassesstheroleofthetwodifferenttransmissionroutesincharacterisingtherecurrentpatternof epidemics.Weconcludefromouranalysisthatthe2-to8-yeardominantoutbreakperiodcanbeexplainedbybothtypes oftransmission,andevenbyeitheroneintheabsenceoftheother.Werecommendthatbothtransmissionroutesshould beconsideredinfuturework. Keywords:Birds,Disease,Modeling,Selection,Transmission. Biodiversity TUESDAY09:15,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Preserving phylogenetic diversity can be a poor strategy for preserving functional diversity FLORENTMAZEL,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ARNEMOOERS,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;GIULIOVALENTINODALLARIVA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;MATTHEWW. PENNELL,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Fordecades,academicbiologistshaveadvocatedformakingconservationdecisionsinlightofevolutionaryhistory. Specifically,theysuggestthatpolicymakersshouldprioritizeconservingphylogeneticallydiverseassemblages.Themost prominentargumentisthatpreservingphylogeneticdiversity(PD)willalsopreservediversityintraitsandfeatures (functionaldiversity;FD),whichmaybevaluableforanumberofreasons.TheclaimthatPD-maximized(‘maxPD’)setsof taxawillalsohavehighFDisoftentakenatfacevalueandincaseswhereresearchershaveactuallytestedit,theyhave donesobymeasuringthephylogeneticsignalinecologicallyimportanttraits.Therationaleisthatiftraitscloselymirror phylogeny,thensavingthemaxPDsetoftaxawilltendtomaximizeFDandiftraitsdonothavephylogeneticstructure, thensavingthemaxPDsetoftaxawillbenobetteratcapturingFDthancriteriathatignorePD.Inthispaper,weargue thatthisisthewrongtestforevaluatingtheeffectivenessofusingPDinconservation.Weevolvetraitsunderseveral differentmodelsand,forthefirsttime,directlycomparetheFDofasetoftaxathatmaximizePDtotheFDofarandomset ofthesamesize.Undermanycommonmodelsoftraitevolutionandtreeshapes,conservingthemaxPDsetoftaxawill preservemoreFDthanconservingarandomsetofthesamesize.However,thisresultcannotbegeneralizedtoother classesofmodels.Wefindthatunderbiologicallyplausiblescenarios,usingPDtoselectspeciescanactuallyleadtoless FDcomparedtoarandomset.Critically,thiscanoccurevenwhenthereisphylogeneticsignalinthetraits.Predicting exactlywhenweexpectusingPDtobeagoodstrategyforpreservingFDischallenging,asitdependsoncomplex interactionsbetweentreeshapeandtheassumptionsoftheevolutionarymodel.Nonetheless,thefactthatpreserving taxabasedonPDwillnotreliablypreserveatleastasmuchFDaschoosingrandomlycanraiseseriousconcernsaboutthe generalutilityofPDinconservation. Keywords:Biodiversity,Functionaltraits,Management,Geneticvariation,Simulationmodel. Selection MONDAY15:45,ROOM:WCOAST Is the experimental evolution of wild red squirrels repeatable? ANDREWG.MCADAM,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] DAVIDW.COLTMAN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;BENDANTZER,UNIVERSITYOFMICHIGAN;JAMIESONC.GORRELL,VANCOUVERISLAND UNIVERSITY;MURRAYM.HUMPHRIES,MCGILLUNIVERSITY;JEFFE.LANE,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN;STANBOUTIN,UNIVERSITY OFALBERTA Oneofthegoalsofexperimentalevolutionistoexploretheconsistencywithwhichpopulationsevolveinresponseto experimentalconditions.Incontrastwithlaboratorystudies,therehavebeenfewexperimentalstudiesofevolutioninthe wild.Experimentalmanipulationsofagentsofnaturalselectioninthewild,however,canrevealtheimportanceofthese agentswithinanotherwisevariablenaturalbackground.Aspartofourlong-termstudyofredsquirrelsintheYukon Territory,wehaveincreasedpopulationdensitythroughfoodsupplementationinthreenaturalpopulationsofred squirrels,whilethreeotherpopulationshavebeenmaintainedascontrols.Thispressmanipulationhasbeenmaintained for12yearsandhasdoubledpopulationdensityinexperimentalareas.Inthistalkwewillexploretheeffectsofthis densitymanipulationonnaturalselectionandevolutionofthetimingofspringbreeding.Inparticular,wewillexplorethe consistencywithwhichthismanipulationalterednaturalselectionandresultedinadaptiveevolutionacrossthesesix populations. Keywords:Smallmammals,Phenologychanges,Experiment,Evolution,Naturalselection,Populationdynamics. Metacommunitytheoryforreal-worldcommunities:theoreticalandempiricaladvancesfortrophicmetacommunities symposium TUESDAY08:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Embracing variability: Food webs in space and time KEVINMCCANN,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] Here,Iarguethatfoodwebshaveaninvariantgeneralistmodulethatrepeatsatavarietyofscales.Thismoduleallowsfor rapidadaptivebehaviorthatcanactasapotentstabilizingagent(repeatedacrossscalesofthefoodweb).Ithenshow thatthestructureofthefoodwebamazinglymapstopatternsinbrainsizesuggestingthatkeyspeciesmayhavethe cognitivecapacitynecessarytorespondinastabilizingmanner.Iendwithanempiricalinlandlakesexampleofhowthis keymodule,atalargespatialscale,respondstoclimatewarming. Animaldiet TUESDAY11:00,ROOM:WCOAST DNA metabarcoding reveals the broad and flexible diet of a declining aerial insectivore BEVERLYMCCLENAGHAN,TRENTUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ERICANOL,TRENTUNIVERSITY;KEVINKERR,TORONTOZOO NorthAmericanaerialinsectivorousbirdshaveexperiencedwidespreadpopulationdeclinesoverthepast30years.This ecologicallydiverseguildrepresentsbirdsfromawidetaxonomicbreadththatoccupydiversehabitats.Thetraitshared byallspeciesinthisguildistheircommonfoodsource-flyinginsects-suggestingthatpopulationdeclinesmaybe relatedtowidespreaddeclinesininsectpopulations.Establishingalinkbetweenthedietandpopulationdeclinesofthese birdsishamperedbygapsinourknowledgeofbothinsectpopulationsandaviandiet.BarnSwallows(Hirundorustica) aremembersofthisguildwhosedietinNorthAmericahasnotbeenwellstudied.WeusedMalaisetrapstomonitorinsect diversityandabundanceatbarnswallownestingsitesandweusedDNAmetabarcodingtoidentifyinsectpreyremains fromfecalsamplescollectedfrombelownests.Barnswallowshaveabroaddietwithover100insectfamiliesidentified fromfecalsamples.ThefamiliesmostfrequentlyconsumedbyBarnSwallowsduringthebreedingseasonwerefoundat lowabundancesinthehabitatwhichsuggestshighselectivityforthesepreyitems.Preliminaryresultsshowchangesin dietcompositionoverthecourseofthebreedingseasonandbetweenyears.Thesechangescanberelatedtochangesin preyavailabilitywhichsuggeststhatwhileBarnSwallowsareshowingselectivityforcertainpreyitemstheymaintaina broadandflexiblediet.TheseresultsfillgapsinourknowledgeofBarnSwallowecologyinOntarioandwillhelpinform decisionsfortheirprotectionandrecovery. Keywords:Swallows,Genomicsequencing,Foraging,Populationdeclines. Coralreefecology TUESDAY16:15,ROOM:OAKBAY2 The unseen world of coral reefs: Impacts of local and global stressors on the coral microbiome JAMIEMCDEVITT-IRWIN,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] MELISSAGARREN,CALIFORNIASTATEUNIVERSITY;REBECCAVEGA-THURBER,OREGONSTATEUNIVERSITY;JULIABAUM,UNIVERSITYOF VICTORIA Recentstudieshaverevealedthatthecompositionofdiverseandabundantcoral-associatedmicrobialcommunitiesmay influencecoralresistancetounwaveringstressorscurrentlythreateningreefsworldwide.Ourresearchuses16SrDNA sequencingonthecoralspeciesMontiporafoliosaandPoriteslobata,toevaluatetheimpactoflocal(i.e.human disturbance)andglobal(i.e.bleachingthermalstress)onthecoral-associatedmicrobialcommunitiesattheislandof Kiritimati(ChristmasIsland),theworld’slargestatoll.Kiritimatiisanidealstudysitebecauseitspansalargegradientof humandisturbancewithreefshighlydegradednearthevillagesandbecomingnearpristineatremotesites.Weevaluate 1)howmicrobialcommunitystructureisrelatedtoindividualcoralcoloniesand2)howtheserelationshipsare influencedbyhumandisturbanceandableachinghotspotduringtheworld’sstrongestElNiñoevent.Coral-associated microbialcommunitiesaresignificantlydifferentbetweencoralspecies,humandisturbancelevelsandapre-bleaching andbleachinghotspot.Bothhumandisturbanceandthermalstressfromableachinghotspotinfluencemicrobialalpha diversityandbeta-diversityamongcoralcolonies.Bydescribingmicrobialcommunitycompositionandvariability betweencoralspecies,humandisturbancelevelsandduringanElNiñoevent,ourresearchprovidesnovelinsightsinto microbialcommunityecologyandtheroleofmicrobesinreefresistancetobothlocalandglobalstressors. Keywords:Coralreef,Bacteria,Genomicsequencing,Resilience,Disturbance,Coral. Landscapes TUESDAY15:30,ROOM:WESTCOAST Building a continuous adaptive management system in SpaDES: Using historical landscape variation for the LandWeb project ELIOTMCINTIRE,NATURALRESOURCESCANADA,[email protected] YONGLUO,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;ALEXM.CHUBATY,NATURALRESOURCESCANADA;DAVIDANDISON,BANDALOOP ECOSYSTEMSERVICES;STEVEG.CUMMING,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL AdaptivemanagementwasformallyintroducedbyHollingin1978,asaniterativeapproachtodecisionmakingintheface ofuncertainty.Whiletherehavebeengreatsuccessesinthemanagementofresourcesinthisway,therehavealsobeen majortechnologicalbarrierstoimplementingacontinuouslyupdated,real-timeadaptivemanagementapproach.With theadventoftheRcomputerlanguage,anditsever-growinguniverseofusercontributedpackages,allthesoftwaretools fordoingcontinuousadaptivemanagement(e.g.,webinterfaces,databasetransactions,GISoperations,statistical analysis,visualization,uncertaintyanalysis,discreteeventsimulation,highperformancecomputing)areallavailableon oneplatform.ThisuniversepermittedthedevelopmentoftheSpaDES(SpatialDiscreteEventSimulation)packagefor integratedanalysisandspatialsimulation.WeillustrateitsapplicationintheLandWebproject,aimedatadaptive managementofwesternCanadianborealforests.Weshowalivedecisionsupportwebapplicationthatisbeingusedby forestcompanies,NGOs,andgovernmentstoevaluatetheirabilitytofulfilltherequirementsforcertificationandthe CanadianBorealForestAgreement.Underlyingthewebappareecologicalmodulesforforestsuccession,seeddispersal, andregeneration(allderivedfromLANDIS-II),severalalternativewildfiremodules,andnumerousdataprocessingand visualizationmodules.Beinganintegratedsystem,weachievecontinuousadaptivemanagementthroughautomated updatingevenasunderlyingdatasets,modules,parameters,andassumptionsarechanged.Wediscussourexperiences workingwithstakeholdersanddemonstratehowthetransparencycreatedbythisprocessishelpingbuildbridges betweengroupsthatpreviouslyhavestruggledtoworktogether. Biodiversity TUESDAY12:00,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Assessing birds and lichen as indicators of biodiversity in a managed subboreal watershed in British Columbia KERRITHMCKAY,MCKAYENVIRONMENTALCONSULTINGLTD.,[email protected] SYBILLEHAUESSLER,UNIVERSITYOFNORTHERNBRITISHCOLUMBIA Ourprojectinvestigatestheeffectivenessofpost-harvestretentionofforeststandstructureatmaintainingbiodiversity withinamanagedwatershedaccordingtotheobjectivesspecifiedinassociatedland-useplans.TheBabineWatershed MonitoringTruststudyareacomprisestheentirewatershedoftheBabineRiverinNWBritishColumbiaintheSub-boreal Sprucebiogeoclimaticsubzone.Thequestionweaskforthisstudy:Isthelevelofretentionofforeststandstructure actuallyworkingtoconservebiodiversityatthestandscale?Ourstudydesignwasbasedonamodelselectionapproach thataimedtosamplestandsacrossarangeofstructuralretentionandedgeinfluenceacrossseverallandusezonesto quantifyriskstobiodiversityandpotentiallyidentifythresholdsformanagement.In26daysoffieldsampling(20142016),wemeasuredstandstructure,epiphyticlichensandforestbirds(2015)at56plots.Weusedcanonicalanalysisof standstructure,lichenandbirdcommunitiesandmixedeffectsmodelselectiontoassessriskstobiodiversityacross gradientsofforestretentionandedgeinfluence.Foreststandstructurevariedmostpredictablyacrossagradientfrom clearcutsthroughvaryinglevelsofstripandpatchretentiontoclosed,interiorforest.Notably,longpiecesofcoarse woodydebrisdecreasedwithretention,andtherewaslittlepoplarregeneration.Epiphyticlichencommunitiescurrently varymoreacrossgeographicgradientsthanacrossmanagementgradients,withthemostdiversecommunities, containingabundantcyanolichens,locatedatlowelevationnearlargewaterbodies.Thehighintensityofloggingandlack ofregeneratingpoplarsintheseareasofgreatestlichendiversitysuggeststhatcyanolichencommunitiesface considerablerisk.Birdspeciesrichnessismoreinfluencedbythepresenceoftallshrubsthanthetypeofretention,but thereisanadditiveaffectonspeciesrichnesswhenintermediateandcanopytreesareretained.Thissmallstudy,thefirst ofitskindintheregion,hasestablishedanimportantbaselinefortheBabineWatershedandwearehopefulthat monitoringcancontinue. Keywords:Birds,Lichen,Biodiversity,Management,Bioindicator. EcologicalandEvolutionaryDynamicsinFluctuatingEnvironmentsSymposium MONDAY08:15,ROOM:THEATRE Hot and cold, wet and dry: The role of season in structuring aquatic food webs BAILEYMCMEANS,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,MISSISSAUGA,[email protected] KEVINS.MCCANN,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH Seasonisanearlyubiquitousdriverofbiologicalprocessesinaquaticecosystems.However,incrediblyfewdataexistfor howfoodwebsrespondtoregular,temporalvariation.Weproposeaconceptualframeworkforhowabiotic-driven variationinresourceavailabilitylowerinthefoodwebdrivesaquaticconsumerstoaltertheirforagingbehavior seasonally.Specifically,anabundanceoflowertrophiclevelresources(plants,invertebrates)duringproductiveperiodsis expectedtopromoteincreasedomnivory(lowertrophiclevelfeeding),whereasdecreasedomnivory(increasedtrophic positions)andincreasedcouplingwithalternativecarbonsources(e.g.terrestrialdetritus)areexpectedduringless productiveperiods.DietdataforselectspeciesfromhighlyseasonalaquaticecosystemsintheArcticandtropicssupport thesegrosspredictions.However,giventhatbothclimatechangeandriverimpoundmentarealreadyalteringexisting seasonalsignals,moreresearchisurgentlyneededtocharacterizethemulti-speciesandwholefoodwebresponsesto seasonalvariation.Suchtemporalshiftsmayplaycentralrolesinsustainingecosystemfunctionsinthefaceofchanging conditions. Evolutionarytheory MONDAY13:30,ROOM:WCOAST Evolutionary bargaining games: Ecological and evolutionary stability in a consumer-resource based model of mutualistic interactions GORDONG.MCNICKLE,PURDUEUNIVERSITY,[email protected] PAULA.ORLANDO,PURDUEUNIVERSITY Modelsofmutualismhavebeenbesiegedwithbothecologicalandevolutionarystabilityproblems.Modelsareoftennot ecologicallystablebecausepositivefeedbacksinmutualismleadtounboundedpopulationgrowth,andtheyareoftennot evolutionarilystablebecausecheaterscanusuallyinvadecooperativestrategies.Wedevelopandanalyzeanecoevolutionarymathematicalmodelthataddressesandsolvestheproblemsofecologicalandevolutionarystability inherentinmutualisms.Inourmodel,individualsfrom2speciestraderesourceswithoneanother.Weassumethat individualshavesimpleadaptivebehaviortoaccepttradeofferswithhigherfrequencyiftheirpartneroffersmore resource.Couchingtheinteractionsinanexplicitconsumerresourceframeworkeliminatesproblemsofecological stability.Andincludingthesimpleadaptivebehavioreliminatesevolutionaryinstabilitybecausecheaterswhogive nothingandonlytakecannotsuccessfullyinvade.Weanalyzethemodelintermsofbotheconomicandevolutionary stabilityofthemutualism.Wefindthateconomicandevolutionarybargainingsolutionsareequivalentonlywhenthetwo specieshavesymmetricparametersets.Whenthetwospeciespossessasymmetriccharacteristics,wefindthatthe speciesthathasmoreresourcetogiveendsupgettingtheshortendofthebargain. Keywords:Evolution,Mutualism,Interactions,Mathematicalmodel. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY11:15,ROOM:COLWOOD Population genetics and invasion history of the invasive European fire ant, Myrmica rubra, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada SHANNONA.MEADLEYDUNPHY,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] PIERRE-JEANG.MAL,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;MEGANE.FREDERICKSON,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Whensomespeciesareintroducedtoanewarea,theyrapidlyestablishandspread,becominghighlyinvasive.However, forotherspeciesthereisalonglagtimebetweenintroductionandinvasiveness.TheEuropeanfireant,Myrmicarubra, wasfirstrecordedinNorthAmericaover100yearsago,yetreportsofitbeinganinvasivepestareonlyfromthepast1020years.InordertounderstandthepopulationbiologyandrecentspreadofM.rubrainitsintroducedrange,we examinedtheexistingpopulationgeneticstructureofM.rubrainurban-parklandareasofToronto.Weused microsatellitemarkerstogenotypeworkersfromnestsacrossthestudyareaandfoundthatantsclusteredintotwo geneticgroupsofunequalsizes.Thelargergroupcontainedworkersfromacrosstheentirestudyregion,andwereoften collectedfromlarge,high-densitynests.Thesmallergroupwascomprisedofonly11%oftheworkersbuthadhigher geneticdiversity,andtypicallyoccurredinthemosturbanareasofthestudyregion,insmaller,moreisolatednests.These resultssuggestthatthetwogroupsofM.rubrainTorontomayrepresenttwoseparateintroductions;alternatelythetwo groupscouldbelocallyadaptedtothedifferenthabitatswheretheyoccur.Currently,weareusingmitochondrialmarkers toidentifypotentialEuropeansourcepopulations. Keywords:Populationgenetics,Insects,Invasion,Populationdynamics. Forestecology WEDNESDAY11:15,ROOM:WCOAST Assessing the relative utility of mesostigmatid versus oribatid mites as bioindicators of disturbance in forested areas of Alberta, Canada MATTHEWMEEHAN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] TYLERCOBB,ROYALALBERTAMUSEUM;LISALUMLEY,ROYALALBERTAMUSEUM;HEATHERPROCTOR,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Indicatortaxaareoftenusedtoestimatehowdisturbancesaffectecosystemhealththroughthepresence/absenceand abundanceofparticulartaxawithintheenvironment.Highlydiversegroupsofsoilfauna,includingmites,havebeen showntobeeffectivebioindicatorsoflandusechange,agriculturalmanagementandsoilcontamination.Oribatidmites (Arachnida:Acariformes:Sarcoptiformes),whicharedetritivorousandfungivorous,arethemostfrequentlyusedmite group,whileothergroups,includingthemostlypredatorymesostigmatidmites(Arachnida:Parasitiformes: Mesostigmata),areusedlessoften.Althoughoribatidmitesareusedmoreoften,onemightpredictmesostigmatidmites tobemoresensitivebioindicatorsduetotheirtrophicstatus,asextinctionriskthroughenvironmentalchangeisthought tobegreaterforpredatorsthanfordetritivores.Throughamultivariateapproach,wetestwhetherMesostigmataor OribatidaaremoreeffectiveasbioindicatorsoffourcommondisturbancetypesinborealAlberta:forestfires(12sites), forestharvest(10sites),wellpads(6sites)andlinearfeatures(7sites).Miteassemblagesfromthesedisturbedsites werecomparedtoassemblageswithinadjacentundisturbedborealforestsitestodeterminetheirutilityasbioindicators. SamplesforthisstudywerecollectedbytheAlbertaBiodiversityMonitoringInstitute(ABMI),andweresampledfrom 20102015.ResultstodateindicatethatOribatidahasgreaterspeciesrichnessandnumberofindividualspersitethan Mesostigmata.Tooursurprise,bothOribatidaandMesostigmatawereineffectivebioindicatorsofalldisturbancetypes, contrarytowhatpaststudieshaveobserved. Keywords:Landusechange,Bioindicator,Biodiversity,Mites,Disturbance. Phylogenetics MONDAY10:30,ROOM:WCOAST Chromosome inversions and adaptation to heterogeneous environments in seaweed flies CLAIREMEROT,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL,[email protected] SIMONBERNATCHEZ,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL;CHARLESBABIN,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL;MARENWELLENREUTHER,UNIVERSITYOFLUND, UNIVERSITYOFAUCKLAND;LOUISBERNATCHEZ,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL Largestructuralgenomicvariants,suchaschromosomalinversions,arethoughttobekeyfacilitatorsofadaptationby limitingrecombination.Forinstance,variationininversionfrequenciesareassociatedwithenvironmentalclines, supportingthetheoreticalviewthatinversionsareinvolvedinlocaladaptation.However,theforcesdrivingtheevolution ofsuchstructuralvariantsarestilldebated,withempiricaldataremainingscarceandusuallylimitedtofewmodel systems.Here,bycombiningclassicalecologicalstudiesandpopulationgeneticswithrecentadvancesingenomics,we searchforempiricalevidenceoftheroleofchromosomalinversionsinlocaladaptationusinganunusualstudysystem, theseaweedflyCoelopafrigida.Earliercytogeneticsstudiesfromthe1980sdescribedalargechromosomalinversion comprisingapproximately10%ofC.frigidagenome,withafrequencythatvariesclinallyinEurope.Hereweinvestigatea parallellatitudinalclineinNorthAmerica,samplingmorethan1,000fliesin15populationsfromMassachusetts(USA)to theNorthCoastofStLawrenceRiver(Quebec)byquantifyingvariationininversionfrequenciesandassociatingwith phenotypeandecologicalvariables.Thisallowstestingforclinalpatterns,whichareclassicalsignaturesoflocal adaptation,aswellasenvironmentalassociation.Wearefurthercharacterizingthegenomeofthisspeciesusingthird generationsequencing(10xgenomicsPacBio),whichletsusdissectthegenomiccontentoftheinvertedregion. Altogether,theresultsshedlightonthemodalitiesbywhichinversionscontributetoadaptationinanon-modelspecies andtheselectiveforcesandgeneticmechanismsunderlyingtheevolutionofsuchstructures. Keywords:Insects,Evolution,Geneticvariation,Genomicsequencing,Chromosomeinversions. Plantecology MONDAY14:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Can traits predict changes in species abundance? JULIEMESSIER,UNIVERSITYOFSHERBROOKE,[email protected] BILLSHIPLEY,UNIVERSITYOFSHERBROOKE;CYRILLEVIOLLE,CENTRED'ÉCOLOGIEFONCTIONNELLEETÉVOLUTIVE,CNRS;MARKVELLEND, UNIVERSITYOFSHERBROOKE InNorthAmerica,weexpectclimatewarmingtocausenorthwardandupwardelevationalrangeshiftsinplantspecies andchangesinlocalcommunitycomposition.Temporalchangesintaxonomiccompositionhasbeenstudied,butthe abilityoffunctionaltraitstopredictwhichspecieswill‘win’or‘loose’inresponsetoclimatechangeisunknown.Although researchindicatesthattraitsaregoodpredictorsofspeciesperformancealongspatialgradients,traitshaveseldombeen usedtopredictchangesinspeciesrelativeabundancesovertime.Yet,knowinghowdifferentspecieswillrespondto climatewarmingwouldallowustoanticipateandthereforemitigateitseffectsonplantcommunities.Toaddressthese shortcomings,wetestedwhethercommonlymeasuredphenotypictraitscanpredictchangesinspeciesrelative abundances.Weusedauniquedatasetassessingspeciesrelativeabundancesinthe1970’sand2010’sin50plotslocated alonganelevationalgradientinaforestpresent.Wemeasuredtenkeyaboveandbelowgroundfunctionaltraitsonthe50 mostabundantunderstoryspeciesinthesecommunities.Wepresentpreliminaryresults. Keywords:Climatechange,Plants,Speciesdistribution,Morphology. Plasticsintheenvironment MONDAY16:15,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Influence of subtidal and intertidal shellfish farming on microplastic contamination in cultured Pacific oysters (Crassostrea gigas) from British Columbia MATTHEWR.MILLER,VANCOUVERISLANDUNIVERSITY,[email protected] SARAHDUDAS,VANCOUVERISLANDUNIVERSITY Microplasticsareacontaminantofincreasingconcernandarenowknowntobeubiquitousinthemarineenvironment.A diverserangeofmarinetaxaacrossalltrophiclevelscaningestmicroplasticseitherdirectlyorindirectly,whichmay resultinnegativebiologicalconsequencesthroughpseudo-satiation,physicalblockage,andchemicaltoxicity.Filterfeedingorganismssuchasoysters,clams,andmusselsareparticularlyvulnerabletomicroplasticsandmayconcentrate theseparticles,possiblyleadingtobioaccumulationeffectsthroughthefoodweb.Duetothisfeedingstrategy,andtheir commercialimportanceandrelevancetohumans,bivalvesaremodelorganismstostudythiscontaminant.British Columbia(BC)isCanada’slargestproduceroffarmedPacificoysters(Crassostreagigas),whicharegrowninthemarine environmentintwomainways:deep-waterraftcultureandintertidalbeachculture.Oystersproducedbythesemethods mayhavedifferentexposurelevelstomicroplasticsduetothevariationbetweenpelagicandbenthicgrowing environments,andthedifferencesinaquacultureinfrastructureused.Todetermineifculturemethodinfluences microplasticconcentration,market-sizedoysterscollectedfromraftsandbeachesatthreefarmsitesinBCwere chemicallydigested,filtered,andanalyzedvisuallyundermicroscopetoquantifymicroplastics.Preliminaryresultswill bediscussed,addressingtherolethatculturemethodplaysintheconcentrationsofmicroplasticswithinoysters.This knowledgemaybenefitshellfishfarmerswhenconsideringbestaquaculturepractises,andwillhelpseafoodconsumers makeinformeddecisions. Keywords:Shellfish,Microplastic,Marine,Aquaculture,Fisheries. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY15:45,ROOM:SAANICH Dietary thiaminase and its effects on reproductive traits in three populations of Atlantic salmon KIMBERLYT.MITCHELL,UNIVERSITYOFWESTERNONTARIO,[email protected] TREVORE.PITCHER,UNIVERSITYOFWINDSOR,GREATLAKESINSTITUTEFORENVIRONMENTALRESEARCH;CHRISC.WILSON,AQUATIC RESEARCHANDMONITORINGSECTION,ONTARIOMINISTRYOFNATURALRESOURCESANDFORESTRY,TRENTUNIVERSITY;BRYAND. NEFF,UNIVERSITYOFWESTERNONTARIO AtlanticsalmonwereonceabundantinLakeOntario,butwereextirpatedmorethanacenturyago.Therehavebeen multipleattemptstoreintroduceAtlanticsalmonintoLakeOntario,buttheseattemptshavenotyetproducedaselfsustainingpopulation.OnepotentialobstacleistheintroductionofinvasivepreyfishesintoLakeOntario,including alewifeandrainbowsmelt.Thesefishescontainhighconcentrationsoftheenzymethiaminase,whichbreaksdownthe essentialvitaminthiamine(B1)andcaninducethiaminedeficiencyinsalmonthatconsumethisenzyme.Wecompared theeffectofdietarythiaminaseonreproductivetraitsinthreeAtlanticsalmonpopulations(LaHave,LacSaint-Jean, Sebago),whichhavepreviouslybeenusedinreintroductionefforts.Wehypothesizedthatahigh-thiaminasedietwould affectreproductivetraitsandtheseeffectswoulddifferamongthethreepopulations.Totestourhypotheses,we performedexperimentalcrosseswithourlow-andhigh-thiaminasetreatmentindividualswithinpopulationsand measuredreproductivetraits.Wepresentdataontheeffectsofdietarythiaminaselevelsonmortality,yolkconversion efficiency,specificgrowthrate,thiamineconcentrationsandspermquality.Wefurtherusethisdatatoassessthe susceptibilityofthethreeAtlanticsalmonpopulationstoahigh-thiaminasediet,asispresentinLakeOntario,andinform bestpracticesformanagingtheAtlanticsalmonreintroductioneffortinLakeOntario. Keywords:Salmon,Freshwater,Invasion,Experiment,Reintroduction. AcceleratingurbanecologyinCanada:Identifyingcurrentresearchapproaches,gaps,andneedsinCanadiancities symposium MONDAY08:00,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Linking urban landscape structure to ecosystem service provision MATTMITCHELL,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] JONATHANRHODES,UNIVERSITYOFQUEENSLAND Urbanlandscapesconsistofcomplexandfine-scalemosaicsofmultiplelandusesandlandcovers.Thestructureofthe urbanlandscapeinfluencesthebiodiversityandecologicalprocessesthatoccurwithinurbanecosystems,andhowurban residentsinteractwithurbanecosystems,bothofwhichareimportantforecosystemserviceprovision.However,the specificwaysthaturbanlandscapestructureinfluencesecosystemservices,andtheimportanceoftheseeffectsrelativeto otherdriverssuchasgeophysical,soils,socioeconomic,andurbanformvariablesislargelyunknown.Resultsfrom Brisbane,Australia,showthaturbanlandscapestructurehasimportanteffectsonurbanvegetationandecosystem services.Usinghigh-resolutiondataonthespatialandverticalstructureofurbanvegetation,wefoundthaturbantree coverarea,treecoverpatchsize,andtreecoverclumpinesswerestronglyrelatedtovegetationverticalstructureand abovegroundcarbon.Innearlyeverycase,theselandscapestructurevariablesbestexplainedurbanvegetationvertical structureandabovegroundcarbonstoragecomparedtootherdrivers.Theseresultssuggestthatmanaginglandscape structurewillbeanimportantwayforurbanplannersandmanagerstoimproveurbanbiodiversityandecosystem serviceprovision.However,thesetypesofpatternsandrelationshipshavenotbeenwidelyinvestigatedinCanada.Akey challengeforurbanecologyinCanadaistounderstandlandscapestructure-ecosystemservicerelationshipsformultiple urbanecosystemservicesandidentifytheecologicalandsocialprocessesthatunderliethesepatterns. Host-associatedmicrobes:fromprotectivemicrobestopathogenssymposium MONDAY08:15,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Tree-ectomycorrhizal symbioses: Does diversity confer function? HOLLYV.MOELLER,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Manytreesformmutualisticrelationshipswithectomycorrhizalfungi,exchangingphotosyntheticallyderivedsugarsfor belowgroundpathogendefense,nutrients,andwater.Thesehost-associatedcommunitiesarestrikinglyspeciose.For example,asingletreecansimultaneouslyhostdozensoffungalpartners,andsometreespeciesareknowntoassociate withthousandsoffungalspecies.Alongsidethisspeciesdiversity,accumulatingevidencesuggeststhatfungivaryintheir functionaltraits(e.g.,watertransportandnutrientacquisitionstrategies)and,asaconsequence,theirpartnerquality. Thus,tree-ectomycorrhizalsymbiosesserveasamodelsystemforthemulti-speciesmutualismsthataboundinnature.In thistalk,Iexploretherolethatfungaldiversitymayplayinfacilitatingtreeestablishmentandgrowthinvaried environmentalcontexts.Ialsohighlightthechallengesthatpartnerdiversitypresentstothemaintenanceandstabilityof mutualisticrelationships,andconsidermechanismshosttreesmayevolvetoregulatetheirfungalpartners. AcceleratingurbanecologyinCanada:Identifyingcurrentresearchapproaches,gaps,andneedsinCanadiancities symposium MONDAY09:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Connecting urban ecology and municipal infrastructure MICHELLEMOLNAR,DAVIDSUZUKIFOUNDATION,[email protected] InmunicipalitiesacrossCanada,infrastructureisshowingitsage,capitalandoperatingcostsarerisingandservice deliveryisstrainedbygrowingpopulationsandshiftingconditions.Yet,forests,wetlandsandstreamscanprovidemany coreservicesnormallydeliveredbyengineeredinfrastructure,includingwaterpurificationandstormwatermanagement. Thequalityofecosystemservicesderivedfrom‘naturalassets’canmeetorexceedthoseofpipesandculverts-butoften atamuchlowercostthatavoidscapitalexpendituresandproducesotherbenefitssuchascoolerurbantemperaturesand healthiercities.TheMunicipalNaturalAssetInitiative(MNAI)isteamingupwithmunicipalitiestodevelopresilient,longterminfrastructurealternativesatsubstantialsavings.Thisuniquepartnershipdrawsuponarangeofdisciplinestodraw outthelinkagesbetweennaturalassets,sustainableinfrastructure,communitywell-being,andresponsiblefiscal management.Thistalkwillfocusonanessentialfactorofsuccess:thecreationofteamsofpeoplecommittedtochanging thestatusquo,composedofindividualsfromdifferentgovernmentdepartments,differentdisciplines,levelsand locations. Effectsofclimatechange TUESDAY16:15,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Fasting season length determines temporal limits for global polar bear persistence PÉTERMOLNÁR,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] Polarbearsarevulnerabletoclimatechangebecausetheyrequireseaicetoaccesstheirsealprey.Whilepolarbearscan enduremonthsoffasting,asillustratedbytheon-shorefastofsouthernpopulationsduringsummerseaiceabsence, climatewarmingwillextendtheseice-freeseasonsandultimatelywillmakeseasonalfastsalsonecessaryinpopulations thatcurrentlyexperienceyear-roundice.Here,wecombineanEarthsystemmodelwithastate-of-the-artseaice componentwithenergybudgetmodelsofpolarbearstoestimatewhenprolongedfastswillleadtorapiddeclinesin reproductionand/orsurvivalinpopulationsworldwide.Undertheconservativeassumptionofnoclimatechangeimpacts ontheforagingofbearswhilehuntingonice,andthusnoeffectsonthebodyconditionsatwhichbearsbeginanon-shore fast,weestimatethatfemaleswillneedtocompromisemilkproduction,andthuscubsurvival,whenthefastexceeds111 days.Beyond160days(adultmales)and225days(adultfemales),weexpectmortalityincreasesby0.4-0.9%foreach additionaldayoffasting.Carry-overeffectsofpoorbodyconditionbetweensequentiallyice-pooryearswouldaccelerate thesedeclines,shorteningthefastingenduranceofbearsby2-4daysforeachpercentdeclineinthefast-initiatingbody mass.Themodelsaccuratelycaptureobserveddemographicchangesacrossthespecies'rangeduring1979-2016,and predictthatmorethanhalfofallpopulationswouldexperiencereproductivedeclinesbytheendofthecenturyunderlow emissions(RCP4.5),whilealmostallpopulationswouldseeadditionaldeclinesinadultsurvivalunderhighemissions (RCP8.5). Keywords:Polarbears,Climatechange,Reproduction,Individualsurvival,Populationdeclines. Ecology&EvolutioninaSocialContextSymposium TUESDAY08:15,ROOM:COLWOOD Social structure modulates the evolutionary consequences of social plasticity: A social network perspective on interacting phenotypes PIERRE-OLIVERMONTIGLIO,MCGILLUNIVERSITY,[email protected] JOELW.MCGLOTHLIN,VIRGINIATECH;DAMIENR.FARINE,UNIVERSITYOFKONSTANZ,MAXPLANCKFORORNITHOLOGY Organismsoftenexpressplasticphenotypicchangesduringsocialinteractions.Suchsocialplasticitycaninfluence phenotypicevolutionbyalteringthevariationavailableforselectionandtheevolutionaryresponse.Theimplicationsof socialplasticityforsocialevolutionhavebeenexploredindepth,butsofar,thisworkhasreliedonrelativelysimple modelsofsocialstructure.Itisunclearhowthepredictionsofsocialevolutiontheoryapplytomorecomplexsocial networks.Here,weextendthisworktoincludegeneralmodelsofsocialstructure.First,wedevelopanapproximationof previousinteractingphenotypesmodelsthatapplytogeneralsocialnetworks.Second,weusesimulationstotestthese analyticalmodelstoexplorehowthenumberofsocialconnectionsbetweenindividualsandpreferentialassociationswith phenotypicallysimilarconspecificsaffectsphenotypicvariationandresponsetoselection.Phenotypicvariationwithin groupswasmaximalwhenindividualsinteractedonaveragewithhalfoftheirgroupmembers.Insuchcases,populations exhibitedagreaterproportionofphenotypicvariationwithingroupsthanamonggroups.Bycontrast,incaseswhere individualsinteractedwithalltheothergroupmembers,populationsexhibitedagreaterportionofphenotypicvariation amonggroupsandreducedphenotypicvariationwithingroups.Preferentialassociationsamongphenotypicallysimilar individualsincreasedthephenotypicvarianceobservedamonggroupmembers.Ourresultsestablishafirstsetof predictionsregardingtheevolutionaryimplicationsofsocialstructureinmodulatingthecontributionofphenotypic plasticitytophenotypicvariationandheritability.Ourpredictionscanapplytostudytheevolutionofsocialbehaviorand specializationwithinpopulations. Keywords:Phenotypicvariation,Plasticity,Socialbehaviour,Selection,Modeling. LinkingEnvironmentalLawandScienceSymposium WEDNESDAY08:00,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Watershed connections in environmental decision-making JONATHANW.MOORE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Flowsofwaterandmigrationsoffishlikesalmonunitewatersheds.InthistalkIwillfirstexaminehowtheselinkages influencetheproductivityandresilienceofriverecosystemsandthendiscusstheimplicationsforenvironmental decision-making.Connectivityandthenaturaltree-likestructureofriversmeansthatriversaremorethanasumortheir parts.BasedonexperiencesandresearchinlargesalmonwatershedsinBritishColumbia,connectedanddiverse watershedscanactasnaturalportfoliosthatdecreasevariationandattenuateclimatechange.Inaddition,specific locationsthatactashabitatbottlenecksmaybedisproportionatelyimportanttomigratoryspecies.Accordingly,key aspectsofenvironmentaldecision-makingarethescope,scale,andspecificsofthescienceofpotentialrisks. Reproductiveecologyandbehaviour MONDAY16:15,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM More reasons why picking the right spatial scale is so #@&! hard ANDREWD.MORAGA,CARLETONUNIVERSITY,[email protected] AMANDAMARTIN,CARLETONUNIVERSITY;LENOREFAHRIG,CARLETONUNIVERSITY Todetectaneffectoflandscapecontextonanecologicalresponse,researchersneedtomeasurethelandscapevariablesat theappropriatespatialextent('scaleofeffect').However,itisunknownwhetheritispossibletoselecttheappropriate scaleofeffectaprioriastherearemanyfactorshypothesizedtoaffectit.Oneoftheseisthetemporalscaleregulatingthe ecologicalresponse:thescaleofeffectispredictedtoincreasewiththetemporalscaleoftheresponse.Totestthis hypothesiswecomparedthescaleofeffectforthreeresponseswithincreasingtemporalscalesofregulation- reproductiverate,populationabundance,andoccurrence-forwoodfrogs(Lithobatessylvaticus)inponds.Wesurveyed woodfrogeggmassesin34pondsatthecentersoflandscapesvaryinginthesurroundingroaddensity(ourlandscape contextvariable).Wepredictedthatscaleofeffectwouldbesmallestforfecundity(numberofeggspereggmass),larger forabundance(numberofeggmassesperpond),andlargestforoccurrence(presence/absenceofeggmassesinapond). Wefoundthatthescaleofeffectdiddifferbetweenresponsesbutnotinthemannerpredicted.Ourresultssupportthe predictionthatthescaleofeffectofthelandscapecandifferfordifferentresponsevariablesofthesamespecies.However, theysuggestthatpredictingthescaleofeffectaprioriislikelynotgenerallypossible.Studiesoflandscapecontexteffects shouldmeasurethelandscapevariable(s)atmultipleextentsandestimatethescaleofeffectempirically,ratherthan conductingtheanalysesatasinglespatialscalethatis'guesstimated'apriori. Keywords:Scale,Landscapeconfiguration,Amphibians,Temporalscale. Birdmigration TUESDAY09:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Stopover timing and refueling in relation to migration distance and sex in Wilson’s warbler YOLANDAE.MORBEY,WESTERNUNIVERSITY,[email protected] QUENTINR.HAYS,WESTERNUNIVERSITY;KEITHA.HOBSON,WESTERNUNIVERSITY,ENVIRONMENTANDCLIMATECHANGECANADA; JAMESE.LYONS,USGS;CHRISTOPHERG.GUGLIELMOWESTERNUNIVERSITY WeinvestigatedhowindividualvariationinmigrationdistanceaffectsaspectsofstopoverecologyofWilson’swarbler (Cardellinapusilla),acommonNearctic-Neotropicalleapfrogmigrantinwhichmalesandfemalesfromdifferentbreeding destinationscanoccupythesamestopoversitesinatemporallysegregatedway.Wecapturedbirdsduringspringandfall atadesertstopoversiteinsouthernArizona.Migrationdistanceofindividualswasinferredusingthehydrogenstable isotoperatiooffeathers(d2Hf)whichshowsastronglatitudinalgradientinNorthAmerica.Refuelingratewasmeasured usingplasmametaboliteanalysis,andstopoverdurationwasestimatedusingresightingsofcolor-bandedbirds. Controllingforvariationincapturedate,wefoundnoevidencethatmigrationdistanceorsexaffectedrefuelingrate,sizecorrectedbodymass,fatscore,orstopoverdurationinthespring.Despitelownumbersofbirdsusingthesiteinthefall, longerdistancemigrantsappearedtohaveahigherrefuelingratebutsimilarsize-correctedbodymass,fatscore,and stopoverdurationasshorter-distancemigrants.Extendingknowledgeofmigrationinthisspecies,wefoundthatthe compositionofbirdsfromdifferentbreedinglatitudesdifferedbetweenspringandfallinfemalesbutnotinmales,with morespringfemalesoriginatingfromnortherlyratherthansoutherlybreedingregions.Thus,whilebreedinglatitudeand sexarestrongandconsistentdeterminantsofmigrationtimingandpossiblyroutesinWilson’sWarblers,neitherseems toconsistentlyinfluencerefuelingperformanceandstopoverduration. Keywords:Birds,Behaviouralecology,Stableisotopes,Animalmovement,Foraging,Migration. Sticklebackecologyandevolution MONDAY08:15,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Heterozygosity and asymmetry in threespine stickleback MATTHEWMORRIS,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] SEANROGERS,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY Theabilityofpopulationstorapidlyadapttonewenvironmentalconditionsdependsinpartontheamountofgenetic variationalreadypresentinthepopulation.Suchstandinggeneticvariationmaypersistunderbalancingselectionif multipleallelesareadaptiveunderdifferentcontexts.Sincethe1950sithasbeenhypothesizedthatgenome-wide heterozygositycouldbufferagainstthegeneticandenvironmentalstressorsthatwouldotherwiseleadtodevelopmental instability.Iftrue,selectionagainstasymmetryinbilateralorganismscouldmaintaingeneticvariationinapopulation. However,untilrecentlyinsufficientcoverageacrossthegenomehashamperedtestsofthishypothesis.Herewereport fluctuatingasymmetryforthepresence/absenceoflateralplatesforeachmyomerepositioninmarinethreespine stickleback,rangingfromAlaskatoCalifornia.Wesequenced~3000SNPsin187individuals.Wefoundnoassociation betweengenome-widestandardizedmultilocusheterozygosityandasymmetry.However,therewasasignificant relationshipbetweenheterozygosityatamajoreffectlocus(Eda)andasymmetry,withheterozygotesshowingincreased asymmetry.ThusvariationatEdamayconstituteaformofgeneticstressthatismaintainedduetotheotherfitness consequencesofEda. Keywords:Stickleback,Genomicsequencing,Adaptation,Stress,Geneticvariation,Plasticity. Lifehistories:reproduction,senescence TUESDAY11:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Does habitat selection constrain adaptive life-histories? DOUGLASW.MORRIS,LAKEHEADUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Theexpectednumberofoffspringthataparentproducesisaproductofadaptiveevolution.Innumerouscases,however, themeanclutchorlittersizeofapopulationhasfailedtoevolveeventhoughitissmallerthanthemostproductivesize. Mostresolutionsofthispeculiarparadoxpointanaccusatoryfingertowardanincreaseinmortality,orreducedfuture reproduction,ofparentsthatproducelargeclutchsizes.Abnormallylowrecruitmentofoffspringfromlargelittersduring unfavourabletimesandoptimizinginvestmentcanalsoyieldastrategyfavouringsmallerthanexpectedmeanlittersize. Butitisalsopossiblethatadaptiveevolutionofincreasedlittersizeisconstrainedbythewayinwhichindividualsexploit habitatvariationinspaceandtime.Robusttestsofthehabitatexplanationaremissingbecausetheyrequirelong-term dataonreproductionandsurvivalacrossarangeofenvironmentalconditions.Iexplorethepotentialroleofhabitat selectionwithdatafrom70breedingseasonsofwhite-footedmiceoccupyingthreehabitats.Long-termpatternsoflitter- sizevariationinthispopulationsuggestthatenvironmentalvariancemayoftenberesponsiblefortheapparentinability ofnaturalselectiontoincreaselittersize.Studiesthatfailtorecognizeandproperlyintegrateenvironmentalvariance mighttherebyfalselyinterpretevolutionarystrategiesandmisleadourunderstandingofeco-evolutionarydynamics. Keywords:Reproduction,Evolution,Selection,Smallmammals. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY16:00,ROOM:COLWOOD Sharp reduction in genetic diversity of the coastal tailed frog (Ascaphus truei): A phylogeographic study using multiple methods CHERIEMOSHER,UNIVERSITYOFNORTHERNBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] BRENTMURRAY,UNIVERSITYOFNORTHERNBRITISHCOLUMBIA;CHRISJOHNSON,UNIVERSITYOFNORTHERNBRITISHCOLUMBIA Northernmostpopulationsareoftencharacterizedbylowergeneticvariability,thisisespeciallytrueforAscaphustrueias theyhavearelativelylowfecundityandlengthylarvalperiod.Wecomparedthewithinregiongeneticdiversityof populationsnearthenorthernextentofA.truei'srange(nearTerraceBC)tofourotherregions(BellaCoolaBC,Chilliwack BC,Mt.St.HelenWA,andtheOlympicPeninsulaWA),movingtowardsthecoreoftherangeinWashington,USA.Weused twogenetictechniques-a9-microsatellitelocistudyandnext-generationsequencing-toexplorebroad-scalegenetic diversification.Sampledregions(N=5)separatedinto4geneticclusterswiththetwomostnorthernregionsclustering together.Theallelicrichnessandheterozygosityweresubstantiallylowerinthosetworegions.Thistalkwilldetailour intriguingresultsandshowcaseinsightintoA.truei'suniqueevolutionarylineageinBritishColumbia. Keywords:Amphibians,Populationrange,Geneticvariation,Evolution,Populationgenetics,Connectivity. MarineEcology TUESDAY16:45,ROOM:SIDNEY Emergent consumption and ecosystem impacts of invasive Chinook salmon in Patagonia NICOLASMUÑOZ,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,WESTERNUNIVERSITY,[email protected] BRIANREID,CENTRODEINVESTIGACIÓNENECOSISTEMASDELAPATAGONIA;CRISTIANCORREA,UNIVERSIDADAUSTRALDECHILE;JOHN REYNOLDS,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Whereasresearchontheimpactsofinvasivespecieshaslargelyfocusedonthedirect,top-downeffectsofinvaders, speciesthatchangethemovementandavailabilityofresourcesarelikelytohavelargebottom-upeffectsonfoodwebs. Overthepastthreedecades,Chinooksalmon(Oncorhynchustshawytscha)havebeencolonizingthePatagonianstreams ofsouthernSouthAmerica.Salmoncanhavefar-reachingimpactsontheproductivityoffreshwaterandriparian ecosystems,largelyduetotheenergyandnutrientsubsidiesthattheyprovideecosystemswithwhentheyspawnand subsequentlydie.AsChinooksalmonexpandtheirabundanceanddistributioninPatagonia,thereispotentialforrapid, widespreadchangeintheseecosystems.Intheaustralsummerandfallof2016,wemeasuredalgalproductivityand nutrientpoolsizeinstreamreacheswithandwithoutspawningsalmon.Algalchlorophyllaconcentrationwashigherin salmonreachesrelativetonon-salmonreaches,consistentwithanutrientsubsidyeffect.Wealsousedcameratrapsto qualitativelydocumentriparianconsumptionofsalmoncarcasses.ThemostfrequentscavengerswerethenativeSouth Americangrayfox(Lycalopexgriseus)andnon-nativemouse(Musmusculus),aswellasnon-nativemink(Neovison vison).Otherconsumersincludednon-nativeyellowjackets(Vespulamaculifrons)andthenative,insectivorous passerineChucaotapaculo,whichperchedoncarcassesdailytofeedonflylarvae.Thesefindingsindicatethattheenergy andnutrientsubsidiesprovidedbyinvasiveChinooksalmonareaffectingtherelativelypristineecosystemsofPatagonia, andthatotherinvadersmaybenefitfromtheirestablishment. Foraging TUESDAY11:30,ROOM:SIDNEY Predator functional responses: Breathing new life into old theory DENNISMURRAY,TRENTUNIVERSITY,[email protected] KEVINCHAN,TRENTUNIVERSITY;THOMASHOSSIE,TRENTUNIVERSITY;MARKO’DONOGHUE,ENVIRONMENTYUKON;CHARLESJ. KREBS,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;STANBOUTIN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Predatorfunctionalresponses,definedasthevariationinpercapitapredationraterelativetopreydensity,havebeena longstandingfocusofresearchinecology.Todate,theoryexplainingpredatorfunctionalresponseswasdevelopedmostly usingprey-dependentinteractionsinsingle-preymodelsystems,andleadingtorelativelysimpleempiricaltestswith limitedreal-worldrelevance.Analysisofpredationratesfromalong-termstudyofCanadalynxandcoyotesintheYukon, inrelationtotheirprimary(snowshoehare)andalternate(redsquirrel)prey,showsthatpredatorfunctionalresponses: i)differdramaticallybetweensimilar-sizedpredators;ii)oftenarebetterexplainedbypredator-dependentratherthan prey-dependentprocesses;andiii)varybetweenprimaryandalternatepreyevenforthesamepredatorspecies.These findingsarereinforcedbyobservedspatialheterogeneityanduseofspatialrefugiabyharesandsquirrels,suggestingthat interferencecompetitionbetweenpredatorswhenpreyarescarcecancontributestronglytotheshapeandmagnitudeof predatorfunctionalresponses.Experimentaltestsusingadragonfly-tadpolesystemconfirmtheroleofspatial heterogeneityofpreyonpredatorinterferenceandfunctionalresponses.Insum,weinferthatpredatorfunctional responsesarebestunderstoodbyextendinginvestigationsbeyondsingularpredator-preyinteractions,andweconclude bydiscussinghowfutureresearchstudiescanbedesignedstrategicallytomorefullyrevealmechanismsunderlying predator-preyrelationshipsandpredationrates. Keywords:Predation,Predatorfunctionalresponse,Interactions,Experiment,Insects. Invasivespecies WEDNESDAY11:30,ROOM:SAANICH Agent-based scenario models of invasion and movement of the orchard pest Rhagoletis pomonella (Diptera: Tephritidae) within the southern interior of British Columbia BRIANMUSELLE,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN,[email protected] JASONPITHER,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN;LAELPARROT,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN;HOWARD THISTLEWOOD,AGRICULTUREANDAGRI-FOODCANADA Theapplemaggot,Rhagoletispomonella,isaneconomicallyimportantpestofpomefruitsintheUnitedStatesand southernCanada.Presently,BritishColumbia'sOkanaganRegionistheonlysignificantcommercialapple-producing regioninNorthAmericathatremainsfreeofit.Thisislikelytochangesoon,asR.pomonellaiswellestablishedwithin certaincountiesinadjacentWashingtonStateandhasbeendifficulttomanage.Extensivesamplingandcontrolefforts havebeenundertakensinceitsarrivalinWashingtoninthelate1970’s.Theresultingdataprovidedthefoundationfor spatiallyexplicitagent-basedmodels(ABM),usedtoevaluateflymovementandestablishmentunderdifferent managementschemeswithinthecomparableOkanaganregion.Byfollowingsimplemovementrules,theseABMs simulatetheapplemaggotspreadacrosstheOkanaganregion,interactingwithboththelandscapeandmanagement practices.Thesimulationsyieldmapsexpressingriskofinfestationundervariousmanagementandlandchange scenarios.Preliminaryfindingswillbepresented,aswellastheresultsofvalidationtestsagainstWashingtondata.Toour knowledge,ABMshavenotpreviouslybeenusedtoexplorescenariosofspreadofaninsectpestintoanewregion. Ultimately,theresultingABMswillbeusedtoinformmanagementandsurveyeffortsasR.pomonellaestablishesinthe southerninteriorofBritishColumbia. Keywords:Spatialmodel,Invasion,Insects,Simulationmodel,Animalmovement. Dispersal WEDNESDAY11:15,ROOM:THEATRE Ecology, genetics and conservation units despite gene flow in highly-vagile terrestrial mammals (caribou and wolves) MARCOMUSIANI,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] ConservationUnits(CUs)aregroupsoforganismsdistinguishableecologicallyandgenetically,anddefiningCUsis instrumentalinconservingbiodiversitywithinspecies.Recently,theuseofbothgenomicsandecologicalinformationhas beenadvocatedfordelineatingCUsthatbetterreflectlocaladaptations(notwithstandingthechallengesofdetectingreal adaptations)-i.e.thetraitsthatintheoryallowforpopulationviabilityinthelong-term.However,CUsaredifficultto detectinhighly-vagileterrestrialmammalscharacterizedbylong-rangedispersaland,potentially,highlevelsofgeneflow (e.g.caribouandwolves).Mylab’sworkhelpeddefiningcaribouCUsbasedonconcordantdistributionsoftraits potentiallyofadaptivesignificanceincludingbehavioural(migratory,partiallymigratoryorsedentaryCUs),ecological (foragingspecializationofCUs),andgeneticvariationatvariedtemporalscales.Preliminarydataalsohighlightimportant morphologicaldifferencesbetweenmigratoryandsedentarypopulations.WolfCUscouldalsobecharacterizedbased upontraitsincludingbehavioural(migratoryvs.not),morphological(coatcoloration),ecological(preyspecialization), andgeneticandgenomicvariation.Ourfindingsalsoconfirmedlong-rangedispersal(forwolves)andhighlevelsofgene flowamongpopulations(forbothwolvesandcaribou).Thus,CUsarerecognizableeveninhighly-vagileterrestrial mammalswithlong-rangedispersalandhighgeneflow,andintegrationofgeneticandecologicaldataallowsfor understandingthepatternsofdifferentiationthatcouldbemaintainedinnature. Keywords:Mammals,Populationdynamics,Geneticvariation,Dispersal. Marineecology TUESDAY14:00,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Benefits and challenges of UAV mapping for seagrass ecology and conservation NATASHANAHIRNICK,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] PAULHUNTER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,HIGHANGLEUAV;MAYCIRACOSTA,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;SARAHSCHROEDER, UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Thespatialdistributionofecologicalphenomenaisofgreatimportancetounderstandtherelationshipbetweenstructure andfunctionofecosystems.Remotesensingtechnology,suchasairborneandsatelliteimagery,isoftenusedtodelineate thesephenomena,butthesetechnologiesarelimitedbythespatialandtemporalscaleoftheimageryandthehighcostof imagerycollection.Ground-basedsurveymethodsontheotherhand,canbeadministeredatscalesandfrequencies appropriatefortheanalysisinquestion,butcanbeextremelytimeandlabourintensive.Bridgingthegapbetween remotelysenseddataandground-basedmappingtechniquesisaerialimagerycollectedbyUnmannedAerialVehicle (UAV).Providingsuperiorspatialresolution,highflexibilityfortask-specificflightplanning,andsignificantlydecreased operationalcostscomparedtomannedaircraftorhighresolutionsatelliteimagery,UAVsarerevolutionizingthestudyof localscalehabitatdistribution.WepresentthemethodologyandresultsfromseveralUAVmappingsurveysofeelgrass (Zosteramarina)meadowsintheSouthernGulfIslands,BritishColumbia,exemplifyingthesuccessesandchallenges associatedwiththeuseofUAVtechnologyforseagrassmapping.CanadianUAVregulations,UAVplatformsandmission planning,specificenvironmentalparametersnecessaryforimageacquisition,thepost-processingworkflowofcollected imagery,andmappingtechniquesfordelineationofeelgrassmeadowsarediscussed. Keywords:Remotesensing,Marine,UAV,Mapping. Canadianprotectedareasinachangingclimate:Across-ecosystemapproachsymposium TUESDAY14:30,ROOM:SAANICH Planning for Neo-tropical migratory bird conservation under climate change ILONANAUJOKAITIS-LEWIS,ENVIRONMENTANDCLIMATECHANGECANADA,[email protected] TARAG.MARTIN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;HUGHP.POSSINGHAM,THENATURECONSERVANCY;MARIE-JOSÉEFORTIN, UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Migratorybirdspeciespresentauniquechallengeforconservationplanningunderclimatechangeduetotheircomplex lifehistories.Conservationplansmustaccountformultiplehabitatsrequiredacrosstheannualcycle,butfewspatial conservationprioritizationsconsiderseasonalrangesthuslimitingtheclimateadaptationpotentialofprotectedareas. Species'abilitytotrackchangingclimatesisconstrainedbytheavailabilityofhabitats,yetthesearerarelyconsideredin global-scalespeciesdistributionmodels(SDMs)andspatialprioritizations.Accountingformultiplemodeluncertainties, wequantifiedthesensitivityofspatialprioritiesunderprojectedclimatechangetotheinclusionofvegetationpredictors withinSDMsacrossbreedingandnonbreedingrangesof28Nearctic-Neotropicalmigratorybirdspecies.Weshowthat priorityareasidentifiedusingbothclimateandvegetationpredictorscontainedmoresuitablehabitatrelativetoclimate modelsalone,undercurrentconditionsandfutureclimatechange.Spatialprioritiesidentifiedundercurrentclimatic conditionsarenotprojectedtoberobusttofutureclimateconditionsacrossseasonalranges.Ourresultssuggestthatto reduceriskyconservationinvestmentsunderclimatechange,spatialprioritiesdependentonSDMsmustincludebiotic factorsthatrepresentkeyresourcedependencies.Givenmigratoryspecies'complexresponsestodynamicthreats, shiftingconservationprioritieswillnecessitatenovelpoliticalalliancestoconserveglobally-sharedresources. Keywords:Conservationpractitioners,Birds,Climatechange,Spatialplanning,Speciesdistributionmodel. Biodiversity TUESDAY11:00,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Effects of disturbance and environmental factors on plant communities at freshwater springs KAYLEIGHG.NIELSON,UNIVERSITYOFLETHBRIDGE,[email protected] KARENM.GILL,UNIVERSITYOFLETHBRIDGE;JERID.LEDBETTER,SPRINGSSTEWARDSHIPINSTITUTE,MUSEUMOFNORTHERNARIZONA; ABEE.SPRINGER,UNIVERSITYOFNORTHERNARIZONA;LARRYE.STEVENS,SPRINGSSTEWARDSHIPINSTITUTE,MUSEUMOFNORTHERN ARIZONA;STEWARTB.ROOD,UNIVERSITYOFLETHBRIDGE Theintroductionofnon-nativespeciesisglobalconcernsincetheseinvasivespeciescanleadtoalossofbiodiversityas wellasecosystemservices.InsouthernAlberta,freshwaterspringsrepresenthotspotsofbiodiversity.Springsarealso utilizedbylivestockandhumansandthismayresultindisturbancethatcouldincreasetheoccurrenceofintroduced plantspecies.Plantcommunitieswereinventoriedaround55springsinAlbertatodeterminethedensityandshootcover ofnativeandintroducedplantspecies.Thesevalueswerecomparedwithlocalandregionalenvironmentalfactorsand theextentofhumandisturbance.Thedensityandcoverofintroducedplantswasfoundtobegreaterwithincreased humandisturbancebutnativeplantcoverwaslower.Introducedplantoccurrencefollowedlandscapepatterns;density andcoverathighelevationspringsintheRockyMountainswaslowercomparedtothelowerelevationuplandsregion. Thispatternlikelyreflectsdifferentlanduseastheuplandsregionsaregrazedextensively,whilemontaneregions experiencelessindustrializationandaremorelikelytobeprotected.Sufficientenvironmentalmanagementprocedures maybeabletoreducetheestablishmentofintroducedplantsatfreshwaterspringsandthuscontributetowardsthe conservationoftheseecologicallydistinctivelandscapefeaturesthatarehighlyfavouredfortheirenvironmentaland aestheticvalues. Keywords:Invasion,Plants,Disturbance,Freshwater. Forestecology WEDNESDAY11:45,ROOM:WCOAST Shore morphology and nearshore forest structure on Islands of BC’s Central Coast WIEBENIJLAND,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,HAKAIINSTITUTE,[email protected] OWENT.FITZPATRICK,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,HAKAIINSTITUTE;SARAB.WICKHAM,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,HAKAIINSTITUTE; BRIANM.STARZOMSKI,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,HAKAIINSTITUTE Near-shoreforestsaresubjecttostressesfromoceanicwindsandsalt-spray,butmayalsobenefitfrommarinenutrient subsidiesintheformofseaweedwrackorbyanimalmovementsbetweenmarineandterrestrialecosystems.Shoreslope, width,substrate,andothermorphologicalcharacteristicsregulatewrackretentionandshorehabitatandthereforeactas astrongcontrolonshorezonepermeabilitytomarinenutrients.BritishColumbia’sCentralCoasthashighlyvariable shoresdominatedbyrockcliffsandplatforms,butincludeswidespreadsandandgravelbeaches,mudslicks,and shelteredbays.Commonlyavailableshorezonedataarebasedonobliqueimageinterpretationandprovideinsufficient detailtostudynutrienttransferprocesses,especiallyonsmallislands.Weuseunmannedaerialphotogrammetryto createhigh-resolution3Dmodelsofremoteislandsandderivedetailedmorphologicalmetricsaswellasinformationof near-shorevegetationstructure.Thesedataprovidealookattheshorezoneandnearshorevegetationinunprecedented detailandenableadirectevaluationoftherelationbetweenshoremorphologyandforeststructure.Ourresultscanbe readilycombinedwithplotscaleobservationsofmarinederivednutrientstoquantifysubsidyeffectsandtherelation betweenshoremorphologyandlandwardnutrientpermeability. Keywords:Landscapeconfiguration,Remotesensing,Environmentalvariation,Marinesubsidies. Movement,activity,wildlifemanagement WEDNESDAY09:15,ROOM:OAKBAY2 The impact of mountain pine beetle and mountain pine beetle management on caribou and grizzly bear food supply BARRYR.NOBERT,FRIRESEARCH,[email protected] TERRYA.LARSEN,FRIRESEARCH;KARINEE.PIGEON,FRIRESEARCH;GORDONB.STENHOUSE,FRIRESEARCH;LAURAFINNEGAN,FRI RESEARCH Themountainpinebeetle(Dendroctonusponderosae,MPB)isoneofthemostdestructiveagentsofpine(Pinusspp.) forestsinwesternNorthAmerica.TomitigatetheimpactsofMPB,theAlbertagovernmenthasimplementedastrategyof increasedtimberharvestofsusceptiblestandsandamanualcutandburnprogramthattargetsnewlyinfectedtrees. Prescribedfireisanothermanagementtreatmentbeingimplemented,butprimarilyinareaswheretimberharvestisnot possible.LandscapechangesassociatedwithMPBandMPBmanagementhavethepotentialtoimpactspecies-at-risklike woodlandcaribou(Rangifertaranduscaribou)andgrizzlybear(Ursusarctos).Inparticular,changestounderstory vegetationthatresultfromMPBmanagementcouldinfluencetheavailabilityoffoodresourcessuchasterrestriallichen forcaribouandberryproducingshrubsforbears.Toaddressthisconcern,wemodelledtheoccurrenceandabundanceof foodresourcesbasedonvegetationsurveysconductedwithinforeststandswithvaryinglevelsofMPBinfestationand withinforeststandswherethreemanagementtreatments(timberharvest,cutandburn,andfire)wereimplemented.We focusedvegetationsurveyswithinfivecaribourangesofthefoothillsandborealforestofAlbertawheregrizzlybearsalso occur.WewilldiscussthechangesincaribouandgrizzlybearfoodsupplyresultingfromMPBinfestation,timberharvest, cutandburn,andwildfire.Inaddition,wewilldiscusstheintegrationofthefoodmodelsintoatoolforpredictingthe potentialconsequencesofMPBmanagementoncaribouandgrizzlybearfoodsupply. Keywords:Management,Speciesatrisk,Foraging,Mammals,Landscapeconfiguration. Livingintheeco-evolutionarytheatre:researchguidedandinspiredbyintensivefieldobservationssymposium TUESDAY16:30,ROOM:THEATRE Stability and change in the evolutionary dynamics of color-pattern loci PATRIKNOSIL,UNIVERSITYOFSHEFFIELD,[email protected] ROMAINVILLOUTREIX,UNIVERSITYOFSHEFFIELD;ZACHGOMPERT,UTAHSTATEUNIVERSITY;CLARISSAF.DECARVALHO,UNIVERSITYOF SHEFFIELD;VÍCTORSORIA-CARRASCO,UNIVERSITYOFSHEFFIELD;MORITZMUSCHICK,EAWAGCENTREFORECOLOGY,EVOLUTIONAND BIOGEOCHEMISTRY;DOROLINDKTE,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;BERNARDJ.CRESPI,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;JEFFFEDER,NOTRE DAMEUNIVERSITY;CRISTINAP.SANDOVAL,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIASANTABARBARA Evolutionarydynamicsvaryacrosstime.Thecausesofthispatternarecriticalforunderstandinggeneticdiversityand speciation.Westudytheevolutionofgeneticregionsunderlyingcrypticcolormorphsofastickinsect.Atthescaleofdays toyears,theseregionsexperiencestrongerfrequencychangethantherestofthegenome,implyingpotentialforrapid fixation.However,morphfrequenciesacross24yearsarefairlystable,exhibitingboundedfluctuationsassociatedwith variableheterozygoteadvantage,frequencydependentselection,climaticvariation,andmigration.Atlongertimescales, directionalchangeoccurswhennewhabitatsarecolonizedorfavoredmutationsoriginate.Thus,transientdirectional changeisquicklyreplacedbyfluctuationsaroundadynamicequilibriumormovingoptimum.Ourresultsaccordwith Simpson’smodelofadaptivezonesanddrawparallelstodynamicsseeninothercomplexecologicalandphysicalsystems. LinkingEnvironmentalLawandScienceSymposium WEDNESDAY10:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Accelerating the creation of effective marine protected areas in Canada: scientific advice and the federal Oceans Act LINDANOWLAN,WESTCOASTENVIRONMENTALLAW,[email protected] ThefederalOceansAct,Canada'sflagshipmarineprotectionandmanagementlaw,givesregulatorsbroadpowersto designatemarineprotectedareas(MPAs).Ensuringthatthesedecisionsareinformedbythebestavailablemarine scienceisessentialtotheprotectionofoceanhealth.Thispresentationwilldiscusstwoproposetwolawreformstofill thegapsbetweenscienceandlawinthecreationofMPAsintheOceansAct:(1)theinclusionofminimumprotection standards,and(2)makingecologicalintegritytheforemostgoalforMPAmanagement.TheframeworkOceansActwas meanttobesupplementedbyregulationstosupportimplementation.However,after20yearsnoregulationsenshrine recognizedbestpracticesforeffectiveMPAs,suchastheneedforno-takeareasaspartofeachMPA.Withoutlegally bindingstandardsofminimumprotection,thelawallowsforprohibitionsonindustrialactivitiestobenegotiatedona case-by-casebasis,resultingintheexistenceofinconsistentprotectionschemes,lengthytimelinesforsecuring designation,andoftenweakenedrestrictions.Mandatesformanagersofterrestrialparksandmarineareasdiffer. AmendingtheOceansActtoincludeaprovisionequivalenttothatfoundintheCanadaNationalParksActwhichrequires prioritizationof“themaintenanceorrestorationofecologicalintegrity”wouldhelptocorrectthis“doublestandard” betweenmarineandterrestrialprotectedarealaw.Clarifyingtheprioritizationofthe‘P’inMPAwithintheOceansAct wouldimprovethelinksbetweenscienceandlawinCanada’smarineenvironmentandreducethreatstoimperiled marineareas. Complexcoevolution:understandinghowcoevolutionmayoperatedifferentlyacrossdiverseinteractiontypes, systems,andscalessymposium TUESDAY09:15,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM The role of coevolution in the assembly and disassembly of mutualistic communities SCOTTL.NUISMER,UNIVERSITYOFIDAHO,[email protected] Mutualismsplayafundamentalbiologicalrole,facilitatingsuccession,enhancingecosystemservices,andinfluencingthe robustnessofcommunities.Thistalkwillpresentresultsfrommathematicalmodelsexploringtherolecoevolutionplays intheassemblyofmutualisticcommunitiesandinbufferingthesecommunitiesagainstdissasemblyinthefaceof anthropogenicdisturbance. Physiologicalecology,temperature WEDNESDAY10:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Metabolic performance and fitness-related responses of a tropical freshwater fish (Nile perch; Lates niloticus) to elevated temperatures ELIZABETHNYBOER,MCGILLUNIVERSITY,[email protected] LAURENCHAPMAN,MCGILLUNIVERSITY Tropicalfishesarepredictedtobeespeciallyvulnerabletoclimatewarmingastheyarethoughttohavenarrowthermal windowsrelativetotemperatespeciesandtobelivingneartheirupperedgeoftheirthermaltolerancelimits.However, theeffectsofincreasingtemperaturesontropicalinlandfisheshaverarelybeentested,andmuchuncertaintyremains regardingresponsesandmechanismsbywhichtropicalfreshwaterfishesreactoradapttothesechanges.Thisstudy quantifiedeffectsofshort-term(3days)andlonger-term(3-weeks)acclimationtoelevatedwatertemperatureonthe aerobicperformance(standardandmaximummetabolicrate,aerobicscope,EPOC)andthermaltolerance(CTmax)of Nileperch,afishorfoodsecurityimportanceintheLakeVictoriaregionofEastAfrica.Both3-dayand3-weekacclimated NileperchshowedalinearincreaseinCTmaxwithacclimationtemperature,andlongerthermalacclimationallowedNile perchtopushtheirupperthermaltolerancelimitevenhigher.AcclimatedNileperchshowedreductionsinSMR,MMR andAScomparedtoacutelyexposedfish,howeverthesechangeswereaccompaniedbydecreasesinEPOCacross exposuretime,indicatingthatthedecreaseinmetabolicrateandASmaybeindicativeofphysiologicalchangesand increasedefficiencyofcardio-respiratoryfunctionafteracclimation.Thisfindingissupportedbyimprovementsin growthandconditionathigheracclimationtemperaturesandnegativerelationshipsbetweenASandgrowthin3-week acclimatedfish. Keywords:Africa,Temperaturemodulation,Physiology,Fish,Plasticity. ECOLOGICAL,EVOLUTIONARYANDENVIRONMENTALSYNTHESISINTHE21STCENTURYSYMPOSIUM TUESDAY16:15,ROOM:ESQUIMALT The ultimate challenge: Synthesizing theory and data to understand ecological change MARYO'CONNOR,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Synthesisecologyhasexpandedourunderstandingofecologicalpatternsandprocesses,andnowisapowerfulandstaple componentofourtoolkittounderstandglobalecologicalchange.Acurrentmajorchallengeistounderstandratesof biodiversitychangeinthecontextofhumanactivities.Thischallengerequiressynthesisnotonlyofdiversityand diversitychangeestimates,butalsoofourtheoreticalunderstandingofbiodiversityandhowitvariesinspaceandtime. Wetackledthischallengebysynthesizingtheoreticalexpectationsforwhybiodiversitychangevariesfromfinetobroad spatialscales,andcomparingourexpectationswithempiricaldatafromcasestudiesandasynthesisofbiodiversitytimeseriescollectedforspatialscalesrangingfromsq-cmtoglobalforvertebrateandinvertebratetaxaacrosshabitats.We observedspeciesgainsandlossesacrosseveryspatialscalesandforalltaxaandhabitats.However,wefoundthatmuch oftheavailabletime-seriesdataisunabletosupportcross-scalecomparisonsofbiodiversitychangebecauseitis measuredandobserveddifferentlyatdifferentspatialscales.Bysynthesizingdatainthecontextofbiodiversitychange theories,itbecameclearthatsystematicandscaleexplicitapproachestoobservingbiodiversityanddetectingchangeare criticallyneeded.Wedrawparallelsbetweenunderstandingbiodiversitychangeandclimatechangeimpacts,andwe developaframeworkfordetectingandattributingbiodiversitychangewithconfidenceinthe21stCentury.Therobust detectionofbiodiversitychangeisnotpossiblewithoutjointsynthesisoftheoryanddata. Habitatselectionanduse WEDNESDAY09:15,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Determining factors affecting dragonfly emergence, including a species-at-risk (skillet clubtail: Gomphus ventricosus) in the lower St John river and Grand Lake meadows area ZOEO'MALLEY,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK,[email protected] ZACCHAEUSCOMPSON,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK;JESSICAM.ORLOFSKE,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK;WENDYA.MONK, UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK;R.ALLENCURRY,UNIVERSITYOFNEWBRUNSWICK Dragonfly(Odonata:Anisoptera)lifehistoriesareintricatelytiedwithaquaticandterrestrialhabitat,especiallyduring thecriticaltransitionfromnymphtoadult.Thepurposeofthisstudyistodeterminethecriticalhabitatandemergence requirementsforseveralOdonatespecies,includingtheendangeredSkilletClubtaildragonfly(Gomphusventricosus), usingexuviae(shedexoskeletons).Aftertheadultsemerge,exuviaecanbecollectedandreliablyidentified,which providesanonlethalsamplingmethodforrareandprotectedspecies.Exuviaewerecollectedfrom2014to2016from15 sitesnearGrandLakeandalongtheSaintJohnRiver,inFredericton,NewBrunswick.Throughoutthecollectingperiodwe measuredabioticvariablessuchaswaterlevel,airandwatertemperature.Thepositionofeachexuviawaslinkedto hydrologicdatabyrecordingtheverticalandhorizontaldistancetraveledrelativetothewaterlevel.Riparianhabitat conditionswerealsoevaluatedusingtreeandvegetationsurveys.Structuralequationmodelingevaluatesthe relationshipsbetweenemergingdragonfliesandtheirenvironmentbothinthewaterandonland.Hydrological conditionsmayhavedirectimplicationsonemergencefordragonfliesinwhichspeciesmaybesignaledtoemergefrom specificwaterlevelortemperaturecues.Alterationoftheseflowscouldimpactthecriticalemergencestageofthisand otherspeciesfromthelossofbiologicalcuesorlimitedaccesstosuitableemergencehabitat.Understandingthe relationshipbetweenriparianhabitats,hydrologicalconditionsandemergencecouldbecrucialfortheconservationand managementoftheSkilletClubtaildragonfly. Keywords:Dragonflies,Lakes,Habitatcomplexity,Hydrologicalcondition. Animaldiet TUESDAY11:15,ROOM:WCOAST Stable isotopes and fatty acids reveal freshwater aquatic prey in the diet of wolves SEANA.O’DONOVAN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] ALLICIAP.KELLY,GOVERNMENTOFNORTHWESTTERRITORIES;KEITHA.HOBSON,UNIVERSITYOFWESTERNONTARIO;SUZANNEM. BUDGE,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY;ANDREWE.DEROCHER,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Stableisotopes(SI)andfattyacids(FA)areoftenusedtoexaminewildlifediets.SIhavebeenusedextensivelyacrossa varietyofecosystems,whereasFAhaveprimarilybeenusedtoassessthedietsofmarineanimals.HerewecombineSI (d13Candd15N)andFAanalysestogaininsightsintothedietofaterrestrialpredator:greywolves(Canislupus)in southernNorthwestTerritories.Wesampledhair,muscleandadiposetissuefrom102wolvesharvestedduringwinter between2012and2015.Wealsocollectedmuscletissuefrompotentialpreyspeciesinthestudyarea.Weare particularlyinterestedinexaminingintrapopulationvariabilityinwolfdietbetweenthreesub-regionswithinthestudy areacharacterizedbyuniqueassemblagesoflargeungulatepreyspecies.Preliminaryresultssuggestthatduringsummer andwintertheremaybeconsistentdifferencesinwolfdietbetweensub-regions.Unexpectedly,analysisofwolfmuscle tissueSIdatainBayesianmixingmodelssuggestedthat9-30%ofwinterdietwascomprisedofanaquaticsource. PreliminaryanalysisofFAdataalsosuggeststhatinsomewolves,aquaticallysourcedFAarepresentinadiposetissue. Wolvesfromareasnearcommunities,towardwhichourdatasetisbiased,mayhaveexploitedfishscrapsleftonicefrom commercialfishingoperationsandbaitstationssettolurefurbearersintotrappedareas.SIdatafromhairsuggestthatan aquaticfoodsourceisabsentinasubsetofthesamewolvesduringspringandsummermonths.Samplecollectionand analysesareongoing. Keywords:Wolves,Foraging,Stableisotopes,Fattyacidanalysis,Freshwater. Biodiversity TUESDAY11:45,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Patterns of plant succession and scale of observation in an extreme environment KATRIINAO’KANE,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] GREGHENRY,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Ourunderstandingoftheclassicconceptofsuccessionisfarfromcomplete,especiallyinextremeenvironmentssuchas theHighArctic.Thisworkcontinuesastorythatbegan20yearsagoonEllesmereIslandintheCanadianArctic archipelago.In1995,asmallsectionofTwinGlacierforelandwassurveyedtocharacterizethepatternsofsuccession. Vegetationcoveranddiversitywereassessed,andassumingthissectionrepresentedachronosequence,thestudyfound thatsuccessionatthesitefollowedadirectional-replacementmodel,transitioningthroughfourmainstagesover44 years.However,dotheseconclusionsstillholdtrueifwebroadenthescaleofoursurvey?In2016,wereturnedtoTwin Glacierandre-surveyedthesamesmallsectionoftheforelandusingidenticalmethods,thusprolongingthetemporal scaleofobservation.Wealsoenlargedthespatialscalebysurveyingamuchlargerareaoftheforeland.Theseadditions bringnewinsightsintothepatternsofplantsuccessionobservedatTwinGlacier,andwillbethefocusofmy presentation. Keywords:Colonization,Plants,Arctic,Biodiversity,Timescales. SeagrassecologyandconservationalongPacificandAtlanticcoastssymposium TUESDAY10:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Seascape connectivity effects on the nursery value of temperate seagrass ecosystems ANGELEENOLSON,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,HAKAIINSTITUTE,[email protected] MARGOTHESSING-LEWIS,HAKAIINSTITUTE;FRANCISJUANES,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Nearshoremarinehabitatsprovidecriticalnurserygroundsforjuvenilefish,buttheirfunctionalrolerequiresthe considerationoftheimpactsofspatialconnectivity.Ourstudyexaminesnurseryfunctioninseagrasshabitatsthrougha marinelandscape(seascape)lens,focusingonthespatialinteractionsbetweenhabitats,andtheireffectsonpopulation andtrophicdynamicsassociatedwithnurseryfunctiontorockfish(Sebastesspp.).InthetemperatePacificOcean, rockfishdependonnearshorehabitatsafteranopen-ocean,pelagiclarvalperiod.Weinvestigatetheroleoftwo importantspatialattributes,habitatadjacencyandcomplexity,onrockfishrecruitmenttoseagrassmeadows,andthe provisionofsubsidiestorockfishinseagrassfoodwebs.Totestfortheseeffects,underwatervisualsurveysand collectionsofyoung-of-the-year(YOY)copperrockfishrecruitment(summer2015)werecomparedacrossadjacent seagrass,kelpforest,andsandhabitatswithinanearshoreseascapeontheCentralCoastofBritishColumbia.Recruitment waspositivelyinfluencedbythestructuralcomplexityofseagrassandadjacencytokelpforestsites,howeveranegative interactionbetweenseagrasscomplexityandkelpforestadjacencysuggeststhatpredationmodifiescopperrockfish recruitmentdensities.Inaddition,usingd13Candd15Nisotopestodeterminethebasalcontributionstorockfishfood webs,kelp-derivednutrientswereonaverage47%ofYOYcopperrockfishdiets,whichwas3xand67xgreaterthanthe contributionofautochthonousseagrassproduction(seagrassepiphyteandseagrassblades,respectively).YOYcopper rockfishdietsinseagrassadjacenttosandhabitatshadthegreatestamountsofkelp-derivednutrientsandharpacticoid copepods,andconcurrentlyhadlowerbodyconditioncomparedtorockfishintheseagrasskelpedgesandinterior, feedingpredominantlyonseagrassepiphytesandcalanoidcopepods.Thisstudyprovidesfurtherevidencethat temperateseagrassesarenurseriesforrockfishandthatspatialelementsofseascapes,includingconnectivityviahabitat adjacencyandvariabilityinhabitatstructure,altertherecruitmentanddietsofrockfishinseagrasshabitats.These seascapenurseryeffectsareimportantconsiderationsformarineplanning,especiallygiventheglobaldeclineof nearshorehabitats. Keywords:Seagrass,Fish,Marine,Habitatselection,Habitatcomplexity,Connectivity. LifeontheEdge:MechanismsofAdaptingtoClimateChangeSymposium TUESDAY11:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Transcriptomic variability in population responses of Atlantic cod to temperature REBEKAHOOMEN,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY,UNIVERSITYOFOSLO,INSTITUTEOFMARINERESEARCHFLØ[email protected] HALVORKNUTSEN,UNIVERSITYOFOSLO,INSTITUTEOFMARINERESEARCHFLØDEVIGEN,UNIVERSITYOFAGDER;ESBENOLSEN, INSTITUTEOFMARINERESEARCHFLØDEVIGEN,UNIVERSITYOFAGDER;SISSELJENTOFT,UNIVERSITYOFOSLO;NILSCHRISTIANSTENSETH, UNIVERSITYOFOSLO;JEFFREYA.HUTCHINGS,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY,UNIVERSITYOFOSLO,UNIVERSITYOFAGDER Understandingtheinterplaybetweenphenotypicplasticityandgeneticadaptationiscriticalforpredictingorganismal responsestoenvironmentalchange.Byexploringspatialadaptationinplasticresponses,wecanbetterunderstandhow populationshaveadaptedtotheirenvironmentsinthepast,theircontemporaryplasticresponses,andtheirpotentialfor futureplasticand/oradaptivechange.Keyquestionssurroundingtheissueofvariablepopulationresponsesto environmentalchangeincludethespatialscaleatwhichdifferencesinplasticityexistandthemolecularbasis(i.e.specific genesorgeneticvariants)underlyingtheseadaptations.WeareinterestedinhowAtlanticcodinhabitingdifferent thermalregimesresponddifferentlytochangesintemperature.Byintegratingcommon-gardenexperimentsacrossa rangeoftemperatureswithgeneexpressionprofilesobtainedthroughRNAsequencing,weaimtobridgethegap betweengenotypicandphenotypicvariation,andplasticandevolutionaryresponsestoclimatechangeamongcod populationsontheNorwegiancoast.Thisapproachhasyieldedinsightinto:1)theresponseoflarvalcodgrowth,survival, andgeneexpressiontotemperature;2)thepotentialforsmall-scalegeneticdifferencesinplasticresponsesinhighly mobilemarinespecies;and3)themolecularbasisofthermaladaptationincod.Weaimtoinformpredictionsofthe responsesofwildcodpopulationstochangingoceantemperaturesandeffectivemanagementofpopulationstoprevent populationcollapseandbiodiversityloss. LinkingEnvironmentalLawandScienceSymposium WEDNESDAY09:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Should courts be 'Academies of Science'? Lessons From the misapplication of "Adaptive Management" under the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act MARTINOLSZYNSKI,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] Earlyoninthejurisprudencewithrespecttoenvironmentalassessment,Canadiancourtsdeclaredthattheywouldnotsit as"academiesofscience"inthecontextoflegalchallengestothesufficiencyofenvironmentalassessments(Vancouver IslandPeaceSocietyv.Canada[1992]3F.C.425).Overtime,thispositionhasevolvedintoa"lowthreshold"forthe considerationofenvironmentaleffectsandtheirmitigation(OntarioPowerGenerationInc.v.GreenpeaceCanadaetal. 2015FCA186).Examiningthemisapplicationof"adaptivemanagement"intheenvironmentalassessmentcontext,this presentationwillshowthedetrimentaleffectthattheCourts'hands-offapproachhashadonenvironmentalmanagement andprotectioninCanada. Evolutionarytheory MONDAY13:45,ROOM:WCOAST The genetic signature of evolutionary rescue with sex MATTHEWOSMOND,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] GUILLAUMEMARTIN,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTPELLIER;OPHÉLIERONCE,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTPELLIER;SARAHOTTO,UNIVERSITYOF BRITISHCOLUMBIA Populationsareincreasinglyfacingstrongerenvironmentalshifts.Meanwhile,mosttheoriespredictingthedistributionof fitness-effectsofallelesfixedduringadaptationassumeaninitiallywell-adaptedpopulation.Thisincongruitymayexplain ourinabilitytopredictthedistributionoffitness-effectsfixedduring,forexample,theevolutionofresistanceto antibiotics.Herewerelaxtheassumptionthatpopulationsareinitiallywell-adaptedandderivethedistributionoffitnesseffectsfixedduringevolutionaryrescue,conditionedonpersistence.Wedothisforbothasexualandsexualpopulations, highlightinghowrecombinationsculptsthegeneticsignatureofevolutionaryrescue. Keywords:Reproduction,Evolution,Populationgenetics,Simulationmodel. Phylogenetics MONDAY09:00,ROOM:WCOAST Exploring the surprisingly finely dissected genomes of the Helianthus hybrid species GREGORYL.OWENS,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] LORENH.RIESEBERG,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Homoploidhybridspeciationinvolvestwospecieshybridizing,withoutpolyploidy,toproduceathirdspeciesthatis reproductivelyisolatedfrombothparents.Duringthehybridspeciationprocess,theinitiallylargegenomicfragmentsare dividedbyrecombination.Thedegreetowhichtheparentalfragmentsaredividedcantellusaboutthestrengthof selectionandpopulationsizesthatareneededforhybridspeciation.Someofthebestworkonthistopichasbeendonein thesunflowerhybridspecies(Helianthusanomalus,H.deserticola,andH.paradoxus)whereearlymolecularwork suggestedextremelylargeparentalblocksandrepeatablepatternsofcomposition.Hereweevaluatethesefindingsusing next-gentranscriptomicdata.Incontrasttopreviouswork,wefindverysmallparentalfragmentsevenifweassume extremelyhighgenotypingerrorrates.Despitethis,weconfirmthatverylargegenomictractsoftendocontain preponderanceofgeneticmaterialfromoneparentortheother,andthatparallelismingenomiccompositionismuch greaterthanexpectedbychance.Ourworksuggeststhatpopulationsizesduringhybridspeciationcanbemuchlarger thanpreviouslysuspectedandthatselectionduringtheearlystagesofhybridspeciationplaysacriticalroleinshaping thecompositionofhybridgenomes. Keywords:Speciation,Hybridization,Genomicsequencing,Evolution,Plants. Sticklebackecologyandevolution MONDAY08:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Temporal variation shapes phenotypic and genetic diversity in bar-built estuary populations of threespine stickleback ANTOINEPACCARD,MCGILLUNIVERSITY,[email protected] BENA.WASSERMAN,THEUNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIASANTACRUZ;DIETAHANSON,MCGILLUNIVERSITY;LOUISASTORG,UNIVERSITÉ DUQUÉBECÀMONTRÉAL;DANDURSTON,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;SARAKURLAND,STOCKHOLMUNIVERSITY;TRAVISM.APGAR, UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIASANTACRUZ;RANAW.EL-SABAAWI,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;ANDREWP.HENDRY,MCGILLUNIVERSITY; ERICP.PALKOVACS,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIASANTACRUZ;ROWAND.H.BARRETT,MCGILLUNIVERSITY Spatialselectionisknowntoshapespatialvariationinadaptivetraits.Whatislesscertainistheroleoftemporal variation.Indeed,recenttheoreticalandempiricaladvancementsinecologyandpopulationgeneticsoftencometo diametricallyopposedconclusionsabouttheimportanceoftemporalvariationinshapingtheadaptiveresponse.Here, ourstudyfocusesonthreespinesticklebackfishpopulations(Gasterosteusaculeatus)encounteredacrossseveralbarbuiltestuariesofthecentralcoastofCaliforniaknownforhavingregularshiftsinenvironmentalconditions.Weaskedthe followingquestions:Isphenotypicandgeneticvariationhigherinpopulationssubjecttostrongtemporalfluctuations thanitisinpopulationssubjecttomorestableenvironments?Canwedetectevidenceofadaptivedivergenceamong populationsexposedtodifferentselectivepressuresdespitetemporalvariationwithineachofthoseenvironments?We usedstandardgeneticmarkerstotestforpopulationstructureandtheinfluenceofselection.Wealsoanalyzedclassic sticklebackadaptivetraitstoassesslevelsofvariationinrelationtopredation.Finally,weaskedhoworganismal stoichiometryvariesinrelationtophenotypes,genotypes,andpredationregime.Wefirstdiscoveredthatvariationin bodyshapewasgreaterinourestuariesthaninknownstableenvironments.Second,despitetemporalvariations,we detectedevidenceforadaptivedivergenceinpopulationsexposedtodifferentpredatorypressures.Ourresultssuggest thattemporalenvironmentalchangesinducedshiftsinselectivepressure,whichinturnshapedtheobservedlevelsof phenotypicandgeneticdiversity. Keywords:Fish,Geneticvariation,Phenotypicvariation,Environmentalvariation,Selection. AcceleratingurbanecologyinCanada:Identifyingcurrentresearchapproaches,gaps,andneedsinCanadiancities symposium MONDAY09:15,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Ecological health in Metro Vancouver: Current projects and emerging topics MARCINPACHCINSKI,METROVANCOUVER,[email protected] MetroVancouverisafederationof21municipalities,oneElectoralAreaandoneTreatyFirstNationthatcollaboratively plansforanddeliversregional-scaleservices,includingutilities(water,sewer,andsolidwaste),regionalplanning,air qualityregulation,regionalparks,andaffordablehousing.Metro2040,theregionalgrowthstrategy,providesthebasis forMetroVancouver'sworkonecologicalhealth.ThisworkisguidedbyMetroVancouver'sEcologicalHealthActionPlan, whichiscurrentlybeingrenewed.Ourworkfocusesonprovidingourmemberlocaljurisdictionsandresidentswithdata andresourcestheyneedtomakebetterdecisionsrelatedtoecologicalhealth.MetroVancouveralsoservesaforumthat bringstogetherenvironmentstafffromlocalgovernmentstodiscussissuesofregionalrelevance,suchasinvasive species.ThepresentationwillhighlightcurrentprojectsMetroVancouverisworkingonrelatedtoecologicalhealth,such asurbanforestryguidelinesandwww.growgreenguide.ca.Itwillalsopreviewemergingtopics,suchasecosystem servicesvaluationandusinglandcoverdatatoanalyzeconnectivityaregionalscale.Gapsandneedsinresearchand informationwillbepointedoutforeachtopicarea. AcceleratingurbanecologyinCanada:Identifyingcurrentresearchapproaches,gaps,andneedsinCanadiancities symposium MONDAY09:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Whales, bees, forests, and birds: Raising the profile of biodiversity in Vancouver NICKPAGE,VANCOUVERPARKBOARD,[email protected] ANGELADANYLUK,CITYOFVANCOUVER EnhancingbiodiversityhasbecomebothafunctionalandculturalgoalintheCityofVancouveraspartofawide-ranging sustainabilityagenda.Unlikemanycitieswhichemphasizeregulatoryapproachestomanagingbiodiversityduring development,Vancouver’surbanlandscapewaslargelyconstructedbeforeenvironmentalvalueswereembeddedin urbanplanning.Mostofstreamswereculverted,wetlandswerefilled,andforestswerecutover100yearsago.But Vancouverhasalsoembracedopportunitiestoprotectandrestoreremnantnaturalareas,andVancouver’sidentityis definedasacitysurroundedbyforests,mountains,andthesea.Residentsarecaptivatedbythereturnofwhalesto EnglishBay,beaverstopondsandwetlands,andevenasingledeerthatswamtoStanleyParkin2015.In2016,acitywideBiodiversityStrategywasadoptedtoguideeffortstosupportthecity’secologicalnetwork,andincreaseaccessto natureforresidents.TheCityandParkBoardhaveagoalofrestoringorenhancing25haofnaturalareasbetween2010 and2020.TheBiodiversityStrategycomplimentsanexistingBirdStrategy,anUrbanForestStrategy,Environmental EducationPlanandvariousdevelopmentpoliciesasafoundationforsupportingbiodiversityinthecity.Specificprojects includetheconstructionofa1.5hacoastalsaltmarsh,meadowprojectstoenhancepollinators,andextensiveforest restorationfocusingonnativecoastalforests. Forestecology WEDNESDAY09:30,ROOM:WCOAST Boreal peat properties link to plant functional traits of ecosystem engineers JULIAE.PALOZZI,WESTERNUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ZOLINDO,WESTERNUNIVERSITY Therelationshipbetweenplantsandsoilisespeciallyimportantinborealpeatlands,wheredominantvegetationtypes dictatepeataccumulationandthereforecarbonstorage.Sphagnummossesfacilitatecarbonsequestration;however, recentevidencesuggeststhatSphagnum-dominatedpeatlandsmayshiftunderfutureclimatechangeconditions. Predictingconsequencesofvegetationshiftsforlong-termpeataccumulationrequireselucidatingrelationshipsbetween dominantpeatlandplantsandpeatproperties.Wequantifiedvegetationcommunitycomposition,plantfunctionaltraits, andpeatpropertiesintwopeatlandsitesdifferingindominantvegetationtype(SphagnummossesandCarexsedges), andlinkplanttraitswithpeatpropertiesusingordination.Weshowthatplanttraitssignificantlyexplainmanypeat properties,includingorganochemicalsthatareindicatorsofdecompositiondynamics.Specifically,Carex-dominatedsites hadlargeramountofdecompositionproductswhilealargerproportionofundecomposedmaterialswasobservedin Sphagnum-dominatedsites.Feedbacksinplant-soilsystemsareincreasinglybeingrecognisedasdriversofecosystem processes.Inbothpeatlandtypes,abovegroundplanttraitsofthekeyecosystemengineerdrovepropertiesofthe belowgroundpeatenvironment.BelowgroundpeatorganochemicalconstituentsbetweenSphagnum-dominatedand Carex-dominatedsitesrevealdifferencesindecompositionratesandcarbonuseefficiency,andthustheconducive potentialforcarbonstorage. Keywords:Carbonstorage,Plants,Climatechange,Decomposition,Experiment. Complexcoevolution:understandinghowcoevolutionmayoperatedifferentlyacrossdiverseinteractiontypes, systems,andscalessymposium TUESDAY09:00,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Co-evolution across the spectrum of host/microbiota integration LAURAPARFREY,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] ANDREWLOUDON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Allmulticellularorganismsarecolonizedbymicrobesandevolvedinthecontinuouspresenceofmicrobes.Thislong evolutionaryhistoryhasproducedintimaterelationshipsbetweenhostandmicrobes.Hostsrelyonmicrobesforsuch essentialfunctionsasinducingnormalmorphology,protectionfrompathogens,andimmunesystemdevelopment.In somecaseshostshaveco-evolvedwithspecificmicrobesintightassociation,suchasinendosymbioses.However,the associationbetweenahostanditsmicrobiotaisoftenmuchlooser,andmicrobiotacompositionvariableacross individualsinaspecies.Thisisthecaseinseaweeds,whereepiphyticmicrobesareassembledfromtheenvironment, varywidelyacrossindividuals,anddifferaccordingtoenvironmentalconditions.Inseaweeds,andmanyotherhosts, thereisnocoresetofmicrobes,yetcollectivelythemicrobesperformcorefunctions.Workinavarietyofsystems, includingseaweeds,suggeststhatmostfunctionscanbeperformedbymanymicrobialtaxa:thereishighfunctional redundancy.Thus,selectionmayoperateonfunctionsratherthantaxonomicidentity.Idiscussexamplesalongthe spectrumofhost-microberelationshipsandtheimplicationsforourunderstandingofco-evolution. Habitatselectionanduse WEDNESDAY09:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Density-dependent habitat selection predicts fitness and abundance of tree lizards (Urosaurus ornatus) JAMESE.PATERSON,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA,[email protected] GABRIELBLOUIN-DEMERS,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA Habitatselectiontheorypredictsthedistributionoforganismsbetweenhabitats.Thetheoryassumesthatindividuals choosepatchestomaximizetheirfitness,andthatsomeimportantaspectofhabitatqualitydeclinesasdensityincreases, forinstancefoodabundance.Temperature,however,isunaffectedbydensityandisoftenthemostimportantfactorfor habitatselectioninectotherms,whichcomprisethevastmajorityofanimals.Lizardperformanceandhabitatselection arestronglyaffectedbytemperature,thuslizardsmaynotselecthabitatsinadensity-dependentmanner.Using10tree lizard(Urosaurusornatus)populationseachstraddlingtwoadjacenthabitats,wetestedtheassumptionsandpredictions ofdensity-dependenthabitatselection:fitnessproxiesdeclinewithdensity,therearedifferencesinhabitatquality(food abundanceandtemperature),habitatselectiondependsondensity,andfitnessproxiesequalizeacrosshabitats.Wefound thatmonthlysurvivaldecreasedwithdensity,lizardspreferredthehabitatwithmorefoodandhigherthermalquality, habitatselectiondependedondensity,andthatfitnessproxiesdidnotdifferbetweenhabitats.Thesepatternsare consistentwithdensity-dependenthabitatselection,despitethermalqualitydifferencesbetweenhabitats.Weexpectthat density-dependenthabitatselectioniswidespreadforterrestrialectothermswhendensitiesarehighandtemperatures areclosetotheirpreferredrange.However,inareaswherethermalqualityislow,weexpectthatdepletableresources, suchasfood,becomelesslimitingbecauseassimilatingresourcesbecomesmoredifficult. Keywords:Habitatselection,Experiment,Reptiles,Densitydependence. Dispersal WEDNESDAY11:30,ROOM:THEATRE How did the chick(adee) cross the road? Mapping arboreal connectivity in urban landscapes DEEL.PATRIQUIN,SOLSTICECANADACORPORATION,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] IANBASFORD,SOLSTICECANADACORPORATION;ROBYNPERKINS,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Landmanagersinavarietyofcontextsareconcernedwithidentifyingconnectivehabitatforconservationplanning. CircuitScapehasrecentlyemergedasaversatileoptionformappingconnectivehabitatatalandscapescale,toidentify locationsrequiringconservationmanagement(e.g.,alternativepathways,pinchpoints).Aspartofanurbanconservation project,weappliedCircuitScapeinacitylandscape,usingcoyoteandchickadeeasindicatorsofterrestrialandarboreal movement,respectively.Thechickadeemodel,oneofthefirstapplicationsforurbanarborealmovement,highlighted issuesnotpreviouslyreportedforterrestrialspecies,includinganislandeffectattheneighbourhoodlevelduetoroad networks.Throughfurtherapplicationinasmallerurbanlandscape,supportedbywintersurveys,wehaveidentified habitatfeaturesthatappeartoenhancearborealconnectivityintheurbancontext,andtheresultingdistributionof chickadees.Songbirdsandotherarborealspeciesareoftenoverlookedinplanningurbanconservationefforts,yetprovide avalued,andeasilyaccessiblewildlifeviewingopportunityforurbanresidents.Resultsofthisstudycanassisturban plannersandecologistsinplanningfuturedevelopment,andinmaintainingandrestoringhabitatinalreadydeveloped urbanareas.Ourworkalsosuggestsareasoffuturestudyforurbanecologistsrelativetofragmentationeffectsandurban connectivity. Keywords:Birds,Landscapeconfiguration,Urbanecology,Spatialmodel. Physiologicalecology,temperature WEDNESDAY11:00,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM To eat or thermoregulate? Determinants of home range size and density in Sceloporus jarrovii lizards LUCYD.PATTERSON,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA,[email protected] GABRIELBLOUIN-DEMERS,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA Accordingtotraditionalhabitatselectionmodels,animalsselecthabitatsbasedonresourceavailability,especiallyfood. However,ectothermphysiologydependssostronglyontemperaturethattheseorganismsmayselecthabitatsbasedon theirthermalpropertiesratherthanfoodavailability.Thus,Itestedtwohypotheses:thathabitatselectioninectotherms isdrivenbythermoregulatoryrequirements,andthatitisdrivenbyfoodavailability.Ipredictedthat(1)thedensityof lizardswouldcorrelatepositivelyandtheaveragehomerangesizewouldcorrelatenegativelywiththethermalquality (orfoodavailability)oftheplot,and(2)afterexperimentallyincreasingplotthermalquality(orfoodavailability),lizard densitywouldincreaseandtheaveragehomerangesizewoulddecreaserelativetocontrolplots.Iestablishedtwoplots ineachoffourtreatments(shaded,food-supplemented,shadedandfood-supplemented,andcontrol),onatalusslopein Arizona,USA.ImeasuredthedensityandhomerangesizeofYarrowsSpinyLizards(Sceloporusjarrovii)beforeandafter manipulations,anddeterminedwhetherlizarddensityandhomerangesizewererelatedtonaturalarthropod(food) availabilityorthermalqualityatthesurfaceandinretreatsites.Theexperimentalmanipulationshadnoeffectondensity orhomerangesize.However,homerangesizeanddensitybothincreasedwithnaturalarthropodavailability,and decreasedwithhigherthermalqualityinretreatsites.Theseresultsprovidepartialsupportforbothfoodavailabilityand thermalqualityasdriversofhabitatselectioninS.jarrovii. Keywords:Habitatselection,Experiment,Reptiles,Populationrange. ECOLOGICAL,EVOLUTIONARYANDENVIRONMENTALSYNTHESISINTHE21STCENTURYSYMPOSIUM TUESDAY15:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Dynamics of collapse and recovery in a marine community: insights from multivariate dynamic statistical approaches ERICJ.PEDERSEN,FISHERIESANDOCEANSCANADA,[email protected] PATRICKL.THOMPSON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;MARIE-JOSEEFORTIN,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;TARIKC.GOUHIER, NORTHEASTERNUNIVERSITY;HEIKELINK,KIELUNIVERSITY;CHARLOTTEMORITZ,PSLRESEARCHUNIVERSITY;HEDVIGNENZEN, UNIVERSITEDUQUEBECAMONTREAL;RYANR.E.STANLEY,FISHERIESANDOCEANSCANADA;ZOFIAE.TARANU,UNIVERSITIEDE MONTREAL;ANDREWGONZALEZ,MCGILL;FREDERICGUICHARD,MCGILL;PIERREPEPIN,FISHERIESANDOCEANSCANADA Asthepaceandscaleofecologicalchangeincreasesthroughouttheanthropocene,ecologistsneedtoolstomodelrapid ecologicalchangeincomplexcommunities.Mostofwhatweknowaboutthedynamicsofrapid,difficulttoreverse ecologicalchanges(i.e.regimeshifts)derivesfrommodelsorexperimentsfocusingonrelativelysimplifiedsystemsor verycoarsescales;wehaveamuchrougherideaofhowregimeshiftsplayoutindiverseorspatiallycomplex communities.OneofthemosticoniccasesofrapidecologicalchangewasthecollapseofNewfoundlandgroundfishstocks intheearly1990’s.Here,weusethegroundfishcollapseasacasestudytodemonstratehowmodernecologicalstatistical approachescanbeusedtogainnewinsightsintoregimeshiftsincomplexsystems.Weusegeneralizedhierarchical smoothmodelstosimultaneouslymodelthespatiotemporaldynamicsofcollapseandrecoveryofmultipleinteracting species.Usingthismodel,Weshowhowtoidentifyspecieswithsimilardynamicresponses,findpotentialbeginningand endpointsofdynamicregimes,andmodeltheratesatwhichdifferentlargescalecommunityindicators(biomass, diversity,andcomposition)havechangedovertime.Weshowthatthethegroundfishcommunityasawholeexperienced fourphasesofchange:1)aperiodofrapid,synchronousbiomasscollapse;2)aregimeshiftincommunitycomposition;3) slowcompositionalrecovery,and;4)slowbiomassgrowth.Themethodsweapplyherehavebroadapplicationsfor modellingthedynamicsofcomplexcommunitiesinawiderangeofecosystems. Complexcoevolution:understandinghowcoevolutionmayoperatedifferentlyacrossdiverseinteractiontypes, systems,andscalessymposium TUESDAY08:15,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Evolution and specificity in an insect defensive symbiosis STEVEJ.PERLMAN,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] MATTHEWJ.BALLINGER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;PHINEAST.HAMILTON,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,BCCANCERAGENCY Thereisagrowingappreciationthatanimalscommonlyharbourmicrobesthatprotectthemagainstnaturalenemies,and thatthesesymbiontsplayacriticalroleinshapingtheecologyandevolutionofhost-parasiteinteractions.Littleisknown aboutspecificityofdefensivesymbionts,andwhetherandhowparasitesareabletoresistsymbiont-mediatedprotection. WestudythesymbiosisbetweenDrosophilafliesandamaternallyinheritedbacterialendosymbiontcalledSpiroplasma thatprotectsagainstinfectionbyparasiticnematodesandparasiticwasps.Protectionagainsttheseverydifferenttypesof parasitesappearstoinvolveaclassoftoxins,calledribosome-inactivatingproteins(RIPs),thattargetahighlyconserved regionofeukaryoticribosomes.SpiroplasmagenomesencodeadiverserepertoireofRIPtoxins,andwespeculatethat host-symbiont-enemycoevolutionaryinteractionsaredrivenbytoxinspecificity. Livingintheeco-evolutionarytheatre:researchguidedandinspiredbyintensivefieldobservationssymposium TUESDAY16:45,ROOM:THEATRE The architecture of adaptation: A master mutation or a mass of mutations? CATHERINEPIECHEL,UNIVERSITYOFBERN,[email protected] SOPHIEL.ARCHAMBEAULT,UNIVERSITYOFWASHINGTON,UNIVERSITYOFBERN Amajorgoalofevolutionarybiologyistoidentifythegenotypesandphenotypesthatunderlieadaptationtodivergent environments.Duetothehistoryofintensiveecologicalandevolutionaryresearchonthethreespinestickleback,these fishhavebecomeapowerfulmodelsystemtouncoverthegeneticarchitectureofadaptation.Priorstudieshavefound genomicregionsunderdivergentselectionbetweenmarineandfreshwaterpopulations.Inaddition,quantitativetraitloci (QTL)mappingstudieshaveidentifiedgenomichotspots,whichharborQTLformanydifferentphenotypictraits.Inorder todisentangletherelationshipsbetweengenotype,phenotypeandfitnessinthesegenomichotspots,wearefocusingona 16kbregionofmarine-freshwaterdivergenceencompassingtheEctodysplasin(Eda)geneonchromosomeIV.TheEda genehasbeenshowntocontributetovariationinthreephenotypes(lateralplatenumber,laterallinepattern,schooling behavior)thatdifferbetweenmarineandfreshwatersticklebacks.However,itisunknownwhethertheeffectsofEdaon thesephenotypesareduetopleiotropiceffectsofasinglemutation,orlinkageofmultiplemutations.Todistinguish betweenlinkageandpleiotropy,weareconductingassociationmappingacrossthis16kbregioninafreshwater populationinLakeWashington(Seattle,USA),whereboththemarineandfreshwaterhaplotypesarepresent. Surprisingly,wefindextensiverecombinationhasoccurredacrossthishaplotypeinLakeWashington.Ourpreliminary analysesfurthersuggestthatlinkage,notpleiotropy,underliestheeffectsofEdaonmultiplephenotypes.Ultimately,our goalistoidentifythespecificecologicalfactorsthatdriveselectiononthesegenotypesandphenotypes. Anthropogenicinfluencesonhabitatselection TUESDAY16:00,ROOM:SAANICH Habitat heterogeneity and functional responses explain seasonal and behaviourbased selection of regenerating seismic lines for a social predator KARINEPIGEON,FRIRESEARCH,[email protected] DOUGMACNEARNEY,FRIRESEARCH;GORDSTENHOUSE,FRIRESEARCH;JEROMECRANSTON,ARCTOSECOLOGICALCONSULTANTS; MARKHEBBLEWHITE,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;MARCOMUSIANI,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;LALENIANEUFELD,PARKSCANADA Predationisakeyregulatoroftop-downeffectsonpreypopulations,andtheabilitytofindandkillpreyisinfluencedby landscapecharacteristicsandanthropogenicdevelopment.Earlysuccessionalstandscreatedbyindustrycansupport moreprimaryprey,inturndrivinganincreaseinpredatornumbers.Linearfeaturessuchasseismiclineshavealsobeen associatedwithfacilitatedaccessandtravelefficiencyforwolves,thereforealteringencounterratesbetweenpredators andprey.Consequently,anthropogenicdevelopmentscaninfluencethedistributionofwolves,andtheirencounterrates withprimarypreyandthreatenedcaribou.WeusedwolfGPSdataandLiDARmeasurementsofvegetationheighton seismiclinestoassesswolfhabitatselectionpatternsrelativetoregeneratingseismiclinesinwest-centralAlberta.We usedaclusteringalgorithmtopartitionwolflocationsintotravellingandresting-feedingbehaviour,andinvestigated(1) whetherease-of-travelorsearchforprimarypreybestexplainedseasonalselectionpatternsofwolvesnearseismiclines, and(2)whetherthedensityofanthropogenicfeaturesledtohabitat-drivenfunctionalresponses.Wolvesgenerally selectedareasnearseismiclinesatlowelevations,andareasnearwetseismiclineswithinearlysuccessionalstands.For travellinglocations,wefoundnoevidenceofhabitat-drivenfunctionalresponses.However,forresting-feedinglocations, wolvesshowedgreaterselectionforareasnearlow-vegetationheightseismiclinesinlow-disturbancelandscapes comparedtomoredisturbedlandscapes.Ourresultshighlighttheimportanceofconsideringhabitatheterogeneityand functionalresponsesinbehaviour-basedselectionpatternsandcanbeusedtoprioritizerestorationofseismiclines towardseffectivecaribourecovery. Keywords:Habitatselection,Humanfootprint,Foraging,Animalmovement. Lifehistories:phenology,sex,sexratio TUESDAY08:45,ROOM:WCOAST Decomposing direct and indirect effects of early-life environment on fitness of bighorn ewes GABRIELPIGEON,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,[email protected] MARCOFESTA-BIANCHET,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE;FANIEPELLETIER,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE Cohorteffectscanhaveamajorimpactonpopulationdynamics,astheycanleadtodelaysintheresponseofpopulation growthratetoenvironmentalvariations.Cohorteffectsoccurwhenearly-lifeconditionsofagroupofindividuals generatedifferencesintheirfutureperformance.Themechanismsbywhichenvironmentalconditionsatbirthcan influencefutureperformancearedifficulttostudyinnature.Inordertoidentifythecausallinksbetweenbirthdensity, ageatfirstreproduction,longevity,andlifetimereproductivesuccess,weusedpathanalysisalongwith40yearsof individual-baseddataonbighornsheep.Ourresultsindicatethatbirthdensityaffectslifetimereproductivesuccess(LRS) bybothdirectandindirecteffects.Contrarytowhatwasexpected,theindirecteffectsthroughadultbodyconditionwere weak,explainingonly1.5%ofthetotaleffectsofdensityatbirth.Delaysinageatfirstreproductionandreducedlongevity accountedfor13%and18%oftheeffectsofdensityatbirthonLRS,respectively.Thedirecteffectofdensityatbirthon LRSwasstrongest(60%).Theseresultssuggestthatevenifenvironmentalconditionsimproveandindividualsundergo compensatorygrowth,theirfitnessmayremainlow,possiblyexplainingtheobserveddelaysinthedynamicofthis population.Ouruseofpathanalysisbringnovelinsightintothemechanismsbywhichearly-lifeenvironmentwill influencefuturefitness. Keywords:Populationdynamics,Densitydependence,Bighornsheep,Cohorteffects. Conservationchallengesassociatedwithaquaticsoundscapessymposium MONDAY14:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Understanding a dolphin's soundscape to assess the potential changes in habitat use MATTHEWPINE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] DINGWANG,INSTITUTEOFHYDROBIOLOGY,CHINESEACADEMYOFSCIENCES;KEXIONGWANG,INSTITUTEOFHYDROBIOLOGY,CHINESE ACADEMYOFSCIENCES Hometotheworld'slargestpopulationofIndo-Pacifichumpbackdolphins(Sousachinensis),thePearlRiverEstuary (PRE)inChinaisoneoftheworld'sbusiestembayments.Quantitativeinvestigationsontheestuary'sunderwater soundscapearelacking.Thisisparticularlyimportantduetothecontinuinglarge-scaledevelopmentsoccurringwithin theestuaryanddecliningnumbersofIndo-Pacifichumpbackdolphinsinthearea.Wethereforeinvestigatedtheexisting soundscapeofthePREtobetterunderstandhowfuturechangestoahabitatfromhumanactivitymayalterdolphin distributions.Internationalanddomesticshippingdroveuptheambientnoiseflooroftheestuary.However,whentested againstdolphindetectionrates,therewasnocorrelation.Significantcorrelations,however,wereobservedbetweenfish chorusesanddolphindetectionrateswithhigheraveragedetectionratesoccurringattimesofpeakfishactivity.When investigatingthespatio-temporalvariationinfishchoruses,asakeypreyitemoftheIndo-Pacifichumpbackdolphin,at leastfivechorus-typeswereidentified.Eachchorus-typedemonstratedclearspatialandtemporalvariationsthroughout thePearlRiverEstuarythatprovideanopportunitytoinvestigateseasonalpatternsindolphinactivityinrelationtotheir prey.Suchworkwouldprovidefurtherunderstandingintothepossibilityofdolphinsshowingadegreeoftoleranceof vesselnoiseinordertoforage.Thesefindingsalsoprovideindirectcauseforconcernregardingthevulnerabilityofthese dolphinsfromdetrimentalchangesinpreyabundanceduetopollutionandoverfishing.Thisisacriticalconservation issueforthisdolphinpopulationthatisfacingintenseanthropogenicpressure. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY13:30,ROOM:SAANICH Glacial recession and salmon futures KARAPITMAN,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] MATTR.SLOAT,USDAFORESTSERVICE;VALENTINARADIC,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;ANDREWBLISS;JONATHANW. MOORE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Climatechangeisacceleratingtherateofdeglaciationwithpotentialchangesforsalmonecosystems.Forexample, approximately75%ofglacialiceareaisprojectedtobelostintheBritishColumbiaCoastMountainsby2100.Onthe coarsescale,asglaciersretreattheymayexposenewsalmonhabitatandpreviousworkhasfoundthatsalmonquickly colonizethesenewhabitats.Herewepredicthowshiftsinglacialcoveragewillredistributesalmonhabitatinwestern NorthAmerica.First,wequantifyhowthecurrentrelationshipbetweenglaciericeandotherlandscapevariables(e.g. watershedarea,elevation,distancetocoast,lakearea)areassociatedwithsalmonabundanceacrosswatershedsfrom WashingtontoAlaska.Usingtheserelationshipsaswellasfutureclimatescenariosandglaciermass-balancemodelsof on-coming21stcenturydeglaciation,wepredictthefutureredistributionofsalmonproduction.Whileglaciallosswill undoubtedlyhaveotherimportantpathwaysofimpactonsalmonsuchasthroughalteredflows,temperatures,and sedimentloadsofrivers,thisworkprovidesaninitialcoarseperspectiveonhowglacialretreatwillredistributesalmon. Thisinformationisasteptowardsforward-lookingmanagementdecisionsandclimateadaptationstrategiesforsalmon futures. Keywords:Salmon,Colonization,Populationrange,Climatechange,Freshwater. Foraging TUESDAY11:45,ROOM:SIDNEY Has predator management neglected to consider the impact of ecology on predator behaviour? KYLEPLOTSKY,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] SHELLEYM.ALEXANDER,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY Ashiftinpublicsentimentoverthepastfewdecadeshasledtoincreasedconcernforanimalwelfareinthemanagement ofpredators.Somemanagersandresearchershavetriedtomoveawayfromtraditionalandineffectivekillingof predatorsthatcomeintoconflictwithpeople,pets,andlivestock.Theuseofnon-lethalmethodstocontrolcarnivore conflicthasshownvaryingdegreesofsuccessduetotheplasticityofpredatorbehaviour.Therehasbeenscant investigationintowhatecologicalfactorsinfluencetheeffectivenessofdifferentmanagementstrategies'impactonboth individuallevelandpopulationlevelbehaviour.Usingprimaryandgreyliteratureoncanidmanagementresearch(1975- 2015),Ireviewtrendsrelatedtohowecologicalcontextisaddressedexplicitlyorimplicitlyinthesereports.Ihave observedthat,todate,theevolvedabilityofcanidstobeplasticintheirbehaviourhasnotbeenconsideredinany meaningfulway.Forinstance,pastlethalcontrolandseasonalitycaninfluencebehaviourandyetthesefactorsarerarely described,letaloneaddressed.Iexplorepotentialreasonsforthisfailuretoconsiderecologicalcontextandits'influence onbehaviour.Thishaspotentialnegativeimplicationsforgrowthintheecologicalsciencesbutalsoforthewelfareof people,predators,andthelivestockthesemanagementstrategiesaremeanttoprotect. Keywords:Predatorcontrol,Management,Behaviouralecology,Review. AcceleratingurbanecologyinCanada:Identifyingcurrentresearchapproaches,gaps,andneedsinCanadiancities symposium MONDAY08:15,ROOM:OAKBAY2 What can human-wildlife encounters in the city tell us about urban ecology? JUSTINPODUR,YORKUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Urbanecologyisanecologyofconflictandcoexistence.Theurbanenvironmentprovidesuniquechallengesand opportunitiesforecology.Speciesadapttotheurbanenvironmentandcanenterintoconflictwithhumans,whilewehave theabilitytodesignourenvironmentstoimproverelationshipsofcoexistence.Wecanimproveourunderstandingof urbanecologyandurban-adaptedspeciesbyusingdatathatbecomeavailableinthecity.Usingonspeciesdistributions developedfromdataonurbanwildlifeencountersintheCityofToronto,thispaperexploresthepossibilitiesand limitationsofextractingmeaningfulinformationabouturbanecologyfromencounterdatacollectedbywildlifecontrol andbywildliferescueorganizations. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY16:15,ROOM:COLWOOD Genetic rescue of a wild population of bighorn sheep MARC-ANTOINEPOIRIER,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,QUEBECCENTREFORBIODIVERSITYSCIENCE,CENTRED’ÉTUDES NORDIQUES,[email protected] MARCOFESTA-BIANCHET,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,QUEBECCENTERFORBIODIVERSITYSCIENCE,CENTREFORNORTHERNSTUDIES Theorypredictsthatsmallandisolatedpopulationswillexperiencereductionsinindividualfitnessthroughinbreeding depression.Inbreedingcanreducepopulationgrowthrateandthusincreaseitsriskofextinction.Geneticrescue,which consistsofincreasingtheoverallfitnessofthepopulationbyintroducingnewalleles,isapotentialsolutiontothethreats facedbyseveralsmallpopulationsworldwide.However,inpractice,geneticrescueremainscontroversialandisrarely applied,sothatfewcasehistoriesexisttodocumentitseffectiveness.ThebighornsheeppopulationofRamMountain, Alberta,isisolatedandimmigrationisrare.Itsufferedadrasticdeclinefrom1992to2002andthenstagnatedatlow numbers.Theadditionofadozenbighornsheepbytranslocationin2003-2007allowedustotesttheeffectivenessof geneticrescueinthewild.Adeepanddetailedpedigreeofthepopulationallowedustoquantifythegeneticcontribution oftranslocatedsheepandevaluatetheeffectofgeneticadmixtureondifferentfitness-relatedtraitsoflambs.DNA sampleswerealsocollectedtoestimatepopulation-widegeneticdiversityduringpre-translocationandposttranslocationperiods.Accordingtoourresults,hybridlambswereheavieratweaningandhadhighersurvivalto1year comparedtopureresidentlambs.Population-widegeneticdiversityincreasedaftertwogenerationsthroughtheaddition ofnewalleles.Overall,ourdemographicandgeneticfindingssupportayoungandgrowingliteratureinfavorofgenetic rescueasaconservationtoolinthewild. Keywords:Bighornsheep,Geneticvariation,Inbreeding,Populationgenetics. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY11:30,ROOM:COLWOOD Ancient diversification in glacial refugia leads to intraspecific diversity in caribou JEANL.POLFUS,UNIVERSITYOFMANITOBA,[email protected] MICHELINEMANSEAU,UNIVERSITYOFMANITOBA,PARKSCANADA;CORNELYAF.C.KÜLTSCH,TRENTUNIVERSITY;DEBORAHSIMMONS, RENEWABLERESOURCESBOARD,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;PAULJ.WILSON,TRENTUNIVERSITY Glacial-interglacialcycleshaveinfluencedthecontemporarygeneticstructureofmanyNorthAmericanspecies.Caribou (Rangifertarandus)exhibitsignificantmorphological,ecologicalandbehavioralphenotypicvariationandoccurredwithin Beringianandsub-LaurentiderefugiaduringthePleistocene.Morespecifically,theborealecotypeofwoodlandcaribouis generallyacceptedtohaveevolvedsouthoftheglacialextent,butinthenorthernpartoftheirrangetheyco-occurwith caribouthathaveaBeringianorigin.Thisproximityprovidesanopportunitytotestwhetherwoodlandcariboucolonized borealhabitatsfromasinglesouthernrefugialsourceorifindependentevolutiontoacommonecotyperesultedfrom diversificationwithinrefugia.WeusedapproximateBayesiancomputationtodiscriminatebetweenalternate evolutionaryhistoriesofcariboubelongingtoboreal,northernmountainandbarren-groundecotypesusing microsatelliteandmtDNAmarkers.Ouranalysisindicatesthatunlikethesouthern-evolvedborealecotype,theboreal ecotypeofcentralNorthwestTerritorieshasBeringianoriginsandarosefromacommonlineagewithbarren-groundand mountaincaribou.Importantly,thedivergenceofthelineageresultinginthenorthernborealecotypesignificantly predatestheLastGlacialMaximum.Wedemonstratethatindependentevolutionarytrajectoriescanconvergeonasimilar phenotypeandforthefirsttimeshowthattheborealecotypeofcaribouinNorthAmericacontainstwophylogeographic assemblages.TheancientdivergencesuggeststhatdiversificationwithinBeringiacouldhaveresultedinecological specialization.Aneco-evolutionaryfocuswillbeessentialtodesigningbiodiversityconservationstrategiesforcaribou thatmaximizegeneticdiversityandpreserveadaptivepotentialinthisintra-specificallydiversespecies. Keywords:Caribou,Geneticvariation,Glacialrefugia,Populationgenetics. SensoryandBehaviouralEcologySymposium WEDNESDAY09:00,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Aggression and the evolution of color signals in stomatopod crustaceans MEGANPORTER,UNIVERSITYOFHAWAII,[email protected] MIKEBOK,LUNDUNIVERSITY;JENNYGUMM,STEPHENF.AUSTINSTATEUNIVERSITY Stomatopodcrustaceanshavethemostcomplexvisualsystemsdescribedinanimalsanddisplayspecies-specificcolor signalsusedinaggressiveinteractions;yetverylittleisknownabouttheevolutionorfunctionofcolorationinthese species.Inparticular,manystomatopodshavespecies-specificcoloredpatchesontheinsideoftheraptorialappendages called'meralspots'thataredisplayedinmultiplebehavioralcontexts.Tounderstandthedriversofdiversityinsignaling colorationofthestomatopodmeralspot,weareinvestigatingthepatternsofcolorsignaltraitevolutionbroadlyacrossa phylogeneticallydiversesetofspecies,aswellasafocusedlookwithinthegenusNeogonodactylus(Stomatopoda, Crustacea).Wehavecollectedreflectanceandgeneticdatafrom20speciesofstomatopod,representingfivefamilies withintwosuperfamiliesandspecieswithbothsmashingandspearingraptorialappendagetypes.Reflectancespectra weremeasuredfromspecificregionsacrossthebody,includingthemeralspot,andwereusedtocalculatestandardcolor metricincludinghue,brightness,andchroma.Sequencedatafromfivegenes(COI,16S,18S,28S,andH3)wereusedto createaphylogenytoinvestigatepatternsofevolutionacrossthesampledspecies.WithintheNeogonodactyluswherewe havealargersamplingofspecies,weusedancestralstatereconstructiontolookattheevolutionofmeralspotcolor.Our resultssuggestthatcloselyrelatedspeciestendtodifferincolorofthemeralspotandthatcolorevolvedindependentlyin cladesfoundinboththeAtlanticandPacific.Continuingstudieswillestimatedivergencetimesamongspeciestodatethe timingofcolorchanges. Keywords:Aggression,Marine,Invertebrates,Vision,Evolution. Biodiversity TUESDAY09:30,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Are the most evolutionary distinct species the most original? VAHABPOURFARAJ,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Whiletraitdiversityisconsideredasacrucialcomponentofbiodiversityandfundingshortageforconservationprograms makesprioritizationinevitable,metricsthatarebeingusedforspeciesprioritizationdonotexplicitlytaketraitdiversity intoaccount.Here,Iconsideraspecies-specificmetricofconservationworth:evolutionarydistinctness(ED).Iusedthe conceptofaveragetraitrarity,whichhasbeensuggestedasameasureof"originality,"wherebyoriginalspecies contributemoretototaltraitrichness,andinvestigatetowhatextentprioritizingspeciesbasedonEDcapturestrait rarity.UsingsimulatedphylogeniesandtraitssimulatedunderasimpleMarkovmodelofevolutionatvariousrates,Ifind thatmeantraitrarityincreaseswithrateofevolutionaswellasthenumberoftraitsstates.Importantly,whileEDis associatedwithtraitrarityinsmall-sizedphylogenies(n=64),thisrelationshipdeteriorateswithbiggertrees(n=1024). Anothercommonmetricofdistinctnessusedincommunityecology,averagepairwisedistance(APD),showedhigh correlationwithtraitrarityinallthreesizesofsurveyedphylogeniesandshowntobefairlyrobusttotreesize.The findingscanbeseenasacautionarymessageforconservationplanning:differentfacetsofdiversitymaynotcovary. Keywords:Evolution,Biodiversity,Rarity,Modeling. Lifehistories:phenology,sex,sexratio TUESDAY09:00,ROOM:WCOAST The role of coding trinucleotide repeats within candidate genes in the adaptation of an iconic northern mammal, Canada lynx (Lynx canadensis) MELANIEPRENTICE,TRENTUNIVERSITY,[email protected] JEFFBOWMAN,WILDLIFERESEARCH&MONITORINGSECTION,ONTARIOMINISTRYOFNATURALRESOURCESANDFORESTRY;PAUL WILSON,TRENTUNIVERSITY Consideringclimatechange,theabilityofspeciestopersistwillrelyontheirrespectivecapacitiestotracklarge-scale environmentalchangesviarangeredistributionsortoevolvetowardsnewphysiologicaloptimaviaadaptation.Thefew speciescapableoflarge-scaledispersal,however,areunlikelytoredistributetolandscapescontainingtheircomplete suiteofoptimalhabitatconditions.Forexample,speciesredistributingtotrackshiftsintemperaturewillbeexposedto novelphotoperiods,whichmayresultinsignificantreproductivechallengesforspeciesrelyingonthesecues.Thus, microevolutionwillbenecessaryforspeciespersistenceunderclimatechange,andwilllikelyincludetheevolutionof photoperiodicresponsemechanisms.Clockgenes,whichexhibitsubstantialcontroloverlife-historystrategies(e.g., reproductivetiming)usingexternalcuessuchasphotoperiod,arelikelycriticalforadaptationtoshiftingseasonal conditionsandnovelenvironments.Codingtrinucleotiderepeats(cTNRs)havebeenobservedinseveralclockgenes,and emergingstudieshavebeguntodemonstratetheevolutionaryandadaptiveimportanceofclockgenecTNRsinarangeof species.Further,consideringtheimportanceofrapidadaptation,cTNRsmaybeparticularlyinterestingtargetsof selectionduetotheircontainmentwithinexonicregionsofthegenomeandelevatedmutationratesincomparisonto moreconventionallystudiedmarkers.ThisposterwillevaluateongoingworkonacTNRwithinthecandidateclockgene NR1D1inCanadalynx.Weusespatialanalysesandenvironmentalcorrelationsonneutralmicrosatellitesandour functionalcTNRmarker,toinvestigatetheroleofselectionontheNR1D1cTNRinCanadalynx.Further,wediscussthe utilityofcTNRmarkersandthecandidategeneapproachforstudyingselectioninnaturalpopulations. Keywords:Climatechange,Evolution,Biomarker,Adaptation,Mammals,Lifehistory,Geneticvariation. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY11:45,ROOM:COLWOOD Genomic insights into local adaptations in Ovibos Moschatus ERINPREWER,TRENTUNIVERSITY,[email protected] CHRISTOPHERKYLE,TRENTUNIVERSITY;SUSANKUTZ,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;LISAMARIELECLERC,GOVERNMENTOFNUNAVUT MuskoxenareaniconicArcticspeciesthathaveexperiencedmultiplebottlenecksleavingthemgeneticallyimpoverished. Asaresult,muskoxpopulationsmaybepoorlyequippedtodealwithrapidchangesinclimateconditions,changing diseasedynamics,andincreasingenvironmentalstresstheyarecurrentlyfacing.Ourtalkwilldiscussourmultipronged approachtobetterunderstandmuskoxhealthandvulnerabilitiesbyevaluatingthecorrelationbetweengeneticvariation, diseasepresenceandmuskoxenfitness.Wehaveusedneutralgeneticmarkerstodeterminethegeneticvariationand geneticstructureofmuskoxpopulations.Thiswillinformusofecologicalfactorsthatareinhibitingorenhancingthe movementofmuskoxenandtheirpathogensbetweenpopulations.Totrackthedispersalandabundanceoftwo muskoxenlungwormsthoughttoposeathreattoislandpopulations,wehavedevelopedaspecies-specificquantitative PCRprotocolthatwillallowustoidentifybothspeciesoflungwormsimultaneously.Weareassemblingadenovomuskox genomeinordertofindcandidategenestoperformpopulationgenomicsandidentifypatternsoflocaladaptationin muskoxpopulationsinresponsetolocalandchangingselectivepressures.Weintendtofocusongenesassociatedwith immuneresponsetoidentifypotentialvariantsassociatedwithpathogenresistanceaswellasthoseallowingmuskoxen toexploittheharshArcticenvironment.Thisinformationwillprovideinsightintothecapacityofmuskoxpopulationsto adapttothewarmingclimate.Overall,thesedatawillinformourcollaboratorsonmuskoxhealthandphysiology,and helpdirectmanagementactionsaimedatconservingthisiconicspecies. Keywords:Geneticbottleneck,Disease,Populationgenetics,Genomicsequencing,Arctic,Ungulates. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY13:45,ROOM:SAANICH Canada’s wild salmon policy: An assessment of conservation progress MICHAELH.PRICE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,SKEENAWILDCONSERVATIONTRUST,[email protected] KARLK.ENGLISH,LGLLIMITED-ENVIRONMENTALRESEARCHASSOCIATES;ANDREWG.ROSENBERGER,RAINCOASTCONSERVATION FOUNDATION;S.MISTYMACDUFFEE,RAINCOASTCONSERVATIONFOUNDATION;JOHND.REYNOLDS,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Canada’sPolicyforConservationofWildPacificSalmon(WSP)isatransformativeapproachtothemanagementofwild salmon(Oncorhynchusspp.)inBritishColumbia(BC),wherebyconservationisthehighestpriority.Forthcomingchanges totheWSPpromptanenhancedunderstandingofwhetherornotourstateofknowledgeandthestatusofwildsalmonin Canadahasindeedimprovedsinceitsadoption.Toaddressthesequestions,weused2indicesofimprovement:1) monitoringeffort,and2)spawnerabundance.Ourresultsshowthatmonitoringefforthascontinuedtoerode,spawner abundancehassignificantlydeclinedforseveralspecies,andthebiologicalstatusofmostspeciesareinzonesofconcern. Whileresourcemanagershaverespondedpositivelytodiminishedsalmonreturnsbyreducingexploitationinocean fisheries,42%ofconservationunitsthatweassessedasRed(threatened)wouldhaveimprovedinstatushadthe Canadianfisherybeenfurtherreduced.Weconcludeourpaperwithrecommendationstoimproveourknowledgeof salmoninBC,ensureadequateprotectionfordiminishedpopulations,andenablearobustandsuccessfullyimplemented WSPforthefuture. Keywords:Marine,Salmon,Survey,Conservationpracticioners,Management. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY14:15,ROOM:COLWOOD Genetic structure of rhinoceros auklet populations throughout the North Pacific MARIEPRILL,UNIVERSITYOFLETHBRIDGE,[email protected] KATHARINESTUDHOLME,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY;MARKHIPFNER,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;THERESABURG,UNIVERSITYOF LETHBRIDGE Levelsofgeneflowamongpopulationsplayacriticalroleinevolutionandareaffectedbygeographic,ecological,and behaviouralbarriers.Seabirdshavehighpotentialforgeneflowyethighlevelsofdifferentiationcanexistoversmall geographicdistances.TherhinocerosaukletisacolonialseabirdthatforagesoffthecontinentalshelfintheNorthPacific. Usingmicrosatellitemarkerswewillexaminelevelsofpopulationgeneticstructureintherhinocerosauklets.Samples fromtheeasternNorthPacificwillbeanalyzedforcontemporarypopulationgeneticstructuretotestifpatternsof populationstructurecorrespondtoknowndispersalbarriers. Keywords:Birds,Geneticvariation,Geneflow,Microsatellitemarkers. Aquaticecology TUESDAY13:30,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Weak correlation between assemblages of non-biting midges (Diptera: Chironomidae) and environmental factors in wetlands in Alberta, Canada HEATHERPROCTOR,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] QILIU,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,CORDILLERACONSULTING;ZHUOYANSONG,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;ROBERTHINCHLIFFE,ROYAL ALBERTAMUSEUM;ROLFVINEBROOKE,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Toevaluatethepotentialuseofnon-bitingmidges(Diptera:Chironomidae)inwetlandbiomonitoring,weexaminedthe relationshipsbetweenvariousaspectsofchironomidassemblages(multivariatestructure,Shannon-Wienerindex, genericrichness,totalabundance,andabundanceofindividualgenera)andboththeirassociatedenvironmentalvariables andvariousmeasuresof"humanfootprint"adjacenttothewetlands(amountofsurroundinglandalteredbyhuman activities).Weusedchironomidsamplesthathadbeencollectedfrom270wetlandsbetween2009and2011bythe AlbertaBiodiversityMonitoringInstituteinAlberta,Canada.Wefoundthatwaterquality,humanfootprint,elevationand maximumdepthwerecorrelatedwithchironomidassemblages.However,overallrelationshipswereweak.All chironomidresponses,exceptforthatoftheShannon-Wienerindexat33%,werepoorlyexplained(lessthan13%of variation).Theweakcorrelationscouldbeduetolackofimportantbutunmeasuredenvironmentalvariables,insufficient taxonomicresolution(weidentifiedonlytogenus),and/orthatchironomidscapableoflivinginAlbertanwetlandsare robustgeneralistsmoretolerantofenvironmentalvariationthanarechironomidsassociatedwithflowingwater. Keywords:Wetlands,Insects,Habitatselection,Humanfootprint. Plasticsintheenvironment MONDAY16:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Evaluating contaminants associated with plastic ingestion in an Arctic seabird JENNIFERPROVENCHER,ACADIAUNIVERSITY,[email protected] BIRGITBRAUNE,ENVIRONMENTANDCLIMATECHANGECANADA;ROBERTLETCHER,ENVIRONMENTANDCLIMATECHANGECANADA; PETERROSS,VANCOUVERAQUARIUM;STEPHANIEAVERY-GOMM,UNIVERSITYOFQUEENSLAND;MAXLIBOIRON,MEMORIAL UNIVERSITYOFNEWFOUNDLAND;MARKMALLORY,ENVIRONMENTANDCLIMATECHANGECANADA Plasticdebrisiscommonlyingestedbyseabirds,eveninhighArcticwaters.Recentlyattentionhasbeenfocusedonwhat theimpactsmaybeasaresultofthisingestedplasticdebris.Since2003severalspeciesofseabirdsintheCanadianArctic havebeenexaminedthroughhunter-collectedsamplingforingestedplastics.Whilethelevelsofplasticingestionin seabirdsisrelativelylowintheCanadianArcticcomparedtootherregions,thereisincreasingevidencethatoncemarine plasticpollutionisinthegutofseabirds,contaminantsthatareadsorbedtoplasticsarereleased,whichmayhave negativeeffectsontheexposedbirds.Thisprojectaimstoassesswhetherchemicalcontaminantsknowntobeassociated withmarineplasticsarepotentiallytransferredtohoststhroughtheingestionofplastics,andthustransferredtoArctic foodwebs.Thisprojectfocusesonthedeterminationoftwogroupsofchemicalcontaminants.First,weareanalysing seabirdtissues(liver,fat,brainandbreastmuscle)forenvironmentalchemicalsthatareknowntobeassociatedwith plasticsinthemarineenvironmentaswellasfoundinpreyitemstoassesshowingestedplasticsmaycontributeto contaminantburdensintheexposedbirds.Second,wearealsoanalysingpreeningglandoilfromseabirdsforplasticizers tospecificallyaddresswhetheringestedmarineplasticsarealsoactingasavectorforcontaminantsspecifictoplastics intothefoodweb.ThisprojectwilladdtoourunderstandingofmarineplasticsintheArctic,andhowthispollutantmay beimpactingArcticecosystems. Keywords:Birds,Marine,Pollution,Plastic,Chemicalcontaminant,Foraging. Ecology&EvolutioninaSocialContextSymposium TUESDAY08:00,ROOM:COLWOOD Selection on colony foraging aggressiveness favors social susceptibility in social spiders JONATHANN.PRUITT,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIA-SANTABARBARA,[email protected] Individualspossessingextremephenotypesoftenexhibitalargeinfluenceoverthecollectivebehavioroftheirgroups.In thesocialspiderStegodyphusdumicola,veryboldindividualscatalyzegreaterforagingaggressivenessintheirshycolony matesatdesertsites,butnotinwettersavannahhabitats.Toevaluatewhethertheapparentsite-specificsocialinfluence ofboldindividualsisaconsequenceoftheirtraitsorthesocialsusceptibilityofshyindividuals,wemixedshyindividuals fromaridsiteswithboldindividualsfromwetsitesandviceversa.Ourresultssuggestthatitisnotthetraitsofbold individualsfromaridsitesthatexplaintheircatalyticeffects,butinsteadthesocialsusceptibilityoftheirshygroupmates thatexplainsthisphenomenon.Shyindividualsfromaridsiteswillincreasetheirforagingaggressivenessinthepresence ofveryboldindividualsregardlessofwheretheboldindividualscomefrom(wetorshysites),andwillevenshifttheir behaviorinresponsetobold,non-socialcongeners.Shyindividualsfromwetsitesexhibitednosuchpatterns.Using240 non-chimericexperimentalcoloniesdeployedacrosssouthernAfrica,wefoundthatcolonyforagingaggressivenessis underpositiveselectionataridsitesbutnotsavannahhabitats.Thus,thesociallysusceptibilityofshyspidersfromarid siteshelpstocreatecolony-levelphenotypesthatareadvantageousattheirsites,butnotelsewhere.Theseresultssuggest thatsocialsusceptibilityisanunderappreciatedtraitinanimalsocieties. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY11:15,ROOM:SAANICH Determinants of brook charr resource polymorphism in Canadian Shield lakes VINCENTRAINVILLE,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECÀTROIS-RIVIÈRES,[email protected] MARCPÉPINO,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECÀTROIS-RIVIÈRES;PIERREMAGNAN,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECÀTROIS-RIVIÈRES Resourcepolymorphismamongvertebratesismorecommonthanwefirstthought.Thisphenomenonoccurswhen individualsofthesamepopulationexhibitdiscretephenotypesassociatedwithdifferentialresourceuse.Resource polymorphismisanimportantmechanismforadaptationtolocalconditionsandmayrepresentthefirststepinadaptive evolution.Somenativebrookcharr(Salvelinusfontinalis)populationsexhibitasubtleresourcepolymorphismin CanadianShieldlakes,wherealittoralformfeedsmostlyonbenthicpreyinshallowwaterandapelagicformfeeds mainlyonzooplanktoninopenwater.However,thefewlakepopulationsstudiedsofarhaverevealedvariationsinthe expressionofresourcepolymorphism(e.g.,relativeabundance,morphology)amongpopulations.Theseresultshighlight thepotentialroleofbioticandabioticfactorsontheexpressionofresourcepolymorphism.Themainobjectiveofthis studywastoidentifytheinfluenceofinterspecificcompetitionaswellasenvironmentalfactorsonbrookcharrresource polymorphismatabroaderscale.Weinvestigatedthemaindeterminantsofrelativeabundance,morphology,and resourceuseofbrookcharrinboththelittoralandpelagichabitatsof28CanadianShieldlakes.Ourresultssuggestthat interspecificcompetitionandhighwatertemperatureinthelittoralhabitatareinverselyrelatedtobrookcharr abundance,probablybylimitingaccesstolittoralresources.Resultsonresourceuseandmorphologyofindividuals capturedinbothzoneswillalsobepresented. Keywords:Fish,Environmentalvariation,Foraging,Lakes,Plasticity,Evolution. Museumcollectionssymposium MONDAY11:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM The dead keep talking LEAHR.RAMSAY,BCCONSERVATIONDATACENTRE,MINISTRYOFENVIRONMENT,[email protected] Naturalhistorycollectionsandtheassociateddatahousedinmuseumsandotherinstitutionsareusedformany purposes.Collectionsarevitalinprovidinginformationusedtodeterminetheconservationstatusofaspecies. Informationderivedfromcollectionsincludesdatathatinformsassessmentcriteriasucharangeextent,areaof occupancyandchangesindistributionandabundance.Distributionpatternscanbeassessedusingmuseumspecimen dataandhelpidentifyspeciesthatareconcentratedinareaswithhistoricorcurrenthabitatchange,orinareasthatare abouttoundergothosechangesfromproposedactivities.Thisisoftentheonlyinformationthatisavailablefortaxonomic groupsthataredifficulttoidentify,arepoorlyknownorhavefewspecialistsworkingonthem,(e.g.someplantgenera andmanyinvertebrategroups).Thereareanumberofstudieswhererelativeabundanceofhistoriccollectionshasbeen usedtomakeinferencesonchangesinstatus.Thisworksbestwithtaxonomicgroupsthathavebeenwellcollected.The B.C.ConservationDataCentre,CanadianGeneralStatusProgramandCOSEWIChaveusedspecimendataextensivelyfor speciesassessmentpurposes.Thedeaddokeeptalking! Keywords:Museumcollection,Biodiversity,Populationrange,Historicalrecords. Reproductiveecologyandbehaviour MONDAY16:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Spatial autocorrelation of white-throated sparrow song variation at the neighbourhood scale SCOTTM.RAMSAY,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] JACALYNNORMANDEAU,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY Thesingingbehaviourofwhite-throatedsparrowshasbeenthesubjectofextensiveresearchsincethe1960s,including someoftheearliestworkonneighbour-strangerdiscriminationbymalesongbirds.Anearlysurveyofsongvariationin thisspeciesfailedtodetectanyevidenceofspatialvariationinsongstructure.However,morerecentworkhas demonstratedaculturalshiftinthestructureoftheterminalstropheofthesong,originatingincentralBritishColumbia andsweepingeastwardacrossthespeciesrange.Atalocalscale,fieldobservationssuggestedthatneighbouringmales mayfallintoclustersbasedonthecharacteristicsoftheintroductoryportionoftheirsongs.Usingfactoranalysiswe derivedpairwisedistancemeasuresofsongcharacteristics,andfoundsignificantspatialautocorrelationacrossyearsand siteswithinAlgonquinPark,Ontario.Theperiodofourstudyalsocapturedapartoftheculturalshiftinterminalstrophes asitpassedacrossOntario.Thelocalclusteringweobserveisconsistentwithevidencefromotherspecies,including repertoiresingers,showingthatsongsimilaritymayfacilitateneighbour-strangerrecognition.Fieldobservationsof white-throatedsparrowsfromacrossthespeciesrangeareconsistentwiththepossibilitythatmalesmaygointotheir firstbreedingseasonwithopensongtemplates,andselectiveattritionallowsthemtocrystallizeonthevariantmost similartotheirnewneighbours.Furtherstudywillberequired,however,todeterminetheactualdevelopmental mechanismbehindthisspatialpatterning. Keywords:Birds,Behaviouralecology,Selection,Socialbehaviour,Reproduction. Forestecology WEDNESDAY11:30,ROOM:WCOAST Effects of wildfires on tree establishment in conifer-dominated boreal forests in southern Northwest Territories KIRSTENREID,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] STEVECUMMING,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL;NICOLADAY,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY;JILLJOHNSTONE,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN; MICHELLEMACK,NORTHERNARIZONAUNIVERSITY;MERRITTTURETSKY,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;XANTHEWALKER,NORTHERN ARIZONAUNIVERSITY;JENNIFERBALTZER,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY Naturalwildfireistheprimarydriverofborealforestdynamics.PinusbanksianaandPiceamarianaaredominantconifers intheborealandregeneratealmostexclusivelyafterfireduetoconeserotiny.Historically,firereturnintervalsinwestern Canadaare50-200years;whenforestsburn,P.banksianaandP.marianahavematuredandproducedseedsthatare availablefordispersal.Climatewarmingisalteringthefireregimeintheborealbyincreasingthefrequencyandseverity offireyears.ThefateoftheNorthwestTerritories(NWT)borealforestsunderanalteredfireregimeisunclear;theymay beresilientandexperiencetypicalsuccessionalpatternsofstandreplacementortheymayshifttoanewstablestate dominatedbyadifferentsetofspecies,ashasbeenobservedinAlaska.Theyear2014wasanhistoricallyunprecedented fireseasonintheNWT.Inresponse,in2015weestablished224vegetationplotsacrossa400kmlatitudinalgradientin conifer-dominatedstandsthatburnedin2014.Resultssuggestthatthedegreeofcanopyconsumptionisthemajordriver ofPiceamarianaseedrainpost-fire.Establishmentofdeciduousseedlings(PopulustremuloidesandBetulaneolaskana) wasdeterminedbyseedbedcharacteristicsfollowingfire.Dateofburnwasimportantindeterminingwhichspeciesof coniferestablished;earlyseasonfiresledtotherecruitmentofPiceamarianawhilePinusbanksianaestablishment respondedpositivelytolateseasonfires.ThisworkprovidesinsightintotheimpactsofachangingfireregimeintheNWT andunparalleleddataforpost-fireforestsuccessionintheNWT. Keywords:Disturbance,Fire,Plants,Forest,Climatechange. Physiologicalecology,temperature WEDNESDAY11:15,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM It's not the heat, it's the humidity: Environmental effects on insect-plant interactions MARYL.REID,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] SANGWOOKAHN,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY Hightemperaturesandlowprecipitationarewidelyrecognizedasstressorsofplantsthatcanincreasevulnerabilityto herbivores.Lesswellunderstoodaretheeffectsoftheseenvironmentalconditionsoninsectsandtheircapacityto withstandplantdefences.Wepredictedthatreducedenergyandwaterreserveswoulddecreasetheabilityofmountain pinebeetles,Dendroctonusponderosae,totoleratemonoterpenedefencesofitshosttrees.Priortoexposureto monoterpenes,wemanipulatedbeetlefatandwatercontentinthreetreatments:1)ambientconditions(moderate temperature,lowhumidity),2)highhumidity(moderatetemperature)and3)cooltemperatures(4degreesC).Beetlesin thehumidtreatmenthadthesamefatcontentasambientbeetlesbutlessthancoolbeetles.Conversely,theyhadhigher watercontentthanambientbeetlesandthesameascoolbeetles.Whentheywerethenexposedtomonoterpenesunder constantconditions,survivorshipofbeetlesfromthehumidtreatmentwashigherthanthosefromtheambienttreatment andthesameasthosefromthecooltreatment.Weconcludethatwaterstatusiskeytoinsectdetoxificationofplant chemicaldefences,andthatlowhumidityconditionswilllimitinsectherbivoresaswellasplants. Keywords:Interactions,Individualsurvival,Insects,Pinebeetle,Foraging. Sticklebackecologyandevolution MONDAY08:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Ecological interactions and genome structure contribute to repeatable patterns of genomic divergence in threespine stickleback DIANAJ.RENNISON,UNIVERSITYOFBERN,[email protected] YOELE.STUART,UNIVERSITYOFTEXASATAUSTIN;DANIELI.BOLNICK,UNIVERSITYOFTEXASATAUSTIN;CATHERINEL.PEICHEL, UNIVERSITYOFBERN Therepeatedevolutionofsimilarphenotypesinindependentpopulationsprovidesaremarkableopportunitytoidentify theecologicalandgeneticfactorsthatcontributetoadaptation.Streamandlakeecotypesofthreespinestickleback (Gasterosteusaculeatus)haveevolvedrepeatedlyandexhibitparallelphenotypicdivergence.Weusethissystemto investigatethecontributionofecologicalfactorsandgeneticconstraintstopatternsofgenomicdivergenceduring adaptation.Wegeneratedgenome-widesequencedatafor16independentlyderivedpairsoflakeandstreamstickleback andintegratedthesegenomicdatawithestimatesof94bioticandabioticvariablesfromthe32locations.Bayesian methodswereusedtoestimatethecorrelationsbetweenallelefrequenciesandourecologicalvariables;theseanalyses identifiedthegenomicregionsandecologicalfactorsimportantforlocaladaptationineachecotype.Wethenlookedat howrepeatablethesepatternswereacrossindependentlyderivedpopulations.Wefoundthatthedegreeofgenomic parallelismvariednotonlybetweenpairsofstream-lakesticklebackbutalsowithinthegenome.Thisvariationin parallelismwaspartiallyexplainedbyenvironmentalvariationamonglake-streampopulationpairsandpartiallyby variationingenomestructure.Togethertheseanalyseshaveprovidednewinsightintotheecologicalmechanismsand genomicconstraintsthatinfluencetherepeatabilityofevolution. Keywords:Stickleback,Genomicsequencing,Freshwater,Selection. Biodiversity TUESDAY09:45,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Diversity-stability hypothesis: Are we looking at the right scale? GUILLAUMERHEAULT,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECÀTROIS-RIVIÈRES,[email protected] ESTHERLÉVESQUE,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECÀTROIS-RIVIÈRES;RAPHAËLPROULX,UNIVERSITÉDUQUÉBECÀTROIS-RIVIÈRES Thediversity-stabilityhypothesisproposesthatbiodiversityactsasaninsurancepolicyonthemaintenanceofecosystem processesovertime.Yet,thehypothesishasseldombeentestedinnaturalsettings.Thegrowingseasonlength(GSL)isa keycomponentofwetlandecosystems,whichdrivescarbonuptakeandnutrientrecyclingprocesses,whilerespondsto climateandspeciesrangeshifts.Theobjectiveofthisstudywastopartitiontheeffectofbothalphaandbetadiversityon GSLvariationover4years.From2013to2016,108plantcommunitiesweremonitoredacrossfiveecosystemsofthe SAuVERnetwork.TimelapsecameraswereusedtotrackchangesinspeciescompositionandGSL.Communitiesineach ecosystemwereselectedalongagradientofspeciesrichnessthatisindependentofthegeographiclocationoredaphic conditions.Theecosystemtypeexplainedalmosthalf(43%)ofGSLvariation,whereasspeciesrichness(i.e.,alpha diversity)explainedverylittle.GSLvariedmorebetweencommunities(32%)inagivenyear,thanbetweenyearsina givencommunity(0.09%).ResidualvariationinGSL(16%)wasrelatedtotheasynchronousdynamicsofplant communities,pointingtoastabilizingeffectofbetadiversityovertime.Whilethenumberofplantspeciesinalocal communitydoesnotseemtoinfluenceGSL,thebiodiversityattheecosystemscaleappearstohavestabilizingeffecton GSLthroughtime.Thisstudyemphasizestheimportanceofconsideringthescaleatwhichbiodiversityconservation strategiesshouldbeorientedandthattheecosystemscaleshouldbeprioritized. Keywords:Biodiversity,Phenologychanges,Betadiversity,Wetlands. Socialsystems MONDAY16:15,ROOM:THEATRE Nest-site competition and the socioecology of reproduction in eastern carpenter bees MIRIAMRICHARDS,BROCKUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Insectsarerarelythesubjectsoflong-termfieldstudies,becausesmallbodysizeandhighmobilitymakeitdifficultto trackindividualsevenforafewdays.However,beesbuildneststowhichtheyregularlyreturn,creatingopportunitiesto markandtrackindividualsandpopulationsfromyeartoyear.Wehavestudiedthesocioecologyofeasterncarpenter bees,Xylocopavirginica,insouthernOntariosince2003.Thislarge,facultativelysocialspeciesbuildslong-lastingnests thatareoccupiedbysuccessivegenerationsforyearsordecades.Thecostofnestconstructionishigh,sonestsarea valuableresource.Whenpopulationdensityrises,greatercompetitionfornestsresultsinhigherfrequencyofsocial nestingandmoreattemptsbyfemalestojoinnewsocialgroups.Withinsocialgroups,competitionresultsinthe formationoflinearreproductivequeuesinwhichthefirst-rankedfemalebreeds,whilelower-rankedfemalesawait opportunitiestoreplaceher.Competitionalsohelpstoexplaintheevolutionofalternativelifehistorystrategiesin females:mostfemalesbreedintheirfirstspringanddiesoonafter,butverysmallfemalescanoverwintertwice, postponingreproductionuntiltheirsecondspring. Keywords:Insects,Competition,Reproduction,Socialbehaviour. Remotecameranetworkstoscaleupecologicalinsightsandconservationapplicationssymposium TUESDAY11:00,ROOM:THEATRE Camera trapping for pollinators: Using time-lapse cameras on a flower lure to index pollinators in fragmented boreal forests FEDERICORIVA,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,LANDRECLAMATIONINTERNATIONALGRADUATESCHOOL,[email protected] TOBIASW.H.TAN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;CASSONDRAJ.STEVENSON,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;JOHNH.ACORN,UNIVERSITYOF ALBERTA;SCOTTE.NIELSEN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,LANDRECLAMATIONINTERNATIONALGRADUATESCHOOL Theuseofcameratrapshasgrownrapidlyinthelast20years,rangingfromfaunalinventoriestobehaviouraland occupancystudies.Moststudies,however,havefocusedonlargevertebrates.Recenttechnologicaladvancesnowmakeit possibletoapplycameratrapstosmallerorganisms,includinginsects.However,empiricaltestsofthesealternative applications,andtestsoftheirlimitations,arescarce.Hereweusedatime-lapseset-upwiththeWingscapes TimelapseCamandacommonmobile(potted)flowerlure(sunflower:Helianthusannuus)totestwhetherpollinator activitydiffersinanthropogenicdisturbancescomparedtoundisturbed(control)forestsintheAlbertaoilsands. Samplingsiteswerestratifiedtocontrolforestsversuseither3-mwideseismiclinesor9-mwideseismiclineswhere treesandshrubshadbeencleared.Twelvecamerasweresetatdifferentsitesonadailyrotationwithcameras approximately20cmfromflowersandpicturescapturedat10secondintervalsduringpeakinsectactivityperiods, between11:00AMand2:00PM(N=1080picture/site).Initialresultssuggesthigherpollinatoractivityinthelargest disturbancesandthelowestincontrolforests.Wediscusssomeofthelimitationsinusingthistechnique,includingthe useofasinglenon-nativespeciesasalureandthetradeoffbetweenfocallength(andthusdepthoffield)andresolution whensamplingsmallspecimens,wheredetailisneededforidentification.Cameraresolutiondidnotmakeitpossibleto identifymostpollinatorstospecies,particularlywhenbodysizewassmall,butindicesofbroadfunctionalgroupswas possiblemakingcameratrappingforpollinatorsaneffectivetoolinaddressingfunctionalquestionsofpollinatoractivity, butnotquestionsofspeciesdiversity. EcologicalEpigeneticsSymposium TUESDAY08:15,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Genetic and epigenetic response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in S. alterniflora MARTAROBERTSON,UNIVERSITYOFSOUTHFLORIDA,[email protected] MARIANOALVAREZ,DUKEUNIVERSITY;CHRISTINARICHARDS,UNIVERSITYOFSOUTHFLORIDA Populationsrespondtoenvironmentalstressorsusingadiversearrayofmolecularmachinery,howevertheextentto whichchangesinthismachinerycanaffectresultingpopulationstructureandevolutionarytrajectoriesisunclear. Catastrophiceventsofferauniqueopportunitytostudyrapidpopulationresponsetostressinnaturalsettings.Following theDeepwaterHorizonoilspill,wesimultaneouslyexaminedthegeneticandepigeneticstructureofrecovering populationsofSpartinaalterniflora,akeystonesaltmarshgrass.SomepopulationsofS.alterniflorareboundedquickly followingtheoilspillandepigeneticmechanisms,inconcertwithgeneticvariation,mayexplainthehighresilienceofS. alternifloratooilexposure.Epigeneticmodifications,suchasDNAmethylation,mayofferarapidmechanismofresponse tosevereenvironmentalchallenges,liketheDeepwaterHorizonoilspill.Weusedareduced-representationbisulfite sequencingapproach,epigenotyping-by-sequencing(epiGBS),tolookforgeneticandepigeneticresponsetooilexposure. WecatalogedSNPsanddifferentiallymethylatedpositionsandregionsinresponsetooilexposure.Weexploredthe functionalityoftheselociusingheterologousannotationdatafromOryzasativa.Overall,thesefindingsallowustostudy theinteractiveeffectsofgeneticandepigeneticresponsetoenvironmentalstressandtheircombinedimpacton populationchange. Matechoice,hybridization MONDAY14:15,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Flexible mate choice may regulate gene flow between sympatric pumpkinseed sunfish ecotypes (Lepomis gibbosus) BERENROBINSON,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] WILLJARVIS,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;SCOTTCOLBORNE,UNIVERSITYOFWINDSOR Themovementofgeneswithinandbetweenpopulationshasfundamentaleffectsontheoriginsandmaintenanceof biodiversity,buttheecologicalandbehaviouralfactorsthatgoverngeneflowarepoorlyunderstood,particularlyatthe earlieststagesofpopulationdivergence.Wetestthehypothesisthatmatechoicehasevolvedbetweentrophicecotypesof polyphenicpumpkinseedsunfish(Lepomisgibbosus)thathavedivergedinsympatryinAshbyLake,ONoverapost-glacial intervalof12,000yrs.Weassessedtheecotypeofnestingmalesandfemalesusingstableisotopebasedestimatesofdiet andadivergentmalemorphologicalcharacter,oraljawwidth.Wefoundweakpositiveassortativematingbetween ecotypesinacommonnestinghabitatalongopenshorelinesthatappearstobevariablyexpressedbyoccurringinoneof twosamplingyears.Nestdepthandproximitytoshorelinehadnoaffectontheassortativematingsignal,suggestingthat microhabitatselectiononthesefactorsdidnotoccur.Thisisconsistentwithactivematechoicebeingexpressedwithin ecotypes,althoughthefactorsthatinfluencethevariableexpressionofmatechoiceareunclear.Agrowingbodyof evidenceindicatesthatmatechoicebehaviourcanbeahighlyplastictrait,andwediscusstheimplicationsforgeneflow andforadaptivedivergence. Keywords:Reproduction,Fish,Speciation,Morphology,Evolution. Coralreefecology TUESDAY16:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Redundancy in system-indicators reveals exploitation impacts in coral reef fisheries JAMESROBINSON,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] ADELHEENAN,PACIFICISLANDSFISHERIESSCIENCECENTER,NOAA;IVORWILLIAMS,PACIFICISLANDSFISHERIESSCIENCECENTER, NOAA;JULIABAUM,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Incoralreefecosystems,artisanalsmall-scalefisheriesareanimportantfoodresourcefordevelopingcoastalnations.Our abilitytotrackexploitationimpactsinreeffisheriesrequiresecologicalindicatorsthatlinktofisheriesproperties(e.g., biomass),respondpredictablytoenvironmentalvariability,andcanbequantifiedindata-poorsystems.Although universalindicatorsofreeffisheryhealthwouldimprovemanagementefficiency,ourunderstandingofregional variabilityandredundancyamongindicatorsispoor.Here,usingunderwatervisualcensusdatacollectedacross38 Pacificislands,weexaminedredundancyamong11community-levelindicators,andindicatorspecificitytohumanand abioticdrivers.Ourindicatorsetcontainedestablishedfisheriesindicatorsthatrespondpredictablytoexploitation (biomass,meansize,sizespectra),aswellasnewtrophic-basedsystemindicatorsthatreflectemergentpropertiesof marineecosystems.Acrossocean-basingradientsintemperature,oceanicproductivity,andexploitationhistory,wefound thatdegradedreefswerecharacterisedbyincreasedhumanpresence,reducedbiomassoflarge-bodiedfishes,and concentrationofbiomassinlowertrophiclevels.Weusedfactoranalysistodeterminethattheunderlyingstructureof size-andtrophic-basedindicatorswasrepresentedbytwocompositeindicators,whichrespondedconsistentlyto variationinexploitationpressure,temperature,andoceanicproductivity.Redundancyamongsize-andtrophic-based indicatorsetssuggeststhatexploitationimpactsmaybeeffectivelycapturedsimplybymeasuringbiomass,sizespectra, andcumulativebiomass~TLrelationships.Bysimplifyingindicatorsetsanddemonstratinghowindicatorsrespondto abioticandhumandrivers,weprovideaframeworkforefficientlytrackingexploitationimpactsincoralreefandother fisheries. Keywords:Fisheries,Management,Coralreef,Marine,Modeling,Morphology. Beeecologyandbehaviour WEDNESDAY10:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 The spatial distribution of central place foraging pollinators in mass-flowering crops SAMUELV.J.ROBINSON,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] RALPHV.CARTAR,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;STEPHENF.PERNAL,AGRICULTUREANDAGRI-FOODCANADA;SHELLEYE.R.HOOVER, ALBERTAAGRICULTUREANDFORESTRY Central-placeforagingtheorydescribesthespaceuseoforganismswhoreturntoacentralplace(nest,burrow,hive)after boutsofforaging.Thedistancethatacentral-placeforager(CPF)willtravelfromtheircentralplacedependsinparton thecostsoftravel,aswellastherewardsreceivedduringforaging.CompetitionamongCPFscandepleteresources locally,changingthestructureofrewardsandcausingCPFstomovefurtheraway.ManymodelsofCPFbehaviourhave examinedcompetition,patchexploitation,andenergetics,butnonehaveconnectedthesepiecestobuildageneralmodel ofCPFbehaviourinlargeforagingenvironments.Inthisstudy,wedescribeanenergeticallyexplicitmodelofcentralplaceforagingbasedontheidealfreedistribution,andtestitusingobservationsofhoneybees(ApismelliferaL.)foraging inmass-floweringcanola(BrassicanapusL.)fieldsinsouthernAlberta,Canada.Wefoundthathoneybeesmostclosely followthepredictionsmadebysolitary,efficiencymaximizingforagers.Thismodelcouldbeextendedforuseby agronomists(forpredictingpollinationinagivencrop)orapiculturists(forpredictinghoneyyieldinagivenlandscape). Keywords:Honeybees,Foraging,Competition,Densitydependence. Phylogenetics MONDAY10:45,ROOM:WCOAST The genomic significance of pervasive broad-scale heterogeneity in recombination rate along chromosomes during early population divergence MARIUSROESTI,UNIVERSITYOFBASEL,[email protected] DANIELBERNER,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Geneticdifferentiationbetweendiversifyingpopulationsisoftengreaterinchromosomecentersthanperipheries. Commonlyoverlooked,thispatternissometimesascribedtoheterogeneityintherateofrecombinationandhencelinked selectionwithinchromosomes,buttheunderlyingmechanismsremainincompletelyresolved.Reviewingthegenetic mappingliterature,wefindthateukaryoticchromosomesgenerallyexhibitreducedrecombinationintheircenter.Using simulationsofpopulationsdivergingintoecologicallydifferenthabitatsthroughsortingofstandinggeneticvariation,we thendemonstratethatsuchheterogeneityinrecombination,combinedwithpolygenicdivergentselection,causesmore extendedhitchhikingandespeciallybarrierstogeneflowacrosschromosomecenters.Withoutrequiringselectionon novelmutations,thisdrivesrelativelyelevatedpopulationdifferentiationinchromosomecenters.Wefurther demonstratethatsuchbroad-scaleheterogeneityindifferentiationcanhampertheinferenceofparallelevolutionand phylogeneticrelationshipsamongpopulations,thedetectionofselectionoutliers,andtheinterpretationofthestrengthof selectionongeneticloci.Thiscallsforgreaterattentiontochromosome-wideheterogeneityinrecombinationratein evolutionarygenomics. Keywords:Literaturesynthesis,,Evolution,Populationmodels,Geneticvariation. Sticklebackecologyandevolution MONDAY09:00,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Speciation seen through the lens of biomechanics: A multidisciplinary approach using fish locomotion and feeding in marine and freshwater threespine stickleback SEANROGERS,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] TIMOTHYE.HIGHAM,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIARIVERSIDE;KEVINJAGNANDAN,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIARIVERSIDE;SARASMITH, UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;ANDHEATHERA.JAMNICZKY,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY Locomotionandfeedingarekeyaxesofdiversityamongfishes,andthesearecommonlyintegratedforsuccessfulprey capture.Predator-preyinteractionsmaybedriversofdecreasedfitnessofhybridsandmigrantsduringadaptive populationdivergenceandspeciation.However,littleisknownabouttheconsequencesofbiomechanicalvariationamong highlydivergentpopulationsoffishes,orhowhybridsfunctioninrelationtotheoriginalpopulations.Threespine stickleback,Gasterosteusaculeatus,isanidealspeciesforteasingaparttheintricaterelationshipsbetweenecology,form, andfunctiongiventhenumerousindependentinvasionsoffreshwaterlakesandstreamsfromamarineancestor.We investigateddifferencesinsuctionfeedingkinematicsandramspeedin30individualsfromthewestcoastofBritish Columbiaspanningfreshwater,marine,andhybrid(marinexfreshwater)individuals.Thisincludedbothwild-caughtfish andlabcrosses.Feedingsequenceswereobtainedusingahigh-speedcamera(500fps),andmicroCTwasusedtolink differencesinkinematicswiththree-dimensionalgeometricmorphometrics.Fromthis,wecandetermineifthereis concordanceoramismatchbetweenmorphologyandbiomechanicsandthepotentialcontributionofthesetraitsto reproductiveisolationandecologicalspeciation. Keywords:Stickleback,Selection,Predation,Hybridization,Evolution,Freshwater,Marine. Populationdynamics TUESDAY09:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Population dynamics of the adopted migrant life history in fish LUKEA.ROGERS,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] MARTINKRKOŠEK,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Theinfluenceofdispersalonpopulationstructureanddynamicsiscentraltobasicandappliedecology.Dispersalthat deliversjuvenilestosuitablehabitatinopenandclosedpopulationsofreeffisheshasbeenextensivelystudied.By contrast,thereisscanttheoreticalorempiricalworkontheroleofjuveniledispersalinthepopulationdynamicsandlife historyofpelagicfishes.Forthesefishes,dispersaldeliversjuvenilesintoamigratoryadultpopulationratherthantoa suitablehabitat.Theadoptedmigranthypothesisexplainsthisdeliverybyasociallytransmittedbehaviourthat segregatesadultfishpopulationsindependentofgeneticdifferentiation,influencingdynamicsandthestructureof populationsinspace.Spatialstructureisimportantbecauseitcanhaveastabilizing(e.g.,portfolio)ordestabilizing(e.g., extinction-pronesynchrony)effect.Tocharacterizethepopulationdynamicsoftheadoptedmigrantlife-history,we developedandanalysedamathematicalmodelofthedynamicsoftwopopulations.Inthismodeltherecruitmentsuccess ofjuvenilesdispersingintoafocaladultpopulationwasdependentontherelativeabundancesoftheadultpopulationsas wellastheextenttowhichadultsandjuvenilesoverlapinspace,timeandrecruitmentcues.Ourresultsdemonstratethat theadoptedmigrantlifehistorycanmaintainspatialstructureamongpopulationsbyeffectingstablecoexistence betweendistinctadultpopulationsthatareconnectedbyjuveniledispersal,butalsothatitcanrenderthosesame populationsvulnerabletocollapseviaademographicAlleeeffect. Keywords:Populationdynamics,Fish,Dispersal,Mathematicalmodel,Adoptedmigranthypothesis. Effectsofclimatechange TUESDAY16:30,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Loss of early-winter snow threatens alpine butterfly populations JENSROLAND,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] STEVEMATTER,UNIVERSITYOFCINCINNATI Butterfliesserveasoneofthebestexamplesofbio-geographicalrange-shiftsduetoclimatechange.Themechanismsby whichweatherandclimatealterbutterflydynamicsare,however,oftenlacking.Weusetechniquesoftree-based regression(randomForestsandrecursivepartitioning[rpart]),combinedwithlinearmixed-effectsmodels,toidentify weathervariables(meansand/orextremes)thatbestexplainannualratesofpopulationchange(Rt)ofadultsofthe alpineapollobutterfly,Parnassiussmintheus,intheRockyMountainsofAlberta.Wedosowithaviewtodeterminingthe mechanism(s)bywhichclimatechangemayacttoalteritsgeographicrangethroughitseffectonpopulationgrowthand decline.Basedon21yearsofpopulationabundanceandgrowthdatafrom21sub-populations,wefoundthatextreme cold,andextremewarmtemperaturesinNovemberareassociatedwithdramaticpopulationdeclines,particularlyin yearswithlittleornosnow.Weatheratanyothertimeofyearbearslittlerelationtoannualpopulationchange.Results implythatover-winteringeggsareparticularlysusceptibletotemperatureextremesinearlywinter,andthatsnowcover atthistimeofyeariscriticalforamelioratingtheeffectsofsuchextremes.Hi-resolution(30cm)satelliteimageryofsnow coverofourstudypopulationsinlateNovemberprovidesadirectindicationofpopulationgrowthbetweensequential summers.Resultsserveastheimpetusforexperimentsmonitoringeggfatesthroughthewinter,wheresnowhasbeen manipulatedbytheuseofsnowfences. Keywords:Alpineapollobutterfly,Climatechange,Populationdynamics,Mountain,Populationdeclines. Mammalianmovementandactivity TUESDAY11:45,ROOM:THEATRE Spatially explicit density estimation in a large-scale grizzly bear study using spatial capture-recapture models ANDYJ.ROYLE,USGSPATUXENTWILDLIFERESEARCHCENTER,[email protected] TABITHAGRAVES,USGSNORTHERNROCKYMOUNTAINRESEARCHCENTER;KATEKENDALL,USGSNORTHERNROCKYMOUNTAIN RESEARCHCENTER;AMYMACLEOD,USGSNORTHERNROCKYMOUNTAINRESEARCHCENTER;KEVINMCKELVEY,USFSROCKY MOUNTAINRESEARCHSTATION;JOHNBOULANGER,INTEGRATEDECOLOGICALRESEARCH Spatialcapture-recapture(SCR)isarelativelynewclassofmethodsforinferenceaboutthespatialecologyofpopulations fromcapture-recapturedata.WeappliedSCRmodelstoastudyofgrizzlybearsintheNorthCentralDivideEcosystem usingnoninvasivegeneticidentificationofindividualsfromhairsamplingusingrubtrees.During5yearsofsampling (2004,2009-2012)between4305-4946rubsweresampledperyearovera33,300squaredkmarea.Thisisthelargest capture-recapturestudyeverconductedonmammals.Wefitted171SCRmodelsusingmaximumlikelihoodintheR packageoSCR.ThetopmodelbyAICallowedforyear-specificdensity.Detectionprobabilityeffectsincludedyearandsex structure,abehavioralresponse,andeffectsofdateanddurationofhairaccumulation.TheSCRspatialscaleparameter wassexandyearspecific.Usingthetopmodel,theestimatedgeometricmeanrateofgrowthwas5.6%peryear(95% confidenceinterval:3.3%-7.0%).SCRpermitsestimationofexplicitdensitymapsprovidingspatiallyexplicitestimatesof populationsizeinspecificmanagementunitsassistinginevaluationofthestatusofthespeciesanditsmanagement. Keywords:Grizzlybear,Capture-recapture(SCR),Spatialmodel,Rubtrees,Populationdynamics. Host-associatedmicrobes:fromprotectivemicrobestopathogenssymposium MONDAY09:00,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Strong community structuring of defensive heritable symbionts is shaped by context-dependent transmission rates JACOBRUSSELL,DREXELUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ANDREWH.SMITH,DREXELUNIVERSITY;KERRYM.OLIVER,UNIVERSITYOFGEORGIA;DANIELLEROCK,DREXELUNIVERSITY Maternallytransferredbacteriaareprevalentacrosstheinsectswheretheyhavemajorimpactsuponhostnutrition, defense,andreproduction.Adiverserangeofbacteriahaveevolvedsuchlifestyles,andopportunitiesforco-infection existinanumberofinsectsharboringmultiplematernallytransferredsymbiontspecies.Inthisstudywepresent evidenceforstrongstructuringofmaternallytransferredsymbiontcommunitieswithinindividualhostsofthepeaaphid, Acyrthosiphonpisum.ExtensivesamplingovertimeandacrosstheUnitedStatesrevealsconsistentpairwisepartnerships betweenanumberofbacteria,whileshowingthatseveralcommunitytypesaremuchrarerthanexpected.Afield-based studyontransmissionratesprovidesapartialexplanationforthesefindings,assymbionts'ratesofmaternal transmissionareimpactedbytheidentitiesofco-infectingbacterialspecies.Thesediscoverieshaveimplicationsforour understandingofsymbiontfunctionwithinthemodelpeaaphidsystem,duetoalackofresearchonsymbiont-induced phenotypesforhostswithmultiplesymbionts.Theyalsosuggestthepotentialforactivecooperationandcompetitionin thewithin-hostarena,raisingquestionsabouttheevolutionofsymbiont-symbiontinteractionsinthebroadercontextofa defensivehost-microbesymbiosiswithpotentialimpactsonarthropodcommunitiesinagriculturalsystems. EcologicalEpigeneticsSymposium TUESDAY08:00,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Why so bitter? The epigenetics of flavour and aroma in hops. LINDAY.RUTLEDGE,PRINCETONUNIVERSITY,TRENTUNIVERSITY,[email protected] REBECCAKARTZINEL,PRINCETONUNIVERSITY,BROWNUNIVERSITY;ELIZABETHHEPPENHEIMER,PRINCETONUNIVERSITY;BRIDGETT VONHOLDT,PRINCETONUNIVERSITY Hops(Humuluslupulus)areperennialclimbingplantswhosefloweringconesareoneofthemainingredientsinbeer. Differenthopvarietiesproducedifferentlevelsofchemicalcomponentsthatprovidebeerwithvariousaromas,flavours, orbitteringagents.Thespecialtysectorofcraftbrewerssetsitselfapartfromthemajorbreweriesbyproducingbeerthat hasaparticularand/oruniqueflavourthatisoftenassociatedwithdifferentcharacteristicsofthevarioushopvarieties. AlthoughthehopgenomewasrecentlycompletedandgeneexpressionworkwithRNAtranscriptsisongoing,akey componentthatislikelyinfluencingtheexpressionofphenotypeinhopsistheepigenome.Epigeneticsincludesthestudy ofmethylationpatternsonthegenomethatinfluenceexpressionofgenes.Understandingthemechanismsbywhich chemicalcomponentsofthehopconeareexpressedhasimportantramificationsforhopgrowersandthebrewing industry.Weusedreduced-represensationbisulfidesequencing(RRBS)toinvestigatedifferentialmethylationintwo varietiesofhops:Cascade(anaroma-typecultivar)andNugget(abittering-typecultivar).Theprimaryfocuswasto identifydifferentialmethylationpatternsbetweenthetwovarietiesthatmaynotbeevidentinthegenomealone.This researchrepresentsapreliminaryinvestigationintotheepigeneticpathwaysresponsibleforphenotypicvariability amongvarietiesofacommerciallyimportantcropspecies.Wehopetoextendthisresearchtoinvestigatetheinfluenceof differentlifestagesandvariablegrowingconditionsonmethylation. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY15:30,ROOM:SAANICH Fishing for sympatry: Historical and contemporary neutral processes shaping Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus) in Labrador, Canada SARAHSALISBURY,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY,[email protected] CONNORBOOKER,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY;GREGORY,R.MCCRACKEN,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY;TOMKNIGHT,PARKSCANADA;DON KEEFE,DEPARTMENTOFENVIRONMENTANDCONSERVATIONNEWFOUNDLAND;R.PERRY,DEPARTMENTOFENVIRONMENTAND CONSERVATION;DANIELE.RUZZANTE,DALHOUSIEUNIVERSITY Arcticchar(Salvelinusalpinus)inLabradorofferanidealmodelsystemtostudytherelativeinfluenceofhistoricaland contemporaryneutralprocessesongeneticstructure.Historically,Labradorwascolonizedbydescendantsofboththe AtlanticandArcticglacialrefugiawhilecontemporarily,bothanadromousandlandlockedcharpopulationsarepresentin Labrador.However,theinfluenceofhistoricalglaciallineageoncontemporarylifehistoryincharremainslargely unknown.Usingmicrosatellitemarkerswefoundgeneticsubgroupsinbothanadromousandlandlockedpopulations.The twogeneticsubgroupsfoundwithinthesea-accessiblesite,Ramah,differedinsizeatmaturation.Thesubgroup containingindividualsthatmaturedatasmallsizearelikelyresidentswhereasthesubgroupcontainingindividualsthat maturedatalargesizeareanadromous.Thepotentialforreproductiveisolationofthesesubgroupsissupportedbythe presenceofmaturemalesandfemalesinbothsubgroups.Toourknowledge,thisisthefirstevidenceofgenetic distinctionamongco-occurringanadromousandresidentArcticchar.Severallinesofevidencesuggestthattheseforms recentlyarosesympatrically:AtlanticandArcticglaciallineagemitochondrialhaplotypeswereobservedineach subgroupinequalfrequenciesandrelativelylowneutralgeneticdivergencewasobservedamongthesesubgroups.Both thespatialcomplexityassociatedwiththelacustrinesiteRamahandtheevolutionaryageofLabradorcharpopulations haslikelyspurredthissympatricgeneticdivergence. Keywords:Fish,Populationgenetics,Evolution,Reproductiveisolation,Sympatry,Geneticvariation. Ecology&EvolutioninaSocialContextSymposium TUESDAY09:15,ROOM:COLWOOD Gene-environment interplay in behavior and evolution: lessons from Drosophila melanogaster JULIAB.SALTZ,RICEUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Evolutionaryquantitativegeneticsalmostalwaysassumesthatgenotypesandenvironmentshaveindependenteffectson phenotypicvariation.Atthesametime,animalshavenear-unlimitedopportunitiestodeterminetheenvironmentsthey experience,especiallytheirsocialenvironments.Whengenotypesdifferinbehaviorsthatinfluencetheirsocial environments,thengeneticandenvironmentalvariationbecomecorrelated.Here,Idescribetheoryanddatasuggesting thatthisphenomenonislikelytobecommonandexploringitsimplicationsforfundamentalevolutionarygenetics parameters.Isuggestthatstudyinglinkagesbetweengenotypeandenvironmentwillrevealnovelpathwaysbywhich behaviordevelopsandevolves. Keywords:Evolution,Phenotypicvariation,Behaviouralecology,Geneticvariation,Environmentalvariation. SensoryandBehaviouralEcologySymposium WEDNESDAY08:15,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Visual ecology of the starry flounder ILARIASAVELLI,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] INIGONOVALESFLAMARIQUE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Theretinaoftheyoung,post-metamorphicstarryflounder(~5ginweight)hassingleanddoubleconephotoreceptors that,together,expressuptosevendifferentvisualpigments(oneUV,threeshortwavelength-Sorblue,twomiddle wavelength-Morgreen,andonelongwavelength-Lorred).Atthisyoungstage,thedoubleconesmayhousethesame visualpigmentineachmemberandbeequalM/Ms(λmaxinnm:527/527)or,alternatively,canbeunequalM/M (527/545)orM/L(527/557)pairs.ThesingleconeshouseUVorSvisualpigments.Amongtheconepopulation,many unequalM/Mdoubleconeshaveamemberthatco-expressesthe527and545visualpigments,locatedatthetipandbase oftheoutersegment,respectively(theothermemberhasonly527visualpigment).Similarly,manysingleconescoexpresstwovisualpigments,a456nmatthebaseanda437nmatthetip.Incontrast,thelargejuvenile(~200g)does nothaveco-expressingconesandthenumberofvisualpigmentsisrestrictedtofour,twoS(withmeanλmaxat445and 459nm)inseparatesinglecones,andtwoMaspartofequaldoublecones(526/526)orunequaldoublecones (528/548).Thisreductioninvisualpigmentsparallelsaprogressionfromlifeatshallowdepths(<20m)todeeperwaters (>50m)characterizedbyareductioninambientUVandlongwavelengths. AcceleratingurbanecologyinCanada:Identifyingcurrentresearchapproaches,gaps,andneedsinCanadiancities symposium MONDAY08:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Incorporating novel ecosystems and layered landscapes for ecological restoration in cities VALENTINSCHAEFER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] Thereisnooneapproachtoecologicalrestoration.It’snotassimpleasusingnativespecies,workingwithsuccessionor usinghistoricalecosystemsasrestorationtargets.Whatandhowwedoitisshapedbycontextandthisisespeciallythe caseincities.Wedealwithradicallyalteredenvironments,challengedwithlargeareasofimpervioussurfaces,invasive speciesandparallelartificialsystemsfortransportingwater,wasteandenergy.Thesearenovelecosystemsandthe restorationtargetsrarelyalignwiththeecosystemsthathistoricallyexistedintheareabeforehumancontact.Novel ecosystemsdifferincompositionand/orfunctionfrompresentandpastsystemsandaremorerelevantinlightofhuman action,climatechangeandinvasivespecies.Thenovelecosystemapproachfocusesonspeciesofconservationinterest, mayincorporateinvasivespeciesinthefinaloutcomeandinvolvesaconstantlyadaptiveapproach.Incities,thenovel ecosystemapproachalsoacknowledgesthatcomplexsocio-ecologicalhistoriesofasitehaveshapedthemovertime.In additiontooftenbeingnovel,urbanlandscapesmustalsodealwithmanylayersofimpacts.Thesecanbehistorical, presentandfuture,andtheycanbeecological,socialorpolitical.Thelayeredlandscapeconceptmaintainsthatprioruses, meaningsandecologiesshapepossibilitiesforthefuture.Restorationplanningengagesdiversevaluesandvisionsthat cangeneratecompetingvisionsforasitethatneedtoberesolvedinsettingtherestorationtarget. Communityecology TUESDAY14:00,ROOM:WCOAST Testing for variation in competition importance and intensity among old-field plant species BRANDONSCHAMP,ALGOMAUNIVERSITY,[email protected] RYANPELLETIER,ALGOMAUNIVERSITY Weexperimentallyvariedneighbourhoodplantdensitysurrounding20targetplantsof16differentherbaceousplant species,andmeasuredtargetplantgrowthovertheensuinggrowingseason.Wealsomeasuredlocalsoilnutrients,soil moisture,neighbourhoodbiomass,andinitialtargetbiomassandusedthesetotestwhetherdensitydependence influencedthegrowthoftargetplants,whetherdensitydependencedifferedamongspecies,andwhethermatureplant sizeinfluencedwhetheraspecieswasmoreorlessdensitydependent. Keywords:Plants,Densitydependence,Competition,Experiment. Livingintheeco-evolutionarytheatre:researchguidedandinspiredbyintensivefieldobservationssymposium TUESDAY14:00,ROOM:THEATRE The evolution of interspecific interactions DOLPHSCHLUTER,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] DIANARENNISON,UNIVERSITYOFBERN;SARAMILLER,CORNELLUNIVERSITY Isummarizerecentworkaddressingtheeffectsofbioticinteractionsonsticklebackevolution.Inacomparativegenome studywefoundasurprisingnumberofgeneticchangesrepeatedlyassociatedwiththepresence/absenceofanintraguild predator.Apondevolutionexperimenttestedtheroleofapredatorspeciesondivergentselection.Resultsfromboth studiessuggestareasonwhybioticinteractionshavesuchprofoundeffectsondivergenceandpossiblyspeciation. Microbialecology MONDAY09:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Understanding the impacts of environmental exposure on gut microbiome diversity and host health using a wild population of deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) ELLIOTSCHMIDT,LAURENTIANUNIVERSITY,[email protected] NADIAMYKYTCZUK,LAURENTIANUNIVERSITY;GARYBURNESS,TRENTUNIVERSITY;ALBRECHTSCHULTE-HOSTEDDE,LAURENTIAN UNIVERSITY Thegutmicrobiomeisadiverseandcomplexecosystemcomposedofanarrayofmicrobialspecies(mainlybacteria)that colonizethegutshortlyafterbirth.Somemicrobialspecieshavedevelopedmutualisticrelationshipswiththeirhostsand collaborateinshapingthehost'simmunesystem.Weusedaneco-immunologicalapproachtodeterminehowthe environment,gutmicrobiome,andimmunesysteminteract.Wepredictthat1)increasedearly-lifeexposuretothe naturalenvironmentwouldincreasegutmicrobiomediversity(GMD)and2)GMDispositivelycorrelatedwithan individual'simmuneresponse.Awildpopulationofdeermice(Peromyscusmaniculatus)wasusedtotestthese hypotheses.Basedonwhereeachindividualwasborn(laborwild)aswellaswheretheywereheldforthedurationof theexperiment(laborwild)individualswereassignedintooneoffourgroups:lab-lab,lab-wild,wild-laborwild-wild. GMDwasassessedthroughfecalsamplescollectedonaweeklybasisandwholecommunityanalysesusinghighthroughputsequencing.Immunesystemfunctionwasassessedthroughhematocritratios,whitebloodcellcountsaswell asimmune-challengesusingabacteriakillingassay.Itisanticipatedthatresultswillprovideameasureoftheimpactof environmentalexposureonGMDandhosthealth,thusprovidingusefulinformationforanimalpopulationsincaptive and/orreintroductionprograms. Keywords:Experiment,Smallmammals,Bacteria,Interactions. Foraging TUESDAY10:45,ROOM:SIDNEY Does access to anthropogenic food subsidies affect glucose metabolism of raccoons? ALBRECHTSCHULTE-HOSTEDDE,LAURENTIANUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ZVIAMAZAL,LAURENTIANUNIVERSITY;CLAIREJARDINE,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;JEFFGAGNON,LAURENTIANUNIVERSITY Citiesandtheirassociatedinfrastructurearerapidlyexpandingashumanpopulationsbecomeincreasinglyurbanized. Anthropogenicfoodsubsidiesintheformofhumanrefuseisincreasinglybeingrecognizedasanimportantecological factorinthepopulationdistributionsanddynamicsofurbanwildlife,butlittleisknownabouttheirsub-lethal consequencesattheindividuallevel.Theconsumptionofhigh-energyfoodmayhaveconsequencesforglucose metabolisminspeciesthatarenotadaptedforsuchadiet.Wesampledraccoons(Procyonlotor)atthreesitesthatvaried inthepresenceofhumanrefuse(low,mediumandhigh),predictingthatraccoonswiththegreatestaccesstohuman refusewouldbeheavierandhavethehighestlevelofcirculatingglucose.Weusedacommercialassayforglycatedserum protein(GSP),whichprovidesa2-3weekwindowintocirculatingglucoselevels.Bodymasswassignificantlycorrelated withGSPconcentration,andraccoonswithhighaccesstogarbagewereheavierandhadhigherGSPconcentrationsthan theircounterpartswithlowandmediumaccesstogarbage.Thefitnessconsequencesofhyperglycemiaareunknown,and thusfutureworkwillassesstheserelationships,aswellasdetermineifurbanraccoonsexhibitotheraspectsofmetabolic diseaseattributabletotheirdiet. Keywords:Raccoon,Urban,Urbanecology,Foraging,Epidemiology. Forestecology TUESDAY14:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Host mycorrhizal association and soil fertility influence plant-soil feedback in a Dipterocarp rainforest MAXSEGNITZ,STANFORDUNIVERSITY,[email protected] SABRINAE.RUSSO,UNIVERSITYOFNEBRASKA;KABIRG.PEAY,STANFORDUNIVERSITY Microbe-mediatedplant-soilfeedback(PSF)isanimportantdriverofplantcommunitydynamics.Variationinstrength anddirectionoffeedbackimpactsplantcommunities,andmaydriveorreinforcethedominanceorrarityofindividual species.PreviousstudieshavesuggestedthatnegativePSFmaybeacommonmechanismsupportingcoexistencein tropicalforestsdominatedbytreesformingarbuscularmycorrhizas(AM),whereaspositivefeedbacksarerareand associatedwithmonodominantstandsofectomycorrhizal(EM)hostspecies.However,amajorityofstudiesontropical PSFhavetakenplaceintheNeotropics,andfewhavecharacterizedPSFamongbothAMandEMhostsinnonmonodominanttropicalforestwhereEMhostsarediverseandabundant.WeassessedthegeneralityofnegativePSFin tropicalforestsusingalarge-scaleshade-houseexperimentinBorneo,wherediversityofbothAMandEMhostsishigh. OurstudyincludedbothEMandAMtreespeciesfromphylogeneticallyvariedlineagestobetterunderstandtheroleof fungalmutualistsindeterminingfeedbackstrength.Wetestedtheinfluenceofevolutionaryhistoryonstrengthand directionoffeedbackusingaphylogeneticallystructureddesign,andutilizedsoilscollectedacrossasoil-resource gradienttoexaminehowresourceavailabilityaffectsPSF.Wedocumentedsignificanteffectsofseedling-soilphylogenetic distanceonseedlinggrowth,thoughthiseffecthadsignificantinteractionswithhostmycorrhizaltype.Further,the strengthanddirectionoffeedbackwasinfluencedbysoilchemistry,suggestingthatfeedbacksmaybecontextdependent. Keywords:fungus,experiment,mutualism,forest,soil. Habitatselectionanduse WEDNESDAY09:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Characterizing Dakota skipper (Hesperia dacotae) habitat and distribution in southeastern Saskatchewan KELSEYM.SEIDLE,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN,[email protected] ERICG.LAMB,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN;JEAN-MICHELDEVINK,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN TheDakotaskipperisanativeprairiespecialistLepidopteraspeciesthatisSARA-listedasThreatenedandCOSEWIClistedasEndangered.ThisspeciesinhabitsthesouthernportionsofCanadianprovincesSaskatchewanandManitoba’s mesicmixed-grassprairieecoregion.Lossofthemesicmixed-grassnativeprairieecoregionisconsideredthemain contributortodeclinesinDakotaskipperabundanceanddistribution.TheDakotaskipperinhabitsthemesicmixed-grass prairie,butitisnotclearwhatdeterminesitsdistributionwithintheecoregion.Therefore,wehavedetermined environmentalparametersthatcharacterizeDakotaskipperhabitat.ResultsindicatethatDakotaskipperhabitatisnot significantlylinkedtovegetativecommunitystructure,butthepresenceofspeciesincludingPediomelumargophyllum, Schizachyriumscoparium,andZiziaapteraissignificant.TheDakotaskipperinhabitsasubsetofsoil,landscape,and climateconditionswithinsoutheasternSaskatchewan.SignificantlandscapeandclimatevariablesforDakotaskipper inhabitantsincludesteepslopes,lowerextremesindiurnaltemperaturerange,andincreasedprecipitationduringthe driestperiodoftheyear.Fromthisinformationapredictivehabitatsuitabilitymodelisbeingdeveloped,whichwill enableestimationofpotentialDakotaskipperdistributionwithinsoutheasternSaskatchewan.Thishabitatsuitability modelallowsforgreateraccuracyoffuturesurveysaimingtoassessanddiscovernewpopulations,andidentifieswhere repopulationoftheDakotaskippermaybefeasible.Thismodelisnecessaryinordertocreatearecoverystrategyforthe Dakotaskipper. Keywords:Speciesdistribution,Speciesatrisk,Birds,Spatialmodel. HERB MONDAY16:15,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Effects of resource manipulation on temperate grassland vegetation under a changing climate JOHNSERAFINI,QUEEN'SUNIVERSITY,[email protected] PAULGROGAN,QUEEN'SUNIVERSITY;LONNIEAARSSEN,QUEEN'SUNIVERSITY Wateravailabilityisobviouslyaprimaryregulatorofplantproductivityandspeciesinteractionsinaridecosystems, wheremanypreviousstudieshavedocumentedtheseeffectsbymanipulatingsoilmoistureavailability.Theimpactof alteredprecipitationpatterns-predictedasaconsequenceofclimatechange-however,islessclearformoremesic temperatehabitats.Howmuchdoesvariationinsoilmoistureavailabilitymatterhererelativetootherkeyenvironmental factors?Toaddressthis,weusedalongtermfieldexperimenttoexplorehowtheinteractionofbelow-groundwaterand nutrientavailabilityandabove-groundherbivory,interactasregulatorsofneighbourhoodbiomassproductionand speciescompositioninanold-fieldmeadowinEasternOntario.Afterfiveyearsofsoilwaterlevelandnutrientlevel manipulation,withandwithoutherbivoreexclosures,werecordedabovegrounddrymassforeachresidentspecies withinreplicateplots.Analysisoftreatmenteffectsshowedthatabove-groundbiomassincreasedwiththeadditionofsoil nutrients,decreasedunderreducedwaterlevels,andwasunaffectedbyincreasingwaterlevelsorthepresenceof herbivoreexclosures.Comparatively,speciesrichnesswasalteredbyallappliedtreatmentswiththesoilwaterlevel manipulationshavingthegreatesteffects.Wehavealsoexploredwhethervariationinplanttraits,suchasbodysizeand fecundityallocation,maypredicttreatmentinducedchangesinspeciescomposition. Evolutionarytheory MONDAY11:15,ROOM:WCOAST The effect of ploidy level on the rate and spectrum of new mutations NATHANIELSHARP,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] LINNEASANDELL,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;CHRISJAMES,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;SALLYOTTO,UNIVERSITYOF BRITISHCOLUMBIA Ploidylevel-thenumberofgenomecopies-variesamongspeciesandlifestages,withimportantevolutionary consequences.Indiploids,wheretherearetwocopiesofeachchromosome,theeffectsofnewrecessivemutationswill initiallybemasked,slowingthespreadofbeneficialmutationsandtheeliminationofdeleteriousmutations.Diploidcells couldbesubjecttoagreater“load”ofdeleteriousmutations,sincetheyhavetwicethenumberofpotentially-mutable sitescomparedtohaploids.Themutationrateperbase-pairmayalsodependonploidy,duetodifferencesinDNArepair mechanisms.Inparticular,diploidyshouldallowDNAdouble-strandbreakstobeconservativelyrepairedusinga homologouschromosometemplate,whereashaploidsmustuseerror-pronerepairpathwaysthatgenerate insertion/deletionevents.Totestthesepredictionsweconductedamutationaccumulationexperimentbybottlenecking over200linesofhaploidanddiploidyeast(Saccharomycescerevisiae)formorethan1500generations.Insomelines,we firstdeletedageneinvolvedinhomologousdouble-strandbreakrepair(RDH54)totesttheimportanceofthispathwayto thespontaneousmutationalspectrum.Basedongrowthrateassays,wefindthattherateofmutationalfitnessdecline wasgreaterindiploidsthaninhaploids,particularlyindiploidswiththeRDH54deletion.Genomesequencingofthese linesisinprogress,whichwillrevealtheunderlyinggeneticbasisforthesefitnessdifferences,andtheeffectofploidyon therateandspectrumofspontaneousmutations.Thesefindingswillhelptoclarifytheevolutionaryconsequencesof transitionsbetweenploidylevels. Keywords:Evolution,Ploidy,Geneticbottleneck,Mutation,Experiment. Marineecology TUESDAY14:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Migratory salmon usage of estuary nursery habitat CIARAE.SHARPE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] CHARMAINECARR-HARRIS,SKEENAFISHERIESCOMMISSION;MICHAELARBEIDER,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;JONATHANW.MOORE, SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Mobileandmigratoryspeciesmayusemanydifferenthabitatsthroughouttheirlife-cycle.Agreaterunderstandingofthe locationanddimensionsofhabitatsthatunderpintheselife-cyclesisatthefoundationofevaluatingpotentialrisksfrom development.Assessmentofenvironmentalriskoftenfocusesonsimplehabitatdescriptionsforfocalspecies,yetsimple metricsofhabitatmaynotaccuratelycapturetheirtrueneeds.Althoughtheestuariesoflargesalmonriversmayprovide criticalrearinghabitatformultiplespecies,thereisscientificuncertaintyaroundthedimensionsofpotentialsalmon habitat.WeconductedjuvenilesalmonsamplingthroughouttheSkeenaRiverestuaryfortwoyearsatdifferenthabitat typesincludingeelgrass,open-waterchannels,sandybanksandrockyshores.Salmonabundancevariedbyoveranorder ofmagnitudeacrossthedifferentsitesintheestuary.Combinationsofdynamicabioticandbioticvariables,which differingacrosssalmonspecies,betterpredicatedsalmonabundancethanhabitattypealone.Forexample,cohoand Chinooksalmontendedtobefoundclosertoshorebutthiswasnotthecaseforsockeyesalmon.Althoughallspeciesof juvenilesalmonutilizedeelgrasshabitattypemorefrequently,amultifacetedapproachtounderstandingsalmonuseof estuariesprovidesmoreinsight.Simpleclassificationofestuaryhabitatmayleadtoundervaluingthecomplexnatureof salmonhabitatpreferenceandthedynamismofestuaries.Byunderstandingwhichabioticandbioticfactorsarelinkedto juvenilesalmonabundanceintheestuary,weadvanceabetterunderstandingofestuaryhabitatforsalmonthatis relevanttoconservationandmanagementofestuaries. Keywords:Salmon,Habitatselection,Animalmovement,Estuary. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY16:00,ROOM:SAANICH Environmental pathogen transmission between farmed and wild salmon populations DYLANSHEA,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] ANDREWBATEMAN,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;KRISTIMILLER-SAUNDERS, DEPARTMENTOFFISHERIESANDOCEANS,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;LINDSEYOGSTEN,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;STEVEN SHORT,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO;MARTINKRKOSEK,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO BritishColumbiasupportsamajorAtlanticsalmonfarmingindustry,withhighdensitiesofopennetpensalmonfarms operatingalongPacificsalmonmigrationcorridors.Undernaturalconditions,migratingjuvenilePacificsalmonare temporallyseparatedfrompotentiallyinfectiousadultsbytheirseasonalmigrationregimes.Theplacementofhigh densitiesofnon-native,adultfarmedsalmonalongjuvenilemigrationroutesdegradesthisnaturalbarriertoinfection. ThereisevidencethatjuvenilePacificsalmonsufferanelevatedriskofectoparasiticsealiceinfectionwhilemigrating pastactivefishfarms,however,itremainsunclearhowsalmonfarminginfluencestheirriskofexposuretopathogenic microorganisms.Thisprojectsoughttoevaluatethepotentialforenvironmentalpathogentransmissionofforty-seven keyviral,bacterial,andeukaryoticpathogensknowntoinfectsalmon.Wecollectedandfilteredwatersamplesfromfiftysevensalmonfarmsites,twenty-twoofwhichwerestockedwithAtlanticsalmon,inordertoassesspathogenabundances usingqPCR.CharacterizingtheenvironmentalhazardswhichjuvenilePacificsalmonareexposedtoduringmigration mayhelpustoforecaststocksuccessintoadulthoodandbegintomitigatethenegativeeffectsofaquaculture. Keywords:Salmon,Aquaculture,Parasitology,Pathogens. Dispersal WEDNESDAY11:45,ROOM:THEATRE Morphology and gene expression associated with dispersal capability in mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae) VICTORSHEGELSKI,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] MAYAEVENDEN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;FELIXSPERLING,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Inrecentyears,mountainpinebeetles(MPB),Dendroctonusponderosae,havebecomemajorforestpestsinWestern Canada,causingimmenseeconomiclossesinforestry.DispersalbyMPBispoorlyunderstoodandmorethorough knowledgeofitsdispersalcapabilitieswouldimprovepredictivemodelling,allowingmoreefficientallocationof managementresources.Flightmorphologyandpropensityaretwokeyelementsthatoftenhaveaneffectonflight performance;thisstudyaimstoidentifymorphologicalcharactersandgenesassociatedwithdispersalcapabilityinMPB. Beetleswereflownonflightmillstocollectflightdata,andmeasurementsweremadeonthebodyandwingsbeforeRNA wasextractedforRNA-seqanddifferentialgeneanalysis.Dimensionsofthewings,bodyandflightmuscleswere comparedtoflightperformance.Multipleregressionshowedthatsomeofthevariationinflightperformancecouldbe explainedwithwingandbodymorphologybasedmodels;previousstudieshavedemonstratedthatbodysizeoftenhas relationshipwithdispersalcapability,butthisstudyshowsthattheinclusionofwingmorphologycandrasticallyimprove thepredictivepowerofthisrelationship.Regardless,onlyapproximately25%ofthedispersalcapabilityisexplainedby themorphologyofthebeetle.Quantileregressionshowsthatmorphologyhasagreaterinfluenceonstrongdispersers whileitseemstohavelittleornoeffectonweakdispersers.Thissuggeststhatbehaviouraltraits-inparticularflight propensity-arealsolikelytobeimportantfactorsaffectingdispersalcapability.RNA-seqdatahasbeencollectedandis beinganalyzedfordifferentialgeneexpressionassociatedwithflightpropensity. Keywords:Pinebeetle,Animalmovement,Dispersal,Experiment,Morphology. Bacterialsymbiosis TUESDAY09:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Diversity and nutritional mutualism of Wolbachia in Bat flies (Streblidae, Nycteribiidae) HAEWONSHIN,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] KATHARINADITTMAR,UNIVERSITYOFBUFFALO Wolbachiaareextremelywidespreadbacterialsymbionts,estimatedtoinfect~40%ofterrestrialarthropodspecies. AlthoughWolbachiaarebestknownasreproductiveparasitesthatmanipulatehostreproductiontoincreasetheir frequency,howmostWolbachiastrainspersistintheirhostsisnotknown.Weusedcomparativegenomedata, phylogeneticanalysesandfluorescenthistologicaltechniquestoinvestigatethediversityandfunctionofWolbachiainbat flies(Streblidae,Nycteribiidae),whichareobligateblood-feedingbatparasites.Likeotherexclusivelyhematophagous insects,theyareexpectedtorelyonendosymbiontsfortheirnutritionaldemands.WefoundthatWolbachiastrainsinbat fliesareverydiverse,withevidencesupportingrelativelyrecentacquisitionswithinbatflyclades.Moreover,wefound thatstrainsfromsupergroupFarecommon,andhaveveryhighinfectionrates(~60-95%)insomespecies.Interestingly, thesestrainsarecloselyrelatedtowCle,anobligatenutritionalstrainfoundinthebedbug,Cimexlectularius.LikewCle, batflyWolbachiacontainbiotinsyntheticgenesintheirgenomes.Consideringthehighinfectionrateandpresenceofan intactbiotinpathway,Wolbachiamaybeintransitionfromfacultativesymbiontstoobligatemutualistsinbatflies. Keywords:Bacteria,Insects,Symbiosis,Mutualism,Evolution. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY16:30,ROOM:COLWOOD Analyses of American mink (Neovison vison) haplotypes in Ontario and Nova Scotia KRISTASHOFSTALL,LAURENTIANUNIVERSITY,[email protected] JEFFBOWMAN,ONTARIOMINISTRYOFNATURALRESOURCES,TRENTUNIVERSITY;ALBRECHTI.SCHULTE-HOSTEDDE,LAURENTIAN UNIVERSITY TheAmericanmink(Neovisonvison)isaninvasivespeciesinmanypartsoftheworldbecauseofdeliberatereleasesand accidentalescapesfromminkfarms.InNorthAmerica,domesticminkthathaveescapedcaninteractwithwild conspecifics.Domesticandwildminkarephenotypicallyandgenotypicallydistinctpopulationsthatareknownfrom studiesofmicrosatellitestohybridizeandintrogress.Thewildminkpopulationhasdeclinedinrecentyearsand hybridizationwiththedomesticminkmaybeoneofthecauses.Somestudieshavesuggestedthatdomesticmalemink havelowfitnessinthewildcontext.Weusedpartofthematernally-inheritedmitochondrialcontrolregiontotestthis idea.Wehadthreemainpredictions:(1)thatthedomesticpopulationwillhavelowgeneticdiversity,(2)minkwillhave haplotypesspecifictothesourcepopulation,and(3)domesticandwildminkwillhavebiaseddirectionalgeneflowwith domesticfemalesbreedingwithwildmales.WeexaminedvariationinmtDNAtodetermineregionaldifferencesandthe directionofhybridizationoccurringinthewildanddomesticpopulations.Wesequenceda300basepairfragmentofthe mtDNAcontrolregionin319individualsofwild,domestic,andhybridoriginfrombothOntarioandNovaScotia.There were74haplotypesintotaland31ofthoseoverlappedwithhaplotypespreviouslyidentified,whichwashigherthan expected.Somehaplotypeswereveryspecifictotheregiontakenorfarmorigin. Keywords:Mink,Populationgenetics,Geneticvariation,Invasion. Pollution TUESDAY11:15,ROOM:SAANICH Impacts of industrial noise on owl occupancy and seasonal use in the boreal forest JULIASHONFIELD,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] ERINBAYNE,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Noiseinanenvironmentcanmaskimportantacousticsignalsusedforanimalcommunication.Owlsusevocalizationsto attractmatesanddefendterritories,andrelyonacousticcuestolocateprey.Industrialnoisehasbeenshownto negativelyaffectowlhuntingsuccessbyaffectingpreydetection.Itremainsunknownifthisresultsinreducedhabitat qualityforowlsinareasclosetochronicindustrialnoise.Todetermineifowlsavoidforestedareassurrounding industrialnoisesourcesinnortheasternAlbertaandatwhatscale,weconductedpassiveacousticsurveysforowlsinthe springusingautonomousrecordingunitsdeployedatsiteswithandwithoutindustrialnoisesources.Detectionsofowls wereextractedfromrecordingsusingautomatedrecognitionandanalyzedusingoccupancymodels.Wewereableto efficientlyprocessallrecordingscollectedinthefieldandobtainalargerdatasetofowldetectionsthanwouldhavebeen possiblewithonlylisteningtoasubsetofrecordings.Barredowls,greathornedowls,andborealowlswereequallylikely tooccupynoisysitescomparedtositeswithnonoise,indicatingthatoccupancyatahomerangescalewasunaffectedby thepresenceofnoisesourcesonthelandscape.However,atalocalscale,seasonalusearoundstationswithhighernoise levelsdeclinedforbarredowlsbutnotforborealowlsandgreathornedowls.Thisresearchcontributestogrowing evidencethatanthropogenicnoisecanimpactwildlifeanddegradesuitablehabitat,thoughsomespeciesseemtobemore sensitivethanothers. Keywords:Birds,Survey,Boreal,BehaviouralEcology,Disturbance. Plasticsintheenvironment MONDAY16:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Plastics and other anthropogenic debris in freshwater birds from Canada DAVESHUTLER,ACADIAUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ERIKAR.HOLLAND,ACADIAUNIVERSITY;MARKMALLORY,ACADIAUNIVERSITY Plasticsinmarineenvironmentsareaglobalenvironmentalissue.Plasticingestionisassociatedwithavarietyof deleterioushealtheffectsinmarinewildlife,andisafocusofmuchinternationalresearchandmonitoring.However,little researchhasfocusedonramificationsofplasticdebrisforfreshwaterorganisms,despitemarineandfreshwater environmentsoftenhavingcomparableplasticconcentrations.Wefoundplasticandotheranthropogenicdebrisin11.1% of350individualsof17freshwaterandonemarinebirdspeciescollectedacrossCanada.Thisworkestablishesthat plasticsandotheranthropogenicdebrisareagenuineconcernformanagementofthehealthoffreshwaterecosystems, andprovidesabaselinefortheprevalenceofplasticandotheranthropogenicdebrisingestioninfreshwaterbirdsin Canada,withrelevanceformanyotherlocations. Keywords:Birds,Plastic,Freshwater,Management. Physiologicalecology,temperature WEDNESDAY11:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Heat wave intensity exacerbates fitness trade-offs in the splash pool copepod, Tigriopus californicus MATTHEWR.SIEGLE,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] MARYI.O'CONNOR,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Heatwavesareincreasinginintensityandfrequency,yettheeffectofincreasingextremeheateventsonthedemographic processesunderlyingpersistence,growthoradaptationfollowingheateventsremainunresolved.Heatwaveshavelethal andsublethaleffectsonpopulationprocesses;evenmoderatestresscanimpactenergybalance,alteringtrade-offs betweensurvivalandreproduction.Weexperimentallytestedthehypothesisthattwoaspectsofheatwaves-maximum temperatureandconsecutivedaysofexposure-reduceaerobicenergyproduction,consequentlyexacerbatingpotential survival/reproductivetrade-offs.Wesubjectedgroupsofthecopepod,Tigriopuscalifornicus,tosixheatwavetreatments thatdifferedinmaximumexposuretemperature(26degreesCor32degreesC)andnumberofconsecutiveexposure days(1,2,or7).Wemeasuredaerobicrespirationdurationtheheatwave,andsurvivorshipandoffspringproductionfor twoweeksfollowingtheheatwave.Heatwavemaximumtemperatureandexposuredurationdidnotaffectsurvivorship, butindividualsthatsurvivedthehotterheatwavesproducedfeweroffspringoverall,andfeweroffspringpercapitain clutchesproducedimmediatelyaftertheheatwavethansurvivorsofthe26degreesCheatwaves.Aerobicrespiration ratesdidnotdifferbetweentheheatwavetreatments,andwerelowerthanexpectedbasedonArrheniuseffects, consistentwithaquiescentstateormetabolicdepression.Ourresultsareconsistentwiththehypothesisthatincreasing thermalstressexacerbatessurvival/reproductivetrade-offsthroughchangestoenergyhomeostasis.Tofullyaddressthe impactofheatwaves,weneedtoincorporatesublethalbutdemographicallyimportanteffectsofrepeatedheatstress. Keywords:Thermaltolerance,Invertebrate,Marine,Intertidal,Individualsurvival,Reproduction,Experiment. Communication MONDAY16:30,ROOM:WCOAST Media and storytelling as a tool for science communication JOSHSILBERG,HAKAIINSTITUTE,[email protected] Sciencecommunicationcanbringanaudiencebehind-the-scenes,putesotericresearchintoabroadercontext,orinspire people'sinterestinthescientificworldaroundthem.Butwhatisthebestwaytosharesciencewiththebroaderscientific communityandinterestedpublic?Itdepends.Beforeyouandyourteamembarkonasciencecommunicationproject,you mustfirstchooseatargetaudience.Otherkeyconsiderationsduringtheplanningstagesincludesettingdesiredoutcomes andidentifyingyourorganization'scapacity.Fromthere,youcandeterminethemostappropriatemethod(s)toreachthat audienceandmeetyourgoals.Sciencecommunicationcomesinmanyforms:storytelling,photoessays,blogs,podcasts, infographics,videos,socialmedia,liveshows,comics,andcartoons.FindouthowthemediateamattheBritishColumbiabasedHakaiInstituteturnssciencecommunicationideasintofinishedproductsinmanyforms. Keywords:Sciencecommunication,Global,Scienceoutreach,Methods. StudentSymposium MONDAY11:45,ROOM:THEATRE Reptile phylogeny and the origin and early radiation of lepidosaurs TIAGORODRIGUESSIMÕES,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] Theevolutionaryhistoryoflepidosaursdatesbacktoatleast230millionyearsagowhensquamates(lizardsandsnakes) andsphenodontians(e.g.Sphenodon)divergedfromotherreptilelineages.Despitepreviousstudiesonbroadlevelreptile relationships,theearlyradiationoflepidosaursremainslargelyenigmaticbyseveralfactors,includinglimitedtaxon sampling,logical/biologicalbiasesinmorphologicaldatasetconstruction,andconflictsbetweenthemorphologicaland moleculardata.Here,Iprovidethefirstphylogeneticdatasetinclusiveofallthemajordiapsidreptileandlepidosaurian lineages(livingandfossil)atthespecieslevelinordertoidentifythecompositionandearlyradiationoflepidosaurs.It includespersonallycollectedmorphologicaldataon150speciesfrom51collectionsaroundtheworld(plus3DCT-scans) andmoleculardata(10nuclear/mitochondrialDNAloci)fortheextantlepidosaurs.Iappliedmultiplemethodsof phylogeneticinvestigation,includingBayesianinference(non-clockandclockbasedanalysesusingtotalevidencedating) andmakinguseofmorphologicalpartitions.Theresultsindicatenovelrelationshipsamongdiapsidsandearly lepidosaurs.Previouslyproposedearlylepidosaursarefoundtobelongtootherlineagesofreptiles.Importantly, heretoforeunrecognizedsquamatefossilsarefoundastheearliestsquamates,datingbacktotheEarlyTriassic,thus fillingwhatwasthoughttobeafossilgapofatleast50millionyears.Inmostresults(morphologicalandcombined evidence)geckosaretheearliestsquamatecrowncladeandiguaniansarealwaysfoundaslaterevolvingsquamates,thus providingagreementbetweenmorphologicalandmoleculardata. Keywords:Evolution,Reptiles,Lepidosaurs,Morphology. Evolutionarytheory MONDAY11:30,ROOM:WCOAST The evolution of constraint as an adaptation ANDREWSIMONS,CARLETONUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Naturalselectionresultsinorganismsequippedtosurviveandreproduceundervariableconditions.Here,Iuseempirical resultsfromobservational,manipulationandexperimentalevolutionstudiestoarguethatthetraditionalideaofa tradeoffbetweenmeanfitnessandvarianceinfitnessisbetterformulatedasatensionbetweenconstraintandadaptation overdifferenttimescales. Keywords:Naturalselection,Evolution,Adaptation,Timescales. Communityecology TUESDAY14:15,ROOM:WCOAST Relative importance of colonist quantity, quality, and arrival frequency to the extinction of two zooplankton species JAMESS.SINCLAIR,QUEEN'SUNIVERSITY,[email protected] SHELLEYE.ARNOTT,QUEEN'SUNIVERSITY Colonistquantity,quality,andarrivalfrequencycanallindividuallydrivethedynamicsandextinctionofnewpopulations. However,wedonotunderstandwhichhasthestrongestinfluence,northecircumstancesunderwhichtheirrelative importancemaychange.Weconductedafieldmesocosmexperimentthatmanipulatedcolonistquantity,quality,and arrivalfrequencyintwozooplanktonspecies(DaphniapulicariaandSkistodiaptomusoregonensis).Wefoundthatthe extinctionofD.pulicariawasnotparticularlyaffectedbycolonistquantityorfrequency,withintroductionsofjusttwo individualsperformedaswellaslargerormorefrequentintroductions,buttherewassomeindicationofqualityeffects onpopulationdynamics.Conversely,S.oregonensisextinctionwasstronglydrivenbyarrivalfrequency.Populationsthat arrivedinasingleeventexhibitedhighratesofextinction(75-83%),withthisprobabilitydecliningdramaticallywhen colonistswereintroducedovermultipleevents(33%extinction).Ourresultsshowthatotherlessstudiedaspectsofthe colonistpool,suchasqualityorarrivalfrequency,couldbeasimportanttopopulationpersistenceastheinitialquantity ofarrivingcolonists.Additionally,therearelikelynumerousspeciesthatarewellsuitedtosucceedingwithanextremely smallnumberoffounders,andwhosesuccessisthereforenotnecessarilydependentuponcolonistquantity,quality,or arrivalfrequency. Keywords:Colonization,Zooplankton,Populationdynamics,Experiment. Socialsystems MONDAY16:30,ROOM:THEATRE Effects of neighbour familiarity on intrusion risk and behavioural time budgets in a territorial squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) ERINSIRACUSA,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] DAVIDR.WILSON,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY;STANBOUTIN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;MURRAYM.HUMPHRIES,MCGILLUNIVERSITY; JAMIESONC.GORRELL,VANCOUVERISLANDUNIVERSITY;DAVIDW.COLTMAN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;BENDANTZER,UNIVERSITYOF MICHIGAN;JEFFERYLANE,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN;ANDREWG.MCADAM,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH Itisincreasinglyacknowledgedthatthephenotypiccompositionofthesocialenvironmentcanvary,andthatthis variationmayhaveprofoundeffectsonindividualbehaviourandfitness.Usingtemporaryremovalsofterritoryowners weinvestigatedtheimportanceofthecompositionofthesocialenvironmentinaterritorialspeciesbyassessingwhether NorthAmericanredsquirrelsfaceincreasedriskofintrusionfromunrelatedorunfamiliarneighboursintheirsocial environment.Wefoundthatneighbourhoodswithlowaveragefamiliarityhadahigherriskofintrusionandthat unfamiliarneighboursweremorelikelytointrude.Usingacombinationofbehaviouralobservationsandaudiorecordings wethendemonstratedthatredsquirrelsrespondtothisriskinabehaviourallyplasticmannerbyincreasingthetime devotedtoterritorialbehaviouranddecreasingnestuseinunfamiliarneighbourhoods.Theresultsfromourresearch demonstratethatfamiliaritywithneighboursaffectsintrusionriskandbehaviouraltimebudgetsinredsquirrels, suggestingthatthecompositionofthesocialenvironmentmaybeapreviouslyunderappreciatedselectivepressurein speciesconsideredtobe‘asocial’. Keywords:Socialbehaviour,Smallmammals,Behaviouralecology,Populationdynamics,Interactions. Beeecologyandbehaviour WEDNESDAY11:00,ROOM:OAKBAY1 An approach to the managed relocation of declining North American bumblebee species under climate change CATHERINESIROIS-DELISLE,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA,[email protected] JEREMYKERR,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA Itwasrecentlyobservedthatsomebumblebeespeciesfailedtotrackclimatechangeattheleadinglatitudinalthermal limitonacontinentalscale.Newconservationstrategiesallowingspeciestotracktheirclimatictolerances,likemanaged relocation(MR),maybetheonlyfeasiblestrategytoavoidtheirextinction.Iamaddressingthefollowingresearch question:aretherepotentialhotspotsforthemanagedrelocationofdecliningbumblebeespeciesthatcouldbenefitmany speciesandwhererisksofharmtolocalspeciesarelikelytobesmall?Abroad-scalequantitativestudyisusedtoexplore thisquestion,usingamassivedatasetofgeoreferencedbumblebeeobservationsandgeneralcirculationmodels.Aseries ofspeciesdistributionmodelsweregeneratedtoassesstheimpactofdifferentclimatechangescenariosonclimatically suitableareasfor31bumblebeespeciesandtoidentifyMRhotspots.Themainobjectiveofthisresearchistomap hotspotsfortheMRofNorthAmericanbumblebeespeciesbymodelingtheirpotentialfuturedistributionasaresponseto climatechange.Whilethisresearchcannotleadtotheimmediateimplementationofmanagedrelocationplans,itwill serveasafoundationforbroaderdiscussionandresearchinanascentresearcharea.Itmayassistinestablishing localitieswherefirstmanagedrelocationeffortscouldbedirectedforvulnerablebumblebeespecies. Keywords:Bumblebees,Speciesdistributionmodel,Populationdeclines,Climatechange,Relocation. Policyandplanning MONDAY16:15,ROOM:ESQUIMALT The effect of target setting on conservation in Canada's boreal: What is the right amount of area to protect? DARRENJ.H.SLEEP,NATIONALCOUNCILFORAIRANDSTREAMIMPROVEMENT,INC.,[email protected] YOLANDAF.WIERSMA,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY ConservationofCanada'sborealforesthasbeentiedtovariouscampaignsadvocatingspecificarea-basedtargetsaspart ofabroaderSystematicConservationPlanning(SCP)effort.AlthoughtargetsettingisanimportantcomponentofSCP,it isknownthatthefinaloutcomesofconservationplansaresensitivetothetargetchosen.Therehavenotbeensystematic evaluationsofhowtheseoutcomeschangewithtargets.Here,weusedistributionofterrestrialmammalsintheBoreal ShieldEcozoneofCanadatoassesstheeffectsoftargetsonconservationplanswithindividualsitesthatarepredictedto belargeenoughtoallowforspeciespersistence.Weexaminethreetypesoftargets;percentageoflandscape,percentage ofumbrellaspeciesrange,andminimumnumberofsites,toseehowthefinalset(intermsofnumbersofsitesand percentofland)isaffectedandhowwellthefinalsetrepresentsthefullsuiteofmammalspecies.Wefoundalarge discrepancy(164,000squarekm)inthelandrequiredtoachieveminimalrepresentationtargetsdependingonthetarget used.Theminimumnumberofsitestargetwasmostefficientandrequiredonly1.25%oftheecozone,whilethesmallest percentagetargetthatcouldcaptureallspecieswas10%.Theuseofanumbrellaspeciesrangewastheleasteffective target,asseveralspeciescouldnotberepresentedatanypercentageoftheumbrellaspeciesrange.Thus,conservation plannersworkingintheborealshouldbemindfuloftheimpactstheirtargetshaveonthefinaldesign. Keywords:Reservedesign,Area-basedtarget,Populationrange,Mammals,Boreal. Sticklebackecologyandevolution MONDAY09:15,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Genetic basis of covariation between temperature-associated traits in marine and freshwater threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) SARAJ.SMITH,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] ROWAND.H.BARRETT,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;SEANM.ROGERS,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY Traitcorrelationscausedbypleiotropyorlinkagedisequilibriummayconstrainevolutionarychangeorreflectselection forintegratedtraits,buttheevolutionaryconsequencesunderlyingsuchcorrelatedtraitsremainslargelyunknownin naturalpopulations.Temperatureisapredominantfactorinthedistribution,abundanceandperformanceofectotherms andisknowntoaffecttheevolutionofbehaviouralandphysiologicaltraits,buttheroleoftemperature-associatedtrait correlationshasneverbeentestedinfishes.Inthisstudy,Iassessphenotypiccovariationforthermaltoleranceand preferencetraitsinmarineandfreshwaterthreespinestickleback(Gasterosteusaculeatus).Marineandfreshwater environmentsdifferintheirtemperatureregimes,wherefreshwaterhabitatsaremorevariableonaseasonalbasisand lessvariableonadailybasisthanmarinenear-shorehabitatsare.Weusedacommongardenenvironmentwithwild,F1 pureandhybridF1crossestotestthegeneticbasisofcriticalthermalminimumandmaximumtemperaturetolerance andpreferenceandtoassesstraitcorrelations.Collectivelythisstudywillcontributetowardsanunderstandingofhow temperature-associatedtraitcorrelationsmayconstrainorfacilitateadaptivechangeintheevolutionoffishpopulations inresponsetocontemporaryclimatechange.Understandingthebasisofthiscorrelationwillaidindeterminingthelongtermevolutionarydynamicsofthesetraits,whichwillvarydependingonwhetherenvironmentalmechanisms, pleiotropy,orlinkagedisequilibriumareresponsible. Keywords:Fish,Geneticvariation,Thermaltolerance,Evolution,Experiment. Invasivespecies TUESDAY16:45,ROOM:VIEWROYAL The diversity-invasibility relationship: Does spatial scale really explain the invasion paradox? NICOLAS.SMITH,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ISABELLECÔTÉ,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Classicecologicaltheorysuggeststhatspecies-richenvironmentsshouldbelesseasilyinvadedthanspecies-poor environments,butempiricalevidencedoesnotconsistentlysupportthisprediction.Whilefine-scaleexperimentstendto yieldthepredictednegativeassociationbetweendiversityandinvasibility,broad-scaleobservationalsurveysgenerally reportapositiveassociation.Thisconflictingpatternbetweenexperimentsandobservationalstudies,i.e.,theinvasion paradox,isthoughttoarisebecausedifferentprocessescontrolspeciescompositionatdifferentspatialscales. Experimentsaretypicallyconductedatfinespatialscaleswherebioticinteractionssuchasnichepartitioningarethought todrivecommunitycomposition.Incontrast,observationalstudiesaretypicallyconductedatbroadspatialscaleswhere extrinsicfactorsthatcovarywithdiversitysuchasenvironmentalheterogeneityarethoughttodrivespeciescomposition. Weaskedwhethertheinvasionparadoxdisappearswhenthepotentiallyconfoundingissueofscaleisremoved.Todoso, weconductedameta-analysisofover75studiestoquantifythestrengthanddirectionofpublisheddiversity-invasibility relationships,limitingourreviewtoterrestrialandaquaticstudiesconductedatfinespatialscales.Contraryto expectation,westillfoundheterogeneityindiversity-invasibilityrelationships.Small-scaleexperimentsshoweda moderate,negativeassociationbetweendiversityandinvasibility,whereassmall-scaleobservationalstudiesshowedthe oppositeeffect.Discrepanciesinspatialscalethereforedonotunderpintheinvasionparadox.Instead,someecologists haverecentlyproposedthatdifferencesinthetemporalscaleofexperimentsversusobservationalstudiesmightbeakey determinantofdiversity-invasibilitypatterns.Wearecurrentlyinvestigatingthishypothesis. Keywords:Scale,Invasion,Biodiversity,Meta-analysis. Parasitismandsymbiosis TUESDAY14:15,ROOM:SIDNEY Fine-scale spatial correlations of parasite prevalence with final-host abundance and waterbody age in a waterfowl-Gammarus-acanthocephalan system ZHUOYANSONG,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] HEATHERPROCTOR,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Infreshwaterecosystems,parasiteprevalenceinawaterbodycanbeinfluencedbycolonizationtimesforhostand parasite,waterbodysizeandenvironmentalconditions,orhostabundance.However,empiricalevidenceremainsscarce regardinghowthesebioticandabioticfactorsinteracttoinfluenceparasiteprevalenceinnaturalsystems.Weuseatwofield-seasondatasetfromawaterfowl-Gammarus-acanthocephalansystemtotesttheeffectsofwaterbodyageandsize, waterqualityvariables,andabundanceofwaterfowl(finalhost)andGammarus(intermediatehost)onacanthocephalan prevalenceinGammarus.Ourresultsshowthatwaterbodyageandwaterfowlabundancehadstrongpositivecorrelations withacanthocephalanprevalenceoverthetwofieldseasons,whileothersignificantcorrelatesofacanthocephalan prevalenceweredifferentindifferentfieldseasons.Surprisingly,abundanceoftheGammarusintermediatehostwasnot significantlyrelatedtoacanthocephalanprevalenceoverthetwofieldseasons.Theseresultsprovideevidencethat abundanceoffinalhostsandamountoftimeavailableforcolonizationbyintermediatehostsandparasitescanaffect prevalenceoffreshwaterparasites. Keywords:Freshwater,Birds,Parasitology,Amphipods. Pollinationsystems TUESDAY11:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Global trends in pollinator community diversity and composition in response to interactive climate and land-use changes PETERSOROYE,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA,[email protected] JEREMYKERR,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA Land-usechangeandclimatechangearecurrentlycriticaldriversofbiodiversitydecline,contributingtodeclining abundances,rangelosses,andincreasingextinctionrisk.Theseglobalchangedriversinteracttogether,buttheinteractive effectstheyhaveonspeciesrichnessandcommunitycompositionisstillunclearandunderstudied.Trackingtheeffectsof theseglobalchangesonpollinatorssuchasbumblebees(Bombus),areespeciallyinterestingasbumblebeesperform criticalecosystemservices.Usingglobaldatasetsofland-useandclimategoingbackto1900,weassessedtheindividual andinteractiveeffectsofchangesinland-use,land-useintensity,andclimateonbumblebeecommunityrichnessand compositionacrossNorthAmericaandEurope.Ratesofland-usechangevaryconsiderablyacrossNorthAmerica.While bumblebeerangeresponsestoeitherclimateorland-usechangecanbelargeenoughtoimperilthesespecies,their responsestotheseaspectsofglobalchangereflectregionally-distinctcombinationsoftheseaspects.Effectsofglobal changedriversonrichnessandcommunitycompositionwerevariableacrossregions,suggestingthatregionally distinctivecombinationsofthesedriverscontributeuniquelytochangingspecies'extinctionrisks.Landuseandclimate changecontributedistinctlyandinteractivelytoimperilbumblebeespeciesacrosscontinents.Pollinatorconservation andmanagementstrategiesshouldaccountforspecificland-useandclimatepressuresintargetregionsandhowtheir interactionsalterconservationprospectsinthesecriticalpollinators. Keywords:Pollinators,Climatechange,Land-usechange,Bumblebees,Historicalrecords,Global. Matechoice,hybridization MONDAY14:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Rapid evolution of reproductive isolation during speciation: Evidence from Lochmaea capreae leaf beetle SHAGHAYEGHSOUDI,BIELEFELDUNIVERSITY,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] KLAUSREINHOLD,BIELEFELDUNIVERSITY;LEIFENGQVIST,BIELEFELDUNIVERSITY,UNIVERSITYOFBERN Theoriginofbiologicaldiversity,viatheformationofnewspecies,canbeinextricablylinkedtoadaptationtothe ecologicalenvironment.Specifically,ecologicalprocessesarecentraltotheformationofnewspecieswhenbarriersto geneflowevolvebetweenpopulationsasaresultofecologically-baseddivergentnaturalselection.Lochmaeacapreaeisa chrysomelidwhichexhibitssympatrichostracesonwillowandbirchwithabout2%geneflowandofferagood opportunitytoinvestigatetheroleofecologyinspeciation.Here,weinvestigatethepresenceofbehaviouralandseveral crypticbarriersbetweenthesympatricwillowandbirchhostracesofLochmaeacapreae.Behaviouralisolationdidnot haveanyprofoundeffectonpreventinggeneflow.Yetdespitepairsmatingindiscriminately,nooffspringwereproduced fromtheheterospecificmatingsbetweenbirchfemalesandwillowmalesduetotheinabilityofmalestotransferspermto females.Wefoundevidencefordifferencesingenitalmorphologywhichmaycontributetofailedinseminationattempts duringcopulation.Theheterospecificmatingsbetweenwillowfemalesandbirchmalesresultedinviableoffspring.Yet fecundityandhatchabilitywasremarkablyreduced,whichislikelytheresultoflowerefficiencyinspermtransportation andstorageandlowersurvivalofspermintheforeignreproductivetract.Ourresultsprovideevidenceforthe contributionofmechanicalandseveralpostmating-prezygoticbarrierswhichpredatebehavioralisolationandactas primaryinhibitorsofgeneflowinthissystem.Thisisasurprising,yetperhapsoftenoverlookedfeatureofbarriersacting earlyinsympatricspeciationprocess. Keywords:Evolution,Insects,Reproduction,Speciation,Morphology,Sympatry. Metacommunitytheoryforreal-worldcommunities:theoreticalandempiricaladvancesfortrophicmetacommunities symposium TUESDAY09:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Coupled spatial-trophic dynamics in bromeliad food webs DIANESRIVASTAVA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] BROMELIADWORKINGGROUP Foodwebsareoftenconsideredasclosedsystems,eventhoughweknowthatthespecieswithinfoodwebscanbe influencedbyspatialprocessesatthescaleofpatches(patchsize),metacommunities(patchnumber)andregions (speciespool).Here,Iusethemacroinvertebratefoodwebswithinbromeliadsasamodelsystemforunderstandinghow suchspatialprocessesaffecttrophicstructure,andhowtheresultanttrophicprocessesinturnaffectthespatialstructure offoodwebs.Bromeliadsizecanstronglyaffectthelarvalsurvivalofthetoppredator,adamselflylarva,initiatingapatch size-dependenttrophiccascade-butonlyinregionswithdamselfliesinthespeciespool.Thistrophiccascadecaninturn affectratesofcarbonandnutrientflux-butonlyinregionswitheasilydigestiblelitter.Finally,thenumberofbromeliads inthelandscapeaffectspreyabundance,withbottom-upeffectsonthetoppredator.Suchcoupledspatial-trophic processesarecurrentlypoorlyintegratedinmetacommunitytheory. Movement,activity,wildlifemanagement WEDNESDAY09:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Why are train strikes on grizzly bears increasing in the mountain parks and what can we do about it? COLLEENCASSADYST.CLAIR,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] JONATHANBACKS,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;ALYSSAFRIESEN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;ADITYAGANGADHARAN,UNIVERSITYOF ALBERTA;PATRICKGILHOOLY,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;MAUREENMURRAY,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;SONYAPOLLOCK,UNIVERSITYOF ALBERTA;SCOTTNIELSEN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;JESSEWHITTINGTON,PARKSCANADA Train-wildlifecollisionspotentiallythreatenwildlifepopulationsaroundtheworld,buthaveattractedverylittlestudy. ForgrizzlybearsinBanffNationalPark,thesecollisionshavebecometheleadingcauseofmortality,whichsomehave attributedtograinspilledfromhoppercars.Resultingpublicpressuresupportedacooperativeresearchprojectinwhich wemeasuredspilledgrainandotherattractants,andcomparedtheirdistributiontohabitatusebybearsfittedwithGPS collars.Graindepositionbytrainsand/orrailusebybearsincreasedinspringandfall,atrailwaysidings,athigher elevationswithslowertrainspeeds,andwithincreasingterrainruggedness,butthesefactorsdidnotpredictcollision sites.Bycontrast,severalcollisionsoccurredwheretherewasacombinationofadjacentattractants,movementbarriers, andtrackcurvature,whichmaybeespeciallydisadvantageousforinexperiencedbears.Wesuggestthatidentifyingsites withelevatedcollisionriskfornativeanimalscouldsupportpartialmitigation,hereandelsewhere,viaaninexpensive warningdevicethatalertswildlifeofapproachingtrains. Keywords:Roads,Grizzlybears,Management,Behaviouralecology,Animalmovement,Foraging. Metacommunitytheoryforreal-worldcommunities:theoreticalandempiricaladvancesfortrophicmetacommunities symposium TUESDAY09:15,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Ecological drift across trophic levels: Consequences for metacommunities DENONSTART,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO,[email protected] BENJAMINGILBERT,UNIVERSITYOFTORONTO Ecologicalcommunitiesarefundamentallystructuredbytwotypesofprocesses-stochasticanddeterministic.Weareonly beginningtounderstandwhichtypesofcommunitiesarestructuredbystochasticordeterministicprocessesandthe implicationsofthesedifferences.Usingdatafromafieldexperimentinartificialold-fieldfragmentsandtheirassociated arthropodfaunasweshowthatstochasticprocessesaredominantinsmall,isolated,andhigh-trophiclevelcommunities. Predatorandparasitoidcommunitiesweremorestronglystructuredbystochasticforcesbothbecauseconsumersare lessabundantbutalsobecausetheyrespondtostochasticchangesincommunityassemblyatlowertrophiclevels.We furthershowthatincreaseddriftinthesecommunitiesreducesdiversity,causespredatorextinction,andultimately allowstrophicrelease.Thus,shiftsinstochasticcommunityassemblymechanismsassociatedwithcommon metacommunityfactorsandtrophicrankcancreatepredictableandpervasivepatternsofdiversityandspecies interactions. Invasivespecies TUESDAY15:30,ROOM:VIEWROYAL How do mountain pine beetle attacks impact understory vegetation in lodgepole pine forests in a novel area in west-central Alberta? JULIESTEINKE,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] ELLENMACDONALD,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;ANNEMCINTOSH,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;LORISCHROEDER,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Mountainpinebeetle(MPB)isanativebarkbeetlethatkillsmaturelodgepolepinetrees;itisexpandingintonovelareas furthereastintowest-centralAlberta,wherepineforestsdifferfromhistoricalMPBhabitat.Theobjectiveofthisstudyis tounderstandtheeffectsofMPBattackinAlbertabyconductinganexperimentalstudyinlodgepolepine-dominated forests.MPBattackwassimulatedbysteminjectionswithglyphosateresultinginapatternofstand-levelmortalitythat closelyresemblesthatfollowingMPBattack.Treatmentsincluded:highmortality,mediummortality,simulatedsalvage loggingoperation,anduntreatedcontrol.Standsweresampledforunderstoryvegetation,soilmoistureandnutrient availability,andpercentcanopycoveroneyearpriortodisturbance,theyeartreatmentswereapplied,one-yearposttreatment,andfiveandsevenyearspost-treatment.Mixedeffectsmodelsandordinationwereusedtoexamineresponses ofunderstoryvegetationtotheabove-andbelow-groundchangesthataroseduetotreemortalityinducedbythe treatments.Canopycoverandlighthadbeguntochangebyfiveyearspost-treatmentandthiswasfollowedbysome changesinunderstoryvegetation.Understoryvegetationchangesinthesimulatedsalvageloggingtreatmentwere immediateanddramatic.UnderstandinghowMPB-disturbedtreecanopiesinAlbertaimpactunderstoryvegetationand lodgepolepineregenerationcanhelpusunderstandthetransformationsinforestcomposition,structure,diversity,and successionalpathwaysthatmaydeveloponthischanginglandscape. Keywords:Pinebeetle,Modeling,Experiment,Forest,Management. Mammalianmovementandactivity TUESDAY11:30,ROOM:THEATRE Camera traps tell us where animals live, but more so, where animals move FRANCESSTEWART,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] JASONT.FISHER,INNOTECHALBERTA,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;A.COLEBURTON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;MARGOPYBUS, ALBERTAENVIRONMENTFISHANDWILDLIFE;DRAGOMIRVUJNOVIC,ALBERTAENVIRONMENTANDPARKS;GLYNNISHOOD,UNIVERSITY OFALBERTAAUGUSTANA;JOHNP.VOLPE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Animalsmoveacrossspaceandacrosstime.Biologistssamplethisdynamicarraybycollectingsnapshotsofanimal occurrence.Speciesoccurrencedata(SOD)—Includingpresence-absenceorcountdata—providethefoundationfor ecologicalresearchandconservationmanagement.Despitethelargeapplicabilityandeaseofcollection,applicationsof SODrelyupon,andderivefrom,assumptionofspace-useandmovementthatarerarelytestedorexplicitlyacknowledged inresearchstudies.Forexample,anincreasinglypopularcontemporarymethodforcollectingwildlifeoccurrencedatais cameratrapping.Thesedataarecollectedfromstationarypointsinspaceandtime,butresultfrom individuals’distributionandmovementonthelandscape.Toquantifytheaccuracyandprecisionofthespace-useand movementassumptionsinherentinSODweemployapaireddatasetof14GPScollaredfisher(Pekankiapennanti)to quantifyspace-useandmovementaround64stationarycameratraps.Weutilizegeneralizedlinearregressionsand occupancymodelstodemonstratethatSODbetterrepresentanimalmovementsthantheirlocationsinspace,anddiscuss theprofoundimplicationstheseresultshaveonourabilitytoinferandmanageecologicalprocess. Keywords:Fishers,Populationdynamics,Experiment,Animalmovement,Speciesdistribution. Phylogenetics MONDAY09:15,ROOM:WCOAST Comparison of genomic and microsatellite profiles from wolves and coyotes ASTRIDV.STRONEN,AALBORGUNIVERSITY,[email protected] NATHALIETESSIER,MINISTÈREDESFORÊTSDELAFAUNEETDESPARCSDUQUÉBEC,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL;ANITAROGIC, UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL,MONTSINAI;MARIOVILLEMURE,PARCNATIONALDUMONT-TREMBLANT;FRANÇOIS-JOSEPHLAPOINTE, UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL;HUGUESTENNIER,PARCNATIONALDUMONT-TREMBLANT;DAWNMARSHALL,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY; ELIZABETHPERRY,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY;TIMSALLOWS,RIDINGMOUNTAINNATIONALPARK;GLORIAGOULET,UNAFFILIATED;PAUL PAQUET,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,RAINCOASTCONSERVATIONFOUNDATION;ETTORERANDI,ISTITUTOSUPERIOREPERLAPROTEZIONEE LARICERCAAMBIENTALE Canidhybridizationinvolvinggraywolves(Canislupus),easternwolves(C.l.lycaonorC.lycaon)and/orcoyotes(C. latrans)appearscommonineasternNorthAmericaandmayimplicatedifferentcanidtypesinlandscapesvariously affectedbyhumandevelopment.Furthermore,thecontinuingeastwardrangeexpansionbycoyotessuggeststhe presenceofhybridfrontsinnortheasternCanada,whichmayaffectwolfpopulationstructureandecologicalfunction. Previousanalyseswith12microsatellitelociindicatedhighlevelsofadmixtureinQuébeccomparedwiththeCanadian Prairies(Manitoba,Saskatchewan).Subsequentanalyseswith66Ksinglenucleotidepolymorphism(SNP)markersfrom theIlluminaCanineHDBeadChipsupportedearlierfindingsofadmixture.Wecomparedmicrosatellite(11loci)andSNP (66Kloci)profilesfor80canidsfromthePrairiesandQuébec.MicrosatelliteandSNPprofilesindicatedoverlapbetween Québeccoyotesandwolves,andbetweenQuébecandPrairiecoyotes.PrairiewolveshadSNPprofilesseparatedfromall coyotesandmostindividualsweredivergentfromQuébecwolves;thesepatternsweresimilarbutlessdistinctfor microsatelliteprofiles.ForQuébecwolvesandcoyotes,SNPprofilesshowedhigherresolutionbetweengroupsand suggestSNPsofferimprovedopportunitiestoidentifyhybridsandestimateancestry.Improvedidentificationofhybrid profilesmaynotimmediatelyhelpclarifytheevolutionaryhistoryofadmixedcanidsbutcouldhelpresolvewhether differentmethodsmightbeasourceofdiscrepancyinreportingofresults.Moreover,ourfindingscanbeusedtoidentify priorityareasformonitoringwithhigh-resolutiontechniquestotrackhybridization,includingthepresenceand movementofhybridfronts. Keywords:Canidae,Hybridization,Genomicsequencing,Populationrange,Populationdynamics. Canadianprotectedareasinachangingclimate:Across-ecosystemapproachsymposium TUESDAY14:00,ROOM:SAANICH Responses of marine habitat-forming organisms to climate change: conserving the stage when the players build the set JENNIFERM.SUNDAY,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] KATHARINAE.FABRICIUS;KRISTYJ.KROEKER;KATHRYNM.ANDERSON;NORAHE.BROWN;JAMESP.BARRY;SEAND.CONNELL;SAM DUPONT;BRIANGAYLORD;JASONM.HALL-SPENCER;TERRIEKLINGER;MARCOMILAZZO;PHILIPL.MUNDAY;BAYDEND.RUSSELL; ERICSANFORD;VENGATESENTHIYAGARAJAN;MEGANL.H.VAUGHAN;STEPHENWIDDICOMBE;CHRISTOPHERD.G.HARLEY Habitat-formingcanopyspecieshavestrongpositiveinteractionswithmanymarineassociatedspecies,suchthattheir responsestowarmingandoceanacidificationmayhaveparticularlystrongcascadingeffectsonlocalbiodiversity.HereI presentsyntheticanalysesfrominsitustudies,whichtogetherleadtothepredictionthattheeffectsofoceanacidification willleadtolowerspeciesdiversityincoralreefs,musselbeds,andsomemacroalgalhabitats,buttoincreasesindiversity inseagrassandothermacroalgalhabitats.Availableinsitudatasupportthepredictionofdecreasedbiodiversityincoral reefs,butnotthepredictionofbiodiversitygainsinseagrassbeds.Inlightoftheseresults,Isummarizeourapproachto coarse-filterconservationapproacheswhen“nature’sstage”itselfrespondstoclimatechange ECOLOGICAL,EVOLUTIONARYANDENVIRONMENTALSYNTHESISINTHE21STCENTURYSYMPOSIUM TUESDAY14:15,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Cross-scale resilience from theory to practice: Results from a synthesis collaboration SHANASUNDSTROM,UNIVERSITYOFNEBRASKALINCOLN,[email protected] CRAIGR.ALLEN,UNIVERSITYOFNEBRASKA;KIRSTYNASH,JAMESCOOKUNIVERSITY Resiliencescienceoffersaconceptualframeworkforquantitativelyassessingtheabilityofasystemtoremainina particularstate.However,muchoftheresilienceresearchtodatehasbeenqualitativeinnature,andframeworks developedfortheimplementationofresiliencesciencehavebeeneithervagueorfocusedonthesocialcomponentof social-ecologicalsystems.Attemptstoquantifyresilienceandoperationalizetheconceptincludethecross-scaleresilience model,thediscontinuityhypothesisandthedetectionofearlywarningsignalsofregimeshifts.Oursynthesis collaborationsoughttoaddressgapsinthescienceofecologicalresilienceinordertofacilitateitsusebynaturalresource managers.Ourprimaryfocuswasthecross-scaleresiliencemodelandthediscontinuityhypothesis,astogethertheyare themostquantitativemethodologyavailableforassessingsystemresilience.Weexecutedaseriesofrelatedtasksthat wouldtakehourstorelate,sothispresentationwillfocusonseveralanalysesthataddressedpropositionscentraltothe cross-scaleresiliencemodel,includingtherelationshipbetweenthescalesofavailableresourcestructureand discontinuitiesinanimalbodymassdistributions(areductioninthenumberofscalesincoralreefstructurecorrelated withalossinbodysizeclassesinthefishcommunity),whetherspecieswithindeterminategrowthrequiredifferent methodsfordetectingdiscontinuitiesinbodymassdistributions(theydo),andwhetherchangesinabodymass distributioncanactasanearlywarningsignalofanimpendingregimeshift(paleoecologicaldiatomcommunitydatawith aknownregimeshiftexperiencedasignificantchangeindiatombodysizedistributionsapproximately150yearsbefore theshift). Policyandplanning MONDAY14:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Proactive conservation planning for high-value habitats of caribou and grizzly bears in the Muskwa-Kechika Management Area, northeast British Columbia NOBUYASUZUKI,UNIVERSITYOFNORTHERNBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] KATHERINEL.PARKER,UNIVERSITYOFNORTHERNBRITISHCOLUMBIA ToconservewildlifehabitatsinanintactborealwildlandoftheMuskwa-KechikaManagementAreainnortheastBritish Columbia,weusedaconservationplanningtool,Marxan,tosimulatechangesinlandscapecharacteristicsofhigh-value habitatsforcaribouandgrizzlybearsinresponsetopotentialdevelopmentofnaturalresources,includingoil,gas, minerals,forests,andwindpower.Wesimulatedconservationoptionsintendedtopreservehigh-valuehabitats:1)in spatialpatternsthatmaximizehabitatconnectivity(ConnectivityOption);2)inlowresourcepotentialareas(Conflict AvoidanceOption);3)inhighresourcepotentialareas(BlockingDevelopmentOption);and4)byavoidinghigh-value habitatsofwolves,moose,andelk(Predation-riskAvoidanceOption).Landscapecharacteristicsofhigh-valuehabitats followingsimulateddevelopmentbecameleastfavorableforcaribouinthePredation-riskAvoidanceOption,followedby theConflictAvoidanceOption.Areductionof14%inhigh-valuehabitatsresultedin50%and38%reductionsininterior habitats,and12%and7%increasesinlengthsofhabitatedgeinthese2options,respectively.ConflictAvoidanceand BlockDevelopmentOptionsproducedsimilarlandscapecharacteristicsforhigh-valuehabitatsofgrizzlybears.The ConflictAvoidanceOptionforbothcaribouandgrizzlybearsandthePredation-riskAvoidanceOptionforcaribouall resultedinagreaternumberofcontiguoushigh-valuehabitatpatchesofsmallersize,whereastheConnectivityand BlockingDevelopmentOptionsmaintainedlargecontiguouspatchesofhigh-valuehabitatwithfewersmallisolatedpatches.Maximizinghabitatconnectivityregardlessoflevelsofresourcepotentialwasbyfarthebestplanningstrategy forconservationforbothspecies. Keywords:Landusechange,Development,Spatialplanning,Interactions,Connectivity. Parasitismandsymbiosis TUESDAY14:30,ROOM:SIDNEY Adaptive genetic variation at salivary protein genes in blood-feeding generalist ectoparasites BENOITTALBOT,WESTERNUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ONDREJBALVIN,CZECHUNIVERSITYOFLIFESCIENCESPRAGUE;MAARTENJ.VONHOF,WESTERNMICHIGANUNIVERSITY;HUGHG. BRODERS,SAINTMARY'SUNIVERSITY;BROCKFENTON,WESTERNUNIVERSITY;NUSHAKEYGHOBADI,WESTERNUNIVERSITY Weexpectparasitestodisplaygeneticsignaturesrepresentativeofthehostwithwhichtheyassociate,throughprocesses suchasanevolutionaryarmsrace.However,individualsofsomeparasitespeciesassociatewithoneofafewhostspecies, thatareinsomecasesevolutionarilyverydifferent.Inthosecases,itisn'tclearhowhostspeciesmayaffectgenetic variationintheparasitespecies.InCimexgenus,parasitespeciesassociatewitharangeofhosts,includingbats,humans, andswallows.Inmydoctoralproject,Iwantedtodeterminehowhostsaffectadaptivegeneticvariationinthese generalistectoparasites.Ianalyzedtwosalivaryproteingenes,codingforanapyraseandanitrophorin,intenspeciesof Cimex.Thesegenesaffectthewayparasitesfeedontheirhosts,bypreventingclottingandvasoconstriction,andtheir efficiencymaydependonparticularecologicalorphysiologicalpropertiesofthehost.Ialsoanalyzed,usinganextgenerationsequencingapproach,thedistributionofallelesatthetwogenesinaspeciesusuallyassociatedwithoneof severalbatspeciesinNorthAmerica,Cimexadjunctus.Overall,Ifoundthathostslargelyaffectadaptivegeneticvariation oftheirparasites,andthatistrueevenforgeneralistparasites,suchasinCimex. Keywords:Parasitology,Genomicsequencing,Invertebrates,Geneticvariation. HERB MONDAY16:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 The role of bison as ecosystem engineers in the aspen parkland PETERTARLETON,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN,[email protected] ERICLAMB,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN Largeherbivoresplayacriticalroleinstructuringtheirecosystemsbyintroducingspeciesselectiveandspatiallyvariable disturbance.Thisisespeciallytrueintransitionalecosystems,whereclimaticconditionsaresuchthatdisturbances readilyshiftcommunitiesbetweenalternatestablestates.Theinteractionbetweenbison(Bisonbison)andthestructure ofcommunitiesoftheaspenparklandprovidesanintriguingmodelofhowthisprocessfunctions.Weconductedtwo experimentsinaspenparklandcommunitiesinRidingMountainNationalParktoexaminethisprocess.Inthefirst,atotal of88permanentplotswereestablishedacrossthegrassland-forestecotoneinthreeareas;thosebeinghistorically occupied,newlyoccupied,andunoccupiedbybison.Lifehistorycharacteristicsandphysicalstructureofthewoodyplant communityintheseplotsweremonitoredover1.5years.Observedchangesintheshrubcommunitywerecomplexand variedwiththedistancefromtheecotone.Inthesecondexperiment,atotalof29rangeexclosureswereestablishedin grasslandspreviouslyandnewlyoccupiedbybison.Plantcover,biomass,swardheight,andlightinterceptionwere measuredwithineachexclosureandadjacentcontrolspriortoandoneyearafterestablishment.Experimentalremoval oradditionofbisonoverasingleyearresultedincomplexchangesinspeciescomposition,markedbytheincreaseofthe invasivePoapratensis,aswellaschangestothephysicalstructureofthecommunity. Keywords:Bison,Interactions,Experiment,Disturbance,Ecosystemengineer. Anthropogenicinfluencesonhabitatselection TUESDAY16:15,ROOM:SAANICH Large mammal responses to seismic line restoration ERINTATTERSALL,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] COLEBURTON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;JASONFISHER,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,INNOTECHALBERTA;JOANNABURGAR, UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA SeismiclinesmakeupalargeportionofanthropogenicdisturbancesinAlberta,cuttingvastnumbersoflinearcorridors throughtheborealforest.Thishassevereconsequencesforthewoodlandcaribou,causinghabitatfragmentationand providingmovementcorridorsforpredators(wolves,blackbears)intopreviouslyinaccessiblehabitat.Asaresult,andin responsetofederalandprovincialcaribourecoverystrategies,energycompaniesareincreasinglypursuingrestoration projectstofacilitatevegetativeregenerationalongseismiclineswithincaribouhabitat.Onesuchprojectisbeing implementedintheAlgarregionsouthwestofFortMcMurray.Theaimofourcurrentresearchistousecameratrapsto examinetheefficacyofseismiclinerestorationwithintherangeoftheAlgarcariboupopulation.Specifically,weare comparingdetectionratesbetweentreatedandcontrollinestodeterminewhetherrestorationdoesindeedreduce predatormovementsandincreasecariboupresence.Here,Ireportonpreliminaryresultsfromourpilotstudyof24 cameratrapsactivefromNovember2015-November2016.Ialsooutlinefutureresearchquestionsasweexpandthe scopeoftheprojecttoincludenaturallyregeneratinglinesandthosereservedforhumanuse.Resultsofthisresearchwill offerinsightintohoweffectivelyrestorationprojectsreclaimcaribouhabitat,aswellasexploretheireffectsonpredatorpreyrelationshipsintheborealforestmammalcommunity.Thiswillhaveimplicationsforconservationeffortsinregions ofmajorindustrialactivityandmayinformfuturepoliciesonreclaimingtheseareas. Keywords:Mammals,Landusechange,Disturbance,Restoration,Management. Livingintheeco-evolutionarytheatre:researchguidedandinspiredbyintensivefieldobservationssymposium TUESDAY16:15,ROOM:THEATRE Are camouflaged flounder hiding from predators or prey? JOHNS.TAYLOR,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] Pollution TUESDAY11:30,ROOM:SAANICH Inferring growth dilution from latitudinal variation in fish growth and mercury bioaccumulation SHYAMTHOMAS,RYERSONUNIVERSITY,[email protected] STEPHANIEMELLES,RYERSONUNIVERSITY;SATYENDRABHAVSAR,ONTARIOMINISTRYOFTHEENVIRONMENTANDCLIMATECHANGE Fishsizeandagearetwocloselyrelatedbioticvariablesthataffectmercurybioaccumulationthroughvaryinggrowth rates.Allelsebeingequal,itisassumedthatforfishesofthesameage,fastgrowingfisheswillattainalargersizeand accumulatelessmercuryduetogrowthdilution.Inthisstudy,wemakeuseofalarge-scalefishmercurymonitoring datasettobetterunderstandhowbodysizeandagedeterminemercurylevels,andtheroleofvaryinggrowthratesand growthdilutioninmodulatingit.Overall,wehypothesizethatgrowthdilutionwillbemoreevidentwhenlatitudinal differenceingrowthratestranslatesintopredictablelatitudinaldifferenceinmercurybioaccumulation.Splittingthe spatialdatainto3latitudinalbands,wefirstpredictthatgrowthrateswilldecreasefromSouthtoNorth.Consequently, mercurylevelswillshowtheoppositelatitudinaltrend,ifgrowthdilutionplaysastrongmodulatoryrole.Linearmixedeffectsregressionmodelswereusedtocapturevariationingrowthratesandbioaccumulationacrossthethreelatitudinal bands.AspredictedaclearlatitudinaltrendwasevidentforWalleye,whereingrowthratesdroppedwhilemercury bioaccumulationincreasedfromSouthtoNorth;butthislatitudinalpatternwaslessevidentinNorthernPike.Plotting bioaccumulationcoefficientsagainstgrowthcoefficientsforalluniquelatitudesfurthershowedsignificantnegative correlationssuggestinggrowthdilution.However,themagnitudeofgrowthdilutionwasgreaterinWalleye,andis apparentlydrivenbyvariationingrowthratesacrosslatitudes.TherelativelyweakergrowthdilutioninNorthernPike suggeststhatthereareotherfactorsbesideslatitudinalvariationingrowthdrivingthepattern. Keywords:Fish,Bioaccumulation,Modeling,Growth. Anthropogenicinfluencesonhabitatselection TUESDAY16:30,ROOM:SAANICH Patch occupancy of two boreal mammals in response to salvage logging JULIETHOMAS,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] MARYL.REID,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY;ROBERTM.R.BARCLAY,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY Intheborealforestthefrequencyandseverityofforestfiresandinsectinfestationshasincreasedinrecentdecades, resultinginthewidespreadpracticeofpost-disturbancelogging(knownassalvagelogging).Recentstudiesdemonstrate thatsalvageloggingcandisruptpost-disturbancesuccessionandaltercriticalwildlifehabitat,thushavingagreater impactthantheoriginalnaturaldisturbance;however,dataarescarceformammals.Insummer2016,Istudiedthe influenceofbarkbeetleinfestationandsubsequentsalvageloggingonpatternsofhabitatusebymoose(Alcesalces)and snowshoehare(Lepusamericanus)insouthwestYukon,Canada.Remotewildlifecamerasweredeployedat90sitesin barkbeetle-affectedforestandinsalvage-loggedstandsofvaryingloggingintensityandage.Iusedoccupancymodelsto examinetherelationshipbetweenmammalhabitatuseandsalvageloggingactivity,standstructure,andstandage.Moose preferredintensivelyloggedstandsoverintactbeetle-affectedstands,likelybenefittingfromenhancedunderstory productivity,whilesnowshoehareavoidedsalvage-loggedareas,irrespectiveofretentionlevelandstandage.Ialso examinedtheeffectsofcutsize,predatorpresence,andvariouslandscape-levelcharacteristicsincludingsurrounding foresttypeandproximitytoedgehabitat.Thecontrastingresultsformooseandharehighlighttheimportanceofstudying multiplespeciessimultaneously,tobetterinformconservationandforestmanagementpolicies. Keywords:Mammals,Boreal,Landusechange,Habitatselection,Disturbance,Landscapeconfiguration. Speciesinteractionsinawarmingworldsymposium TUESDAY13:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Dispersal governs the reorganization of ecological networks under environmental change PATRICKTHOMPSON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] ANDREWGONZALEZ,MCGILLUNIVERSITY Ecologicalnetworks,suchasfoodwebs,mutualistwebs,andhost-parasitewebs,arereorganizingasspeciesabundances andspatialdistributionsshiftinresponsetoenvironmentalchange.Currenttheoreticalexpectationsforhowthis reorganizationwilloccurareforcompetitionorforpartsofinteractionnetworksandmaynotextendtomorecomplex networks.Hereweusemetacommunitytheorytodevelopnewexpectationsforhowcomplexnetworkswillreorganize underenvironmentalchange,andshowthatdispersaliscrucialfordeterminingthedegreetowhichnetworkswillretain theircompositionandstructure.Whendispersalbetweenhabitatpatchesislow,alltypesofspeciesinteractionsactasa strongdeterminantofwhetherspeciescancolonizesuitablehabitats;thiscolonizationresistancedrivesspeciesturnover, whichbreaksapartcurrentnetworksandleadstotheformationofnewnetworks.However,whendispersalratesare increased,colonistsarriveinhighabundanceinhabitatswheretheyarewelladapted,sointeractionswithresident speciescontributelesstocolonizationsuccess.Dispersalensuresthatspeciesassociationsaremaintainedastheyshiftin space,sonetworksretainsimilarcompositionandstructure.Thecrucialroleofdispersalreinforcestheneedtomanage habitatconnectivitytosustainspeciesandinteractiondiversityintothefuture. Communityecology TUESDAY14:30,ROOM:WCOAST What is the nature of the interaction between a flower weevil and a leaf beetle, two biocontrol agents of purple loosestrife: Competitive, complementary, or neutral? MARINATORREBLANCA,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA,[email protected] RISAD.SARGENT,UNIVERSITYOFOTTAWA Theorypredictsthat,uponreleasefromnaturalenemiesinthenewrange,invasivespecieswillevolvetoallocatemore resourcestowardstraitsthatimprovetheirabilitytocompetewithnativespecies.Themotivationformostbiological controlprogramsistore-introducenativeenemiesinordertoopposethiseffectandreduceorevenreversesomeofthe negativeimpactsofinvasivespeciesonnativeecosystems.Inmanycases,multiplebiocontrolagentsareintroduced,often undertheassumptionthattheirimpactswillbecomplementary.However,studiesthatquantifythenatureofinteractions amongbiocontrolagentsonthesameinvasivespecieshavefoundfewgeneralities.Herewedescribethefindingsofa studyoftheimpactsofinfestationbyonespeciesofbiocontrolagentofinvasivepurpleloosestrife,theleafbeetle Neogalerucellacalmariensis,onthereproductivesuccessofasecondbiocontrolagent,theflowerfeedingweevil Nanophyesmarmoratus.Somewhatsurprisingly,wefoundthatweevilreproductivesuccesswashigheramongplantsthat weresimultaneouslyinfestedwithleafbeetles.Thiswastrueevenwhendifferencesininflorescencelengthamongplants wastakenintoaccount.Wediscussthepossibilitythatbiocontrolinduceddifferencesinfloweringphenologyareatleast partiallyresponsibleforourfindings. Keywords:Insects,Interactions,Invasion,Reproduction,Management,Conservationpractitioners. Lifehistories:phenology,sex,sexratio TUESDAY09:30,ROOM:WCOAST Lack of diapause in aphid parasitoids from mild winter areas: Ecological and evolutionary insights KÉVINTOUGERON,UNIVERSITÉDEMONTRÉAL,[email protected] Insectsfromtemperateareasusuallyenterdiapausetooverwinter.Climatechangemayseverelyimpactinsect communitiesthroughchangesinphenologyandseasonalecology.InWesternFranceforinstance,therehasbeenarecent changeinparasitoidspeciescompositionincerealfieldswithsomespeciesthatusedtooverwinterindiapauseoverthe past30yearsnowbeingactivethroughoutwinter.Thisrecentpatternmaybeduetoalackofdiapauseexpressionand couldleadtochangesinspeciesinteractionsandimpairbiologicalpestcontrol.Wetestedwhetherfourparasitoidspecies fromthismildwinterareawerestillabletoundergodiapauseunderninedifferentphotoperiodandtemperature conditionsinthelaboratory.Wefoundthat2outof4speciesdidnotexpressdiapauseatanyoftheconditionstested.The twootherspeciesentereddiapauseatverylowlevels.Wedevelopedtwohypothesestoexplainchangesindiapause incidenceoverthelastdecades(i)parasitoidshaveevolvedotherstrategiestooverwinter,diapauseexpressionbeing geneticallylostinallorpartofthepopulationor(ii)phenotypicplasticityisnotexpressedunderunsuitable environmentalsignals.Host-parasitoidcommunitycompositionchangesinthefieldbetween2010and2017willalsobe presented.Theseresultsarediscussedinrelationtotheecologicalcostsofdiapauseexpressioninparasitoids experiencingwarmertemperaturesandincreasedhostavailabilityduringwinterfollowingclimatechanges. Keywords:Insects,Climatechange,Phenologychanges,Diapause. Reproductiveecologyandbehaviour MONDAY16:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM The causes and consequences of the variability in incubation behaviour in tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) NGHIATRAN,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,QUEBECCENTERFORBIODIVERSITYSCIENCE,[email protected] DANYGARANT,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,QUEBECCENTERFORBIODIVERSITYSCIENCE;FANIEPELLETIER,UNIVERSITÉDE SHERBROOKE,QUEBECCENTERFORBIODIVERSITYSCIENCE Duringtheincubationperiod,birdsmustbalancethetimetheyspendincubatingtheireggswithotheractivitiessuchas foraging.Asaresult,eggsareexposedtovariableconditionsthroughouttheirdevelopment,especiallyinpasserinebirds, whichareforthemostpartuni-parentalincubators.Westudiedincubationbehaviourinatreeswallowpopulation nestinginsouthernQuebecusingautomatedtemperaturedataloggers(iButtons)toassessthevariationinthedaily proportionoftimeeggsarebeingincubated.Wefoundthatdailyproportionoftimespentincubatingincreasedbefore clutchcompletiondayandremainedstablethroughouttheincubationperiod.Clutchsizewasfoundtobeanimportant factorinshapingincubationbehaviour,withlargerclutchesbeingincubatedforalargerproportionofthedaytime. Althoughdailyproportionoftimespentincubatingremainedstableafterclutchcompletionday,otherincubationrelated behaviourmightchangethroughouttheincubationperiod.Incubationbehaviourmaybeanimportantaspectforfitness astheproportionofegghatchingincreaseswhentheclutchesarebeinglessexposedtoambienttemperature.Incubation duration(fromclutchcompletiondatetohatching)wasalsoinfluencedbyincubationbehaviour.Theeffectishowever moreimportantduringtheearlystageofeggdevelopment. Keywords:Birds,BehaviouralEcology,Incubation,Reproduction. ConsequencesofRapidEcologicalChangeinMountainEcosystemsSymposium TUESDAY08:00,ROOM:SIDNEY A century of ecosystem change in the Canadian Rocky Mountains ANDREWTRANT,UNIVERSITYOFWATERLOO,[email protected] JULIEFORTIN,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;BRIANSTARZOMSKI,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;ERICHIGGS,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Mountainecosystemsserveassentinelsofchange,andthoseintheCanadianRockyMountainshaveundergonean exceptionalshiftoverthepastcentury.Thischangehasbeendrivenbymanagementpractices,disturbanceregimesand anthropogenicclimatechange.Withmorethanacenturyofstronghumaninfluence,haveweensuredthatecosystem noveltywillprevail?Canhistoricreferencespredatingthe20thcentury,beusedtoidentifyboundariesandthresholdsof change?Wepresentquantitativeanalysesof100high-resolutionimagepairsofsystematichistoricsurveyandrepeat photographsofmountainhabitatsacquiredintheCanadianRockyMountains,measuringtreelineadvance,changesin forestcover,andextentofforestregeneration.Withatimelapseof70to100yearsbetweenimagepairs,these photographscontaincriticalinformationaboutrelativelylong-termecologicalchangethatcannotbefoundelsewhere.In the220kmofmountainhabitatexamined,wefoundhighlevelsofvariabilityintheecosystemdynamics,although generalpatternsofincreasedconiferouscoverandanaltitudinaladvancetreelinewereprominent.Toexplainthe processesdrivingtheobservedpatterns,weexploreclimate-drivenecosystemresponsesfromchangesindisturbance andland-usehistory.Justoverhalfoftheecosystemscapturedbytheimagesrespondedinthedirectionpredicted(i.e., upwardadvanceofthetreelineecotoneandinfillingofforestcover)withdisturbanceplayingasignificantrole.These resultsarediscussedfromtheperspectiveofemergingnoveltyinmountainecosystemsandtheimplicationsfor conservationandrestoration. Movement,activity,wildlifemanagement WEDNESDAY09:00,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Endangered endemic cyprinid minnow exhibits different spatial and temporal patterns to native and invasive species in a perennial desert stream CAROLYNTROMBLEY,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] ASTRIDSCHWALB,TEXASSTATEUNIVERSITY;THOMASHARDY,TEXASSTATEUNIVERSITY;KARLCOTTENIE,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH TheVirginRiverisaperennialdesertstreaminthesouthwesternUnitedStates,flowingfromitsheadwatersaboveZion NationalPark(Utah)toLakeMead(Nevada).Thisriversupportsseveraldifferentfishspecies,including6nativeand13 introduced.Woundfin(Plagopterusargentissimus)isanendemicspecieslistedasendangeredbytheUnitedStatesFish andWildlifeServicethathasdeclineddrasticallyinbothdistributionandabundance.Redshiner(Cyprinellalutrensis),an introducedspecies,havesuccessfullyinvadedtheriverandbeenlinkedtothedeclineofwoundfin.Usingadatasetoffish abundancesin10sitesover23yearsintheVirginRiver,weinvestigatedtherelativeimportanceofspatialandtemporal factorstothestructureofthefishassemblagesintheriver.Weextractedabundancerecordsforthe8mostabundant species(98.5%cumulativeabundances)inallrunhabitatsthenranPCNManalysesinRtoexaminetherelationships betweenspatiallocation,date,andspecies.Wefoundthatspatialandtemporalfactorsweresignificant(p=0.001)and togetherexplained59%ofthedatawhilebeingrelativelyindependent(5%overlap).Nativespeciesshowedpatterns differenttothoseofthetwoinvasivespecies,redshinerandmosquitofish(Gambusiaaffinas),withwoundfinexhibiting differentpatternsfromothernativespecies,suggestingthatwoundfinmaybeparticularlysusceptibletoinvasionbynonnativespeciesorfactorscoincidingwithinvasions. Keywords:Speciesatrisk,Fish,Freshwater,Invasion. Usingexperimentalevolutiontorevealtheeco-evolutionaryimpactsofglobalchangesymposium WEDNESDAY09:15,ROOM:THEATRE Experimental evolution in ecological communities: Predators mediate rapid evolution of herbivores and resources to warming MICHELLETSENG,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Globalchangesinclimateandhabitatqualityarealteringtheabioticenvironmentexperiencedbyorganismsworldwide. Organismsregularlyinteractwithotherspecies,yetwhetherthesespeciesinteractionshelporhinderevolutionary adaptationtoabioticstressesisnotwellunderstood.InthistalkIwillpresentpublisheddatademonstratingthe importantroleofpredatorsinmediatingherbivoreevolutiontowarmingtemperatures,andI'llgiveasneakpeakinto newdatashowingthefitnessconsequencesofmismatchesbetweenevolutionaryratesofresourcesvs.consumersto experimentalwarming. UncertaintyinEcologyandConservationSymposium MONDAY08:00,ROOM:SAANICH Uncertainty and the relationship between human and environmental well-being SHRIPADTULJAPURKAR,STANFORDUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Ipresentasimpleframeworktoshowhowdemographyandproductivityshapehumanwell-being.Iusethattodiscuss thedistinctdimensionsofhumanandenvironmentalwell-being,theirrelationships.andthemeaningofsustainability.I highlighttheimportanceofandtheconnectionsbetweenuncertaintyindemographicandecologicalprocesses. Usingexperimentalevolutiontorevealtheeco-evolutionaryimpactsofglobalchangesymposium WEDNESDAY08:30,ROOM:THEATRE An experimental test of the effects of rapid evolution on species coexistence in the field MARTINTURCOTTE,UNIVERSITYOFPITTSBURGH,[email protected] SIMONP.HART,EIDGENÖSSISCHETECHNISCHEHOCHSCHULEZÜRICH;JONATHANM.LEVINE,EIDGENÖSSISCHETECHNISCHE HOCHSCHULEZÜRICH Therecentrecognitionthatevolutionoccursonecologicaltime-scalesistransformingbiology.Yetrecentadvancesinour understandingofthemechanismsthatmaintainspeciesdiversityassumethatspeciesarefixed,andsorarelyconsiderthe influenceofrapidchangesinspecies-leveltraitsontheoutcomeofspeciesinteractions.Usingapowerfulnewempirical systembasedontheworld’ssmallestfloweringplants—duckweeds—wemanipulatedtheabilityoftwocompeting speciestocoevolveacrossapproximately15generationsinthefield.Wethenquantifiedtheinfluenceofrapidevolution ontheoutcomeofcompetitionbycomparingthetrajectoriesofthecompetingpopulationsinthepresencevs.absenceof coevolution.Ourresultsdemonstratethatcoevolutionaltersthestrengthofcoexistenceonecologicaltimescales.There weresignificantdifferencesinthetrajectoriesofcompetingspecieswhenthesespeciescouldcoevolve.Mostofthese effectsoccurredduetoevolutioninonespecies,L.minor,whichwasquantifiedusingmoleculargenetics.However,the effectsofcoevolutiononL.minorcauseditspopulationsizetodeclineinrelativeabundance.Parameterizedcompetitive populationdynamicmodelsrevealedthatcoevolutioncausedL.minortodoubleitslow-densitygrowthrate.Yet concomitantincreasesinL.minor’ssensitivitytointra-andinterspecificcompetitionnegatedanybenefitsofevolutionfor itsinterspecificcompetitiveability.Ultimately,coevolutioncreatedanetadvantageforthepreviouslyinferiorcompetitor throughchangesinaveragefitnessdifferencesandnotnichedifferences.Ourresultsproviderareexperimentalsupport fortheroleofrapidevolutionininfluencingthemaintenanceofspeciesdiversity. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY14:30,ROOM:COLWOOD Fine-scale genetic structure and effective size of an isolated and endangered population of woodland caribou GENEVIÈVETURGEON,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,[email protected] Maintenanceofgeneticdiversityiscrucialforadaptationtoenvironmentalchanges.Insmallpopulations,however,it representsaconservationchallengesincepopulationdeclinesandisolationareoftenfollowedbylossesingenetic diversity.Caribouandreindeer(Rangifertarandus)aredecliningworldwideandtheGaspésie-Atlanticcariboupopulation isnoexception.Thisherdwasalreadygeneticallydifferentiatedfromothercariboupopulationsattheendofthe‘90s,and showedamongthelowestgeneticdiversity,evenifthepopulationsizewastwiceitscurrentsize.Theheterogeneous environmentmayalsohaveenhancedthedeclineandisolationeffectsonlossesofgeneticdiversitybecausesubgroupsof individualsareusingdifferentmountainsummits,withlimitedexchangesrecordedbetweencollaredindividuals.Here ourgoalsweretocharacterizethegeneticdiversityandstructureofthisherd,toestimateitseffectivepopulationsizeand toassesshowtheseparametershavechangedbetween1998and2013.Todoso,atotalof75caribous(31in1998and44 in2013)weregenotypedat15microsatelliteloci.Geneticdiversitywascomparablebetweenyearsbutaspatially-explicit geneticstructureemergedin2013,withdifferencesbetweenindividualslivingeastofanationalroadcomparedtothose livingwestoftheroad.Duringthesametime,theeffectivepopulationsizedecreasedbyhalf,from39individuals[23:87 (95%CI)]to20[15:26].Ourresultssuggestthatthespatialgeneticstructurecombinedwiththeverysmalleffective populationsizecouldhavedetrimentalconsequencesforfuturegeneticdiversityandultimatelyforthepersistenceofthis isolatedpopulation. Keywords:Speciesatrisk,Caribou,Geneticvariation,Isolation. Movement,activity,wildlifemanagement WEDNESDAY09:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Tracing the origin of migratory pest species European starling (Sturnus vulgaris): Application of geochemical fingerprinting in south central British Columbia, Canada KCUPAMA,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN,[email protected] CURTISJEFFERSON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIAOKANAGAN TheEuropeanStarling(Sturnusvulgaris)isaninvasivebirdtoNorthAmericawhereitisanagriculturalpest.InBritish Columbia,Canadapopulationsofstarlingsincreaseinfall,coincidingwithripeningfruits.Starlingsalsocreatedamagein dairyfarmsandfeedlotsbyeatingandcontaminatingfoodandspreadingdiseases.Damagecanbepartlymitigatedbythe useofscaredeterrents.However,scaretechniquesmainlyservetodivertflocksuntiltheybecomeacclimated. Interceptingstarlingsbeforetheymovetofieldsandfarmsisthemostpracticalmeansofpreventingdamagebutrequires knowledgeofthenatalorigin.Withinasmall(20,829squarekm),agriculturallysignificantportionofsouth-central BritishColumbia,theOkanaganValley,weemployedamultivariatestatisticalanalysisofmulti-elementgeochemical fingerprintsinbonetissuethatidentifiedthreedistinctsourcepopulationsofstarlings(northern,centralandsouthern 83-100%).Problembirdstrappedinvineyardsandorchards,andindairyfarmsandfeedlotsweremeasuredand comparedtosourcepopulations.Themajorityofstarlingscaughtinvineyardsandorchards(80%)arederivedfrom withintheOkanaganValley,mainlyfromsouthernandnorthernpopulationsandonly20%areimmigrantstothevalley. Incontrast,themajorityofbirdscaughtatdairyfarmsandfeedlotsareimmigrants(90%),andonly10%arelocalbirds.It isunlikelythatstarlingsfromoutsidetheregionweremisidentifiedasOkanaganValleystarlings,becausethe geochemicalfingerprintsofpopulationsoutsideofthevalleyareverydistinct.Thesefindingssuggestedthatfurther controlofstarlingsinvineyardsandorchards,primarilylocatedinthesouth,betargetedtothesouthernandnorthern regions.Controlofstarlingsindairyfarmsandfeedlots,primarilylocatedinthenorth,willrequireanexpansionofthe trappingprogramoutsidetheregion. Keywords:Europeanstarling,Pest,Geochemicalfingerprints,Migration. Lifehistories:reproduction,senescence TUESDAY11:45,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Hunting promotes slow life histories in brown bears JOANIEVANDEWALLE,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,CENTERFORNORTHERNSTUDIES,QUEBECCENTREFORBIODIVERSITYSCIENCE, [email protected] GABRIELPIGEON,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,QUEBECCENTREFORBIODIVERSITYSCIENCE;ANDREASZEDROSSER,UNIVERSITYCOLLEGE OFSOUTHEASTNORWAY,UNIVERSITYOFNATURALRESOURCESANDLIFESCIENCESVIENNA;JONE.SWENSON,NORWEGIANUNIVERSITY OFLIFESCIENCES,NORWEGIANINSTITUTEFORNATURERESEARCH;FANIEPELLETIER,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,CENTERFOR NORTHERNSTUDIES,QUEBECCENTREFORBIODIVERSITYSCIENCE Huntingistypicallynon-randomandcanartificiallyselectforphenotypictraitsandaffectwildlifepopulationdynamics.In manyhuntingsystems,huntersavoidkillingmembersoffamilygroups(i.e.femalesanddependentoffspring)forethical reasonsorbecausetheyarelegallyprotected.However,thispracticedivertsthehunttowardsnon-reproducingfemales andmayselectforlongermother-offspringassociations,withunknownconsequencesforindividualfitnessand populationdynamics.Inthisstudy,wecontrasttheeffectsoftwotacticsofmaternalcare(providingmaternalcarefor either1.5yearsor2.5years)onindividualfitnessandpopulationdynamics,using>20yearsofdatafromanindividualbasedlong-termstudyofScandinavianbrownbears.Theoccurrenceofthetactic2.5yearshasincreasedinrecentyears from0%before1993toabout26%in1993-2015.Femalesusingthistactichad7%highersurvivalrates,but52%lower recruitmentratescomparedtofemalesusingtactic1.5years.Usingtactic-specificage-structuredpopulationmodels,we showthatthestableage-structureofatheoreticalpopulationconsistingofonlyfemalesusingtactic2.5yearscomprised 13%moreadultfemales.However,highersurvivalwithtactic2.5yearsappearstocompensateforreducedrecruitment, asasymptoticpopulationgrowthrateswerehighlycomparableamongtactics(95%CI:1.5=[1.05,1.13],2.5=[1.05,1.15]). Wealsoshowthatthebesttacticdependsonhuntingpressure,withtactic2.5yearsbecomingincreasinglyadvantageous ashuntingpressureintensifies.Therefore,protectionoffamilygroupshasthepotentialtoslowdownlifehistoriesand drivepopulationdynamicsinhuntedpopulations. Keywords:Largecarnivores,Grizzlybears,Hunting,Reproduction,Populationmodels. Geneticstructureofpopulations TUESDAY14:45,ROOM:COLWOOD Assessing genetic structure in subalpine larch (Larix lyallii), a high-elevation deciduous conifer species MARIEC.VANCE,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA,[email protected] PATRICKVONADERKAS,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA Subalpinelarch(Larixlyallii)isadeciduousconiferthatonlygrowsattimberlineintheCascadeRangeandRocky MountainsofthePacificNorthwest.Predictedclimatechangecouldfurtherreduceavailablehabitatbyincreasingthe frequencyoflate-summerdroughteventsand/orbyencouragingtheupwardmigrationofmorecompetitivetimberline species.Tocopewithitschangingenvironment,subalpinelarchwillberequiredtoadaptinsituorfacemaladaptation andeventualdecline.Unfortunatelythisspeciesmaynotbeparticularlyadaptable.Demographicfactorssuchasa relativelylonggenerationtime(average500years)andlatearrivalatsexualmaturity(100-200years)willslow adaptation.Lowlevelsofgeneticdiversitycouldfurtherlimitthemagnitudeofapotentiallyadaptiveresponseto selection.Toassesstheamountofgeneticvariationwithinpopulationsandthestructureofthatvariationacrossthe landscape,Isampled61populationsdistributedacrossthespecies’naturalrange.Individualsweregenotypedusing singlenucleotidepolymorphisms(SNPs)identifiedviarestrictionenzymeassociatedDNAsequencing(RADseq). Comparedtoitsmorewidelydistributedsisterspecies,westernlarch,subalpinelarchhaslowgeneticdiversity,most likelyduetostrongdriftactingoversuccessivefoundereventsasthespeciesmigratednorthwardaftertheretreatofthe Cordilleranicesheetapproximately10,000yearsago.Elucidatingpatternsofgeneticdiversityinthisspecieswillidentify geneticallyuniquepopulationsthatshouldbeprioritizedforfutureconservationeffortsandhelpmanagersdevelopa conservationplanforthisspecies. Keywords:Populationgenetics,Geneticvariation,Adaptation,Climatechange,Plants. Birdmigration TUESDAY09:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Large variation in migration routes of hybrid flycatchers THORVEEN,QUESTUNIVERSITY,[email protected] JAKUBRYBINSKI,UPPSALAUNIVERSITY;KIERADELMORE,MAXPLANCKINSTITUTEFOREVOLUTIONARYBIOLOGY;ANNAQVARNSTRÖM, UPPSALAUNIVERSITY Longdistanceavianmigrationoftenfollowswelldefinedroutes,asdeviationsarebelievedtobeselectedagainst.Hybrids betweenspecieswithdistinctmigratoryroutesareoftenbelievedtofollowanintermediaterouteandarepredictedto faceincreasedmortality.Hybridsbetweenthecollaredandpiedflycatcherhoweverdonothavereducedreturnratesto thebreedinggrounds,despitetheverydifferenteastern(collared)andwestern(pied)migrationroutesandwintering sitesoftheparentalspecies.Usingsmalllight-levelrecordingdevices(geolocators)werevealedthemigrationroutesof twohybrids.Bothhybridshaveacollaredmotherandpiedfather,buttheytakeverydifferentroutes.Wediscussthe implicationsoftheseresultsforourunderstandingofavianmigration. Keywords:Birds,Migration,Behaviouralecology,Hybridization. Thetensionbetweenscienceandadvocacyinecology,evolution,andconservationbiologysymposium TUESDAY08:00,ROOM:SAANICH Safeguarding scientific credibility in ecology and conservation biology MARKVELLEND,UNIVERSITÉDESHERBROOKE,[email protected] Whenlearningofastudyfundedbyanagrochemicalcompanyfindingnoadverseeffectsofapesticide,thetypical ecologist'sresponseisarolloftheeyes,signalingsomethingbetweenskepticismanddismissal.How,then,doyou supposethegeneralpublicperceivesscientistsalliedinsomewaywithenvironmentaladvocacyorganizationsor protectedareas(i.e.,manyCSEEmembers)whentheyreportthatnatureisintroubleandinneedofprotection?Fromits inceptionthefieldofconservationbiologyhasbeenbasedonthepostulatethat'diversityoforganismsisgood',aclear declarationofvalues.Otherwidelysharedvaluesamongecologistsincludeapreferencefornativeovernon-native species,andforpristineoverhuman-modifiedhabitats.Wearethusfacedwiththemajorchallengeofdisentangling politicalmotivationsfromobjectiveinterpretationofevidencewhendrawingconclusionsabouttheconsequencesof thingslikehabitatalterationornon-nativespecies.Researchersinthefieldofsciencestudiestakeus'scientists'astheir objectsofstudy,andhavediagnosedaclearpotentialthreatoftheabove-describedissuestoscientificcredibility. Countermeasuresthatcanhelpsafeguardscientificcredibilityinclude(i)aconcertedefforttoapplyanequallycriticaleye tostudieswhoseresultsalignwithpre-heldvaluesastothosethatdonot;(ii)recognizingwhenscientificresultsdonot makeamajorcontributiontoapolicydebate(i.e.,whenthedebateisreallyaboutcompetingvalues);(iii)attemptingto broadenratherthannarrowtherangeofoptionsthatpolicymakersmightconsider. Policyandplanning MONDAY16:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Global Human Footprint project OSCARVENTER,UNIVERSITYOFNORTHERNBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Humanpressuresontheenvironmentarechangingspatiallyandtemporally,withprofoundimplicationsfortheplanet's biodiversityandhumaneconomies.InthistalkIwillpresentourworktomapinfrastructures,landcoverandhuman accessintonaturalareastoconstructaglobally-standardizedmeasureofthecumulativehumanfootprintonthe terrestrialenvironmentat1squarekmresolutionfrom1993to2009.Iwillalsodiscussourfindingsusingthesedatato quantifywildernessdecline,ecologicalconditioninworldheritagesitesandglobalspeciesendangerment. Keywords:Speciesatrisk,Biodiversity,Landusechange,Spatialmodel,Global. Anthropogenicinfluencesonhabitatselection TUESDAY16:45,ROOM:SAANICH Understanding predation and energy limitations on woodland caribou recruitment through habitat selection REBECCAVIEJOU,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] MADELINEMCGREER,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;ERINMALLON,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;ANDREWM.KITTLE,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH; TALAVGAR,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;JIMA.BAKER,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;GLENS.BROWN,ONTARIOMINISTRYOFNATURAL RESOURCES;JEVONHAGENS,ONTARIOMINISTRYOFNATURALRESOURCES;EDIWACHEWSKI,ONTARIOMINISTRYOFNATURAL RESOURCES;ANNAMOSSER,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;BRENTR.PATTERSON,CANADIANFORESTSERVICE;DOUGE.B.REID,ONTARIO MINISTRYOFNATURALRESOURCES;ARTR.RODGERS,ONTARIOMINISTRYOFNATURALRESOURCES;JENNIFERSHUTER,ONTARIO MINISTRYOFNATURALRESOURCES;GARRETTM.STREET,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;IAND.THOMPSON,CANADIANFORESTSERVICE; JOHNM.FRYXELL,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH Therelativeimportanceoftop-downandbottom-upsourcesofpopulationlimitationcanbeindicatedbythestrengthof habitatselectionacrossspatialscalesandseasons.Weexaminedthefactorsinfluencinghabitatselectionbywoodland caribouduringtheearlyoffspringrecruitmentperiodinnorthernOntariobycomparingthestrengthofhabitatselection onthebasisoffoodavailabilityandavoidanceofpredationriskforfemaleswithcalvesvs.thosewithoutcalves.We combinedestablishedmethodsoffittingresourceandstepselectionfunctionsderivedfromtelemetrydatawiththe newertechniquesofidentifyingcalfstatusfromvideocollardataandseasonalhabitatselectionanalysisthroughlatent selectiondifferencefunctions.Wefoundthatfemaleswithcalvesavoidedpredationandselectedfoodavailabilitymore stronglythanfemaleswithoutcalveswithintheirhomeranges.Atfinerscales,femaleswithcalvesavoidedpredation morestronglythanfemaleswithoutcalves.Femaleswithcalvessacrificedfoodacquisitiontoenhancepredation avoidanceuponcalving,whereasfemaleswithoutcalvessacrificedpredationavoidancetoenhancefoodacquisition acrossthesameseason.Thesebehavioralresponsessuggestthathabitatselectionbywoodlandcaribouisinfluencedby reproductivestate,particularlywithrespecttopredationriskbutsecondarilybytheavailabilityofenergy-richforage species. Keywords:Caribou,Habitatselection,Speciesatrisk,Foraging,Reproduction,Predation,Mammals. Aquaticecology TUESDAY13:45,ROOM:VIEWROYAL How Pacific salmon shape streams and riparian forests: Implications for ecosystembased management JESSICAC.WALSH,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] JANEE.PENDRAY,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;KYLEA.ARTELLE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY;SEANC.GODWIN,SIMONFRASER UNIVERSITY;HOLLYK.KINDSVATER,RUTGERSUNIVERSITY;JOHND.REYNOLDS,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY Determiningobjectivesforecosystem-basedmanagementcanbehinderedbylimitedknowledgeoftheecological thresholdsatwhichecosystemsmaximisetheirproductivity.Pacificsalmonarewellknownfortheirinfluenceon temperateterrestrialandfreshwaterecosystems,throughthedispersalofmarinederivednutrientsandecosystem engineeringofstreambedswhenspawning.Inaddition,theysupportlargecommercial,recreationalandsubsistence fisheries,particularlyalongthewestcoastofCanadaandUSA.Thetrade-offsassociatedwithmaintaininghealthysalmon populations,supportingtheirsurroundingecosystems,andmaximisingtheeconomicandsocialbenefitsfromfishingare largelyunknown.Weconductedacomprehensiveliteraturereviewofstudiesthatinvestigatedtheeffectofsalmon densitiesonecologicalprocessesandcomponents,toidentifyhowmanysalmonarerequiredtosupportfunctional ecosystems.Over50studieshavequantifiedtheinfluenceofsalmondensityonspeciesabundance,diversity,food provision,concentrationofmarinederivedisotopes,nutrientenhancementandphenology.Theserelationshipsoccur acrossadiversesetoftaxonomicgroups,includingbears,birds,aquaticandterrestrialinsects,freshwaterfish, periphyton,plants,inadditiontoabioticfactors.Around25%oftherelationshipswerebestdescribedwithanasymptotic curve,whileanotherquarterwerelinearrelationshipswithnoobservedsaturationathighersalmondensities.The asymptoticthresholdofsalmondensityrequiredtomaximizeeachecosystemprocessdifferedacrosstaxa.Understanding thediversityandmagnitudeoftheseecologicalthresholdsisanimportantstepforimplementingecosystem-based management,toensurethatsalmonfishingquotasadequatelyaccountfortherequirementsofupstreamecosystems. Keywords:Management,Salmon,Ecosystemfunction,Fish,Forest,Literaturesynthesis. UncertaintyinEcologyandConservationSymposium MONDAY09:30,ROOM:SAANICH The widespread failure of adaptive management in fisheries CARLJ.WALTERS,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Phylogenetics MONDAY11:00,ROOM:WCOAST Tracing the footprints of a moving Setophaga warbler hybrid zone SILUWANG,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] DARRENIRWIN,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA Theevolutionofreproductiveisolationisthekeyprocessofspeciation.Itcanbeobservedinhybridzones,where previouslydivergedlineagesinterbreed.Manyhybridzonesaremovingovertime,butthecauseandconsequencesof suchmovementisnotwellunderstood.TheTownsend’sandHermitWarblerhybridzoneintheCascadeMountainsofthe PacificNorthwestisagreatopportunitytounderstandthedynamicsofhybridzonemovement.Thishybridzonehasbeen movingsouthovertime,potentiallyduetomalecompetitivedisplacement.Weestimatedwarblerplumagehybridindices (HI)overdecadesandhavedetectedcontinuoussouthwardmovementinthishybridzone.Wefurtherinvestigatedother signaturesofhybridzonemovementwithineachtimeperiod.Bothclineanalysisandlinkagedisequilibriumrevealed hybridzonemovementdynamics.Toinvestigatethecauseofhybridzonemovement,wetestedthecompetitive displacementhypothesis:thatthemoreaggressivetaxonpushestheothertaxonaway,drivingthehybridzonetowards therecessivetaxon.Wemeasuredmaleterritorialbehaviorbyintruderstimulationduringbreedingseasons. Interestingly,althoughindividualmaleaggressionisnotassociatedwithplumageHI,meanmaleaggressionispositively correlatedwiththeshiftofHIateachsiteovertime.Thissuggestslocalaggressionculturemighthavebeenfacilitating and/orshapedbyintrogressioninthismovinghybridzone.Werevealedapotentialcauseandconsequencesofthe movinghybridzone,whichwillenablebetterunderstandingofspeciationandbiodiversity. Keywords:Hybridization,Reproduction,Birds,Populationrange. Matechoice,hybridization MONDAY14:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Sexual conflict can constrain the evolution of reinforcement ALISONWARDLAW,UNIVERSITYOFMINNESOTA,[email protected] YANIVBRANDVAIN,UNIVERSITYOFMINNESOTA Characterizingtheforcesmaintainingspeciesboundariesisalongstandinggoalofevolutionarybiology.Therecent divergenceofZeamaysmays(hereafter,maize)anditswildrelativeZeamaysmexicana(hereafter,mexicana)offersan opportunitytostudytheearlystagesofthespeciationprocessandtheconsequencesofmisalignedmaleandfemale interests.Insympatry,maizeandmexicanaproducelowfitnesshybrids.Inthiscase,evolutionarytheorypredictsthat naturalselectionwill'reinforce'theevolutionofprematingisolatingbarriers.Indeed,thesesubspeciesareseparatedby threeknownpollen-pistilincompatibilitiesthatarefoundinsympatrybutnotallopatry.However,thereisalsoevidence thatconflictbetweenmalesandfemalesbreaksdownreinforcementaspolleninsomepopulationsofmaizecan overcomethepistilbarrierofmexicana.Theconflictbetweenthesexesarisesbecausefemalesareselectedtoavoidthe productionoflowfitnesshybrids,whilemalesthatavoidgametewastagebyfertilizingheterospecificshavehigherfitness thanmalesthatcannotovercomeheterospecificpistilbarriers.Inspiredbymaize,Idevelopedageneralpopulation geneticmodeltotrackallelefrequenciesatpollen-pistilincompatibilitylociinsympatricandallopatricpopulationsof twoincipientplantspecies.Ishowthatinsomeconditionstheevolutionofreinforcementistransientandallelesto overcomepistilbarriersspreadintobothspecieswhenfoundtogetherinsympatry.Thetransientevolutionof reinforcementmayexplainthepresenceofmultiplepollen-pistilincompatibilitiesbetweenmaizeandmexicana,and moregenerally,contributetoourunderstandingofthebreakdownofisolatingbarriersbetweenspecies. Keywords:Evolution,Speciation,Plants,Reproduction. Parasites,parasitoids,pathogens WEDNESDAY11:45,ROOM:OAKBAY2 The importance of dyadic social ties for pathogen dynamics in a gregarious ungulate QUINNWEBBER,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY,[email protected] ERICVANDERWAL,MEMORIALUNIVERSITY Incorporatinghostbehaviouralvariationintoepidemiologicalmodelsisimportantforpredictinghost-pathogen dynamics.Animalslivingathighdensitiesorwithmanystrongsocialinteractionsarepredictedtohavegreaterriskof acquiringpathogens.Usingsocialnetworkanalyseswetestedthehypothesisthatvariationthestrengthofdyadicsocial interactionswouldinfluencepathogendynamicsinelk(Cervuscanadensis).Wequantifiedfine-scaledyadicsocial interactionsforcaptiveelkatthreeexperimentallymanipulateddensitiesandwildelkattwonaturaldensities.We appliedsusceptible-infectedepidemiologicalmodelstoourelknetworkstoinfertherelationshipbetweenfine-scalehost socialityandmodel-predictedpathogenprevalence.Networkswerefilteredbasedonfourassociationthresholdsto determinehowvariationinthestrengthofdyadicsocialassociationsinfluencedpathogendynamics.Oursimulations suggestthatsocialityinteractswithpopulationdensitytopredictpathogenprevalence.Athighdensities,elkhadstrong socialassociations,resultinginhigherpathogenprevalence.Wealsoobservedaneffectofpathogenvirulence,captured byedge-filtering,wherehighlyvirulentpathogenslikelydisseminatewithinnetworksindependentofdensityorsociality, whilepathogenswithlowvirulencefade-outatlow,butnothigh,densities.Ourresultshighlighthowvariationinthe interactionbetweenhostsociality,density,andpathogenvirulencecandriveanepidemic,withpotentialforpathogensto switchfromdensity-tofrequency-dependent.Elkarereservoirhostsfornumerousimportantinfectiousdiseasesandour modelssuggestthathostsociality,asafunctionofdensity,coulddrivepathogendynamicswithinandbetweenelkgroups withimportantimplicationsforelkasreservoirhosts. Keywords:Epidemiology,Socialbehaviour,Disease,Densitydependence,Mammals. LinkingEnvironmentalLawandScienceSymposium WEDNESDAY09:15,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Watershed connections in environmental decision-making JILLWEITZ,SALMONBEYONDBORDERS,[email protected] Thedevelopmentofsharedwatershedsrequiresacoordinatedapproachtogovernancethatensuresequitableand reasonableutilizationofresources.TheripariannationsoftheUnitedStatesandCanadasharefifteentransboundary rivers.Alaska'sborderwithB.C.andtheYukoncompriseseightofthefifteenUS/Canadatransboundaryrivers.Threeof theseparticularwatershedsaresomeofthelargestsalmonproducingriversintheworld,flowingfromNorthwestBritish ColumbiabeforepouringintothewatersofSoutheastAlaska-aneconomicpowerhouseforthecommercialfishingand tourismindustriesoftheUnitedStates.Inthispresentation,IwillgiveanoverviewoftheworkunderwayinSoutheast AlaskaandNorthwestBritishColumbiainregardstotheaforementionedtransboundaryTaku,Stikine,andUnuk watershedsthathousemorethantenlarge-scaleB.C.minesindifferentstagesofdevelopment,andthecallmadefrom thousandsofAlaskanstosecureenforceableprotectionsandfinancialassurancesindefenseoftherivers,jobs,andwayof lifeinthisiconicregion. Aquaticecology TUESDAY14:00,ROOM:VIEWROYAL Diversity meets decomposition: Are local decomposer communities influenced by local riparian conditions? NATALIEWESTWOOD,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] ALISONDERRY,UNIVERSITÉDEQUÉBECÀMONTRÉAL Thelinkbetweenecosystemfunctionandbiodiversityhasbeenhotlydebatedinthepast,asthisrelationshipisnotwell understood.Thisrelationshipisoftencomplicatedandfrequentlydependentonlocalfactorsandregionaldifferences. Decomposition—anessentialecosystemprocess—isresponsiblefortherecyclingofnutrientsandbridgingaquaticand terrestrialecosystems.Ourstudyexaminedifmacroinvertebratesarelocallyoptimizedtodecomposelocalleaflitterover non-local(homefieldadvantage).Usingspeckledalder(Alnusincanarugosa),weperformedareciprocaltransplant betweentwostreamsintwodifferentbiomes.Wemeasuredpercentdryweightlosstoestimatedecompositionand identifiedmacroinvertebratestofamilylevel.Usingthemacroinvertebratedata,wedeterminedtaxonomicabundance, richness,evenness,anddiversity.Wedidnotfindanyevidenceforhomefieldadvantageineithertheleafdecomposition orinbiodiversityofthemacroinvertebratecommunity.However,bothdiversityandevennesswerestronglypositively correlatedwithdecomposition,withthehighestdiversity,evenness,anddecompositionoccurringinthemixedwoods stream.Theseresultsareconsistentwithanumberofotherstudiesthathavefoundlittleevidenceofhomefield advantageindecomposercommunities,whilesupportingthatthereisapositiverelationshipbetweenecosystemfunction andbiodiversity. Keywords:Ecosystemfunction,Transplant,Macroinvertebrate,Biodiversity,Decomposition. Ecology&EvolutioninaSocialContextSymposium TUESDAY08:45,ROOM:COLWOOD Ecological variation, mate sharing, and the potential for sperm competition in Wellington tree weta TINAWEY,UNIVERSITÉOFQUÉBECAMONTRÉAL,[email protected] CLINTD.KELLY,UNIVERSITÉOFQUÉBECAMONTRÉAL Ecologicalvariationinresourcescaninfluencethedistributionsandencounterratesofpotentialmatesandcompetitors, andconsequentlytheopportunityforsexualselection.Insystemswithspermcompetition,ecologicalfactorsthat influencethelikelihoodthatfemalesmatemultiplycouldalsoaffectthepotentialnumberofspermcompetitors.In Wellingtontreeweta(Hemideinacrassidens),thesizeoftreecavities(calledgalleries)usedasrefugesandmatingsitesis animportantdeterminantoffemaledistributionand,asaresult,opportunityforsexualselectionanddirectionalselection onmaleweaponry.Femaletreewetamatemultiplyandstoresperm,butpatternsofpotentialspermcompetitionhave notbeensystematicallyinvestigated.Inthisstudy,weaskedifgallerysizeormaleweaponrysizeaffectedthestructureof connectionsamongpotentialspermcompetitors.Wefoundthatfemalewetaweremorelikelytomatemultiplyinsmall galleriesandthatpotentialspermcompetitionintensitywashigherinsmallgalleries.However,maleweaponrywasnot associatedwithdifferencesinnumberofpotentialspermcompetitors,andthenumberofpotentialspermcompetitors wasnegativelycorrelatedwithestimatedmatingsuccessregardlessofgallerysize.Overallourresultsindicatethat ecologicalvariationinaresourceislikelytoinfluencenumbersofspermcompetitorsandthatpost-copulatorysexual selectioninthissystemcouldincreaseexpectedvariationinoverallreproductivesuccess. Borealforestregeneration TUESDAY09:45,ROOM:SIDNEY Drivers of post-fire understory regeneration in the conifer dominated boreal forest of southern Northwest Territories ALISONWHITE,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] STEVECUMMING,UNIVERSITÉLAVAL;NICOLADAY,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY;JILLJOHNSTONE,UNIVERSITYOFSASKATCHEWAN; MICHELLEMACK,NORTHERNARIZONAUNIVERSITY;MERRITTTURETSKY,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH;XANTHEWALKER,NORTHERN ARIZONAUNIVERSITY;JENNIFERBALTZER,WILFRIDLAURIERUNIVERSITY In2014,anunprecedented3.4MhaofborealforestburnedintheNorthwestTerritories(NWT).Theborealforestis adaptedtoregularwildfirewithfireregimeplayingakeyroleinplantcommunityassemblypost-fire.Thefrequencyand severityoffirefiltersplantregenerationstrategies,suchastheabilitytoresproutfromundergroundtissue. Understandinghowvariationsinfireseverityandotherenvironmentalvariablesimpactthemechanismsofunderstory establishmentmayenableustopredictplantregenerationresponsestochangingfireregimesinthefaceofclimate change.ThisresearchaddresseswhetherthesouthernborealforestoftheNWTisexperiencingchangesinits successionaltrajectory,asseeninotherwesternboreallocations,followingthemostseverefireyearonrecord.Altering communitycompositioncanimpactecosystemfunctioningandwildlifehabitat.Inthefirsttwogrowingseasonsfollowing theNWTfire,weestablished220vegetationplotsacrosstwoecoregions;arangeofabioticandbioticvariableswas measured,includingdepthoforganiclayer,fireseverityandpre-firestandcompositionthroughoutconifer-dominated stands.Speciespresenceandmodesofregenerationofvascularspecieswererecorded.Basedonpreviousworkinthe borealforest,itwashypothesizedthatvariationsinfireseveritywouldimpacttherelativesuccessofplantregeneration strategies,influencingcommunitycompositionpost-fire.Resultssuggestthatresidualorganicmaterialandtheseasonal timingoftheburnmaybekeydeterminantsinpredictingthedominantmodeofregeneration.Theresultsofthisresearch haveimplicationsformodelingwildlifehabitatandmanagingforestsinachangingclimate. Keywords:Forest,Fire,Disturbance,Climatechange. Remotecameranetworkstoscaleupecologicalinsightsandconservationapplicationssymposium TUESDAY09:45,ROOM:THEATRE Monitoring large-scale trends in wildlife populations using remote cameras JESSEWHITTINGTON,PARKSCANADARESOURCECONSERVATION,[email protected] RICHARDCHANDLER,UNIVERSITYOFGEORGIA;ANNEFORSHNER,PARKSCANADARESOURCECONSERVATION;MARKHEBBLEWHITE, UNIVERSITYOFMONTANA;BARBJOHNSTON,PARKSCANADARESOURCECONSERVATION;DEREKPETERSEN,PARKSCANADARESOURCE CONSERVATION;BRENDASHEPHERD,PARKSCANADARESOURCECONSERVATION Remotecamerasrepresentapromisingmethodformonitoringwildlifepopulationsacrossvastlandscapesbecausethey arenon-invasiveandarerelativelyinexpensive.Wehighlighttwocasestudieswhereremotecameraswereusedto monitortrendsinabundanceanddistributionalongtheCanadianRockyMountains.First,wecombinedthreeyearsof remotecameraandGPSradio-collardatatoestimategrizzlybeardensityinBanff,Kootenay,andYohoNationalParks.We appliedageneralizedspatialmark-resightmodelthatincludedboththecollaringandresightingprocesses.Inclusionofa spatialcapture-recapturesubmodelforthecollaringprocesswasrequiredbecausethemarkedandunmarkedbears differedintheirspatialdistributionandthusencounterratesatcameras.Weaveragedclosedpopulationdensity estimatesfrom2012-2014.Densityestimatesof13.6+/-1.7grizzlybearsper1,000squarekmsuggestthepopulation wasstablecomparedtopreviousDNA-basedestimates.Second,wecombinedremotecameradatafromWatertonLakes NationalParkthroughtoJasperNationalParktoassesschangesinoccupancyfor14mammalspeciesfrom2011through 2015.Resultsfromthemulti-speciesmulti-yearoccupancymodelwerecombinedintoawildlifeoccupancyindexasa metricofecologicalintegrity.Together,thesestudiesdemonstratethepowerofremotecamerastoefficientlymonitor changesintheabundanceanddistributionofwildlife. Thetensionbetweenscienceandadvocacyinecology,evolution,andconservationbiologysymposium TUESDAY09:45,ROOM:SAANICH Conservation of peripheral populations illustrate the tension between advice and advocacy in the absence of scientific consensus JEANNETTEWHITTON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] Opportunitiesforacademicstobroadentheircontributionstosocietyareincreasingly(ifnotuniversally)valuedasa meansofextendingtheimpactandrelevanceofourexpertise.Evenamongengagedscientists,therearediverseviews abouttherightandwrongwaytoproceed.Theblurrylinesbetweencommunicatingandadvocatingforscience, providingpolicyadviceandadvocatingforpolicyoutcomes,areperceivedandacteduponbyindividualswithunique perspectives,includingtheirownimplicitvalue-drivenbiases.Becausesociety'svaluesarealsoreflectedinlawsand policies,therangeofoptionsthatscientistsareaskedtoevaluatemaybelimitedbyandentangledwiththevalues embeddedinpolicies.OnesuchexampleinvolvesSARA,Canada'sSpeciesatRiskAct,whichprovidesfortherecoveryof endangeredorthreatenedspeciesinCanada,placingimplicitvalueonbiodiversityconservation.MorethanhalfofSARA listedspeciesareperipheralpopulationsofgloballysecurespeciesmorebroadlydistributedoutsideCanada.Among conservationbiologists,thereisnoclearconsensusaboutwhetherorhowtoprioritizeconservationtheseperipheral populations.Intheabsenceofclearadvicederivingfromscience,shouldscientistsadvocatefortheuseofthe precautionaryprincipletojustifyconservingthesepopulations?Wouldpromotingtheexclusionofperipheralpopulations fromSARAprotectionsbeanylessfraught?Istherearoleforscienceinthisdiscussion?Thisexampleillustratesthe complexrelationshipbetweenembeddedvalues,scientificconsensusandscienceadvicethatcontributetomaintaining thetensionbetweenscienceandadvocacy. UncertaintyinEcologyandConservationSymposium MONDAY08:45,ROOM:SAANICH Managing natural resources in the face of uncertainty in future environments BYRONK.WILLIAMS,THEWILDLIFESOCIETY,[email protected] Themanagementofnaturalresourcesfacesanumberofuncertaintieswithpotentialconsequencesforresourcedynamics anddecisionmaking.Oneexpressionofuncertaintyisalimitedabilitytorecognizefutureresourcetrajectoriesin responsetomanagementstrategy.Thisinturnreflectslimitationsonourunderstandingaboutresourcedynamicsand theprocessesinfluencingdynamics,andlimitationsonthevalueofdecisionmakingitself.InthistalkIpresenta frameworkfordecisionmakingintermsofstochasticresourcetransitions,rewards,andvaluation,andincorporate4 uncertaintyfactorsinit.Ithenfocuson2factorsthatareprevalentinnaturalresourcesmanagement,namelypartial observabilityandprocessorstructuraluncertainty.Finally,Ishowhowoptimaldecisionmakinginthepresenceof uncertaintycanbetiedtometricsforthevalueofinformation. Landscapes TUESDAY15:45,ROOM:WESTCOAST Rapid evolution accelerates the expansion of plant populations in fragmented experimental landscapes JENNIFERWILLIAMS,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] BRUCEE.KENDALL,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIA;JONATHANLEVINE,ETHZURICH Topredicthowquicklynativespecieswillmigrateinresponsetoclimatechangeandbiologicalinvasionswillexpandin theirnewrangesrequiresunderstandingtheecologicalandevolutionarydynamicsofspreadingpopulations.Theory predictsthatevolutioncanacceleratethespreadvelocityofaspecies,butempiricaltestsarerare,leavingtheextentand predictabilityofevolutioninspreadingpopulationsnotwellunderstood.Further,howmuchthepatchinessofa landscape,whichcanbeanimportantcontrolovertraitsunderselection,influencesthisprocessisunknown.We manipulatedtheresponsetoselectioninpopulationsofamodelplantspecies(Arabidopsisthaliana)spreadingthrough replicatedexperimentallandscapesthatvariedinpatchiness.Aftersixgenerationsofchange,evolvingpopulationsspread 11%furtherthannon-evolvingpopulationsincontinuouslyfavorablelandscapes,and200%furtherinthemost fragmentedlandscapes.Thegreatereffectofevolutiononspreadinpatchierlandscapeswasconsistentwiththeevolution ofdispersalandcompetitiveability.Weconcludethataccountingforevolutionarychangemaybecriticalwhenpredicting thevelocityofrangeexpansions. LinkingEnvironmentalLawandScienceSymposium WEDNESDAY09:00,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM How Haida law embraces traditional and scientific knowledge TERRI-LYNNWILLIAMS-DAVIDSON,WHITERAVENLAWCORPORATION,[email protected] Forestecology TUESDAY14:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Evaluating differences in plant community composition and stand structure caused by road fragmentation in forested wetlands CAITLINWILLIER,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA,[email protected] KEVINDEVITO,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA;SCOTTE.NIELSEN,UNIVERSITYOFALBERTA Roadscanactasdamstowaterflowwhentheydisrupthydrologicallinkages.Whenthishappenstreesontheupstream sideofaroadbecomewaterloggedresultinginstuntedgrowthormortality.Incontrast,thewatertableonthe downstreamsideofaroadisreducedcausinggreaterrootdepthandgrowth(height).However,thisphenomenonisnot consistentlyobservedacrossallwetlands.Infact,thesameroadconstructedthroughtwowetlandsmaydisrupttree growthpatternsinone,whiletheotherappearsunaffected.Thisstudyexaminestheconditionsthatmaintainwetland treestructureandplantcompositionwithroaddisturbancesbasedonlandscapepositionandsoilsubstrate.Specifically, weusedLiDARderivedtreecanopyheightandcoverfrom96peatlandsandvegetationfieldsampleplotsfrom48 peatlandsinNorthEasternAlbertatoidentifywetlandfactorsthatresultinvegetationchangeswhenroadsarepresent. Weusedgeneralizedlinearmixedmodelstoexplainthevariationincanopyheightandcoverbasedonsideofroad, substrate,andlandscapeposition.Resultsfromthisstudywillhelpguidemanagementdecisionsbyidentifyingpeatland andsubstratetypesthataremoresusceptibletoroadimpactsandthussitestoavoidroaddevelopment. Keywords:Peatland,Landusechange,Landscapeconfiguration,Fragmentation,Roads. Salmonidecologyandevolution MONDAY14:00,ROOM:SAANICH Long-term shifts in the phenology of juvenile salmon migration across species and location JONATHANW.MOORE,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY SAMANTHAWILSON,SIMONFRASERUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Climatechangeisalteringthelengthofseasonsresultinginearlierspringsandlaterfalls,butitisunclearifthelife historiesofanimalscankeeppacewiththischange.Warmingspringtemperatureshaveresultedinadvancing phenologiesofspecies,however,notallspeciesorpopulationsareshiftingatthesamerate.Differingratesof phenologicalchangecandecoupleinterspecificinteractions.Forexample,climatechangeisadvancingthemarinespring planktonbloomatarateatwhichseawardmigratingjuvenilesalmonmaybestrugglingtotrack.Timingoftheseaward migrationofjuvenilePacificsalmonissignalledbyacombinationofenvironmentalcuessuchastemperature,riverflow, andphotoperiod,andthesecombinationsdifferbyspeciesandpopulation.Thesemigratorycuesmayenablecertain speciesorpopulationstomorecloselytrackchangingpatternsinoceantemperatureandfoodavailabilityinthemarine environment,comparedtoothers.Weexamineddailyoutmigrationtimingacross20yearsforpink,sockeye,chum, chinook,andcohosalmonandsteelheadtroutfrompopulationsrangingfromCaliforniatoAlaska.Thedegreeofchange inoutmigrationtimingvariedbetweenspeciesandacrosslocations.Thesedifferingratesofphenologicalchange demonstratethatnotallspeciesarekeepingpacewiththechangingclimate. Keywords:Phenologychanges,Salmon,Climatechange,Interactions,Resourcelimitation,Migration. Forestecology TUESDAY15:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Should I stay or should I go? Range stasis versus range shifts of plants in the North Cascades RACHELWILSON,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] AMYANGERT,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;CHRISKOPP,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA;JANNEKEHILLE-RISLAMBERS, WESTERNUNIVERSITY Asanthropogenicclimatechangeprogresses,themostimmediateoptionformanyspeciestomitigatefitnesscostswillbe totrackchangingdistributionsofsuitablehabitat.Comparisonsofcontemporarydatatohistoricalbaselinesindicatethat climatechangehasalreadyalteredspeciesrangesandabundances.Thoughgeneralpatternsareslowlyemerging,there appearstobeconsiderablevariationinresponsesamongspecies,someofwhichmaybeexplainedbydifferencesin functionaltraits.WeresurveyedhistoricalvegetationplotsinNorthCascadesNationalParktodetectelevationalrange shiftsandchangesinabundanceofplantspeciesovera30-yearperiod,duringwhichtimetheareahaswarmedby0.8 degreesC.Wethentestedwhetherspeciesvariationinrangeshiftscouldbeexplainedbyfunctionaltraits.Overall,most speciesexhibitedrangestasis.Ofthespeciesthatinitiallyappearedtoexhibitarangeshift,morethanhalfwere eliminatedafteraccountingforfiresanddifferencesinsurveyeffortbetweenyears.Mostspeciesappearedtodecreasein abundance,thoughthistrendwasoftennotsignificant.Predictionsfromtraitmodelswereinconsistent,dependingonthe modelingframeworkandthemetricusedforrangeshifts.Rangestasiswaslikelydrivenbydispersallimitation,butmay havealsoresultedfromacclimation,slowdemography,microclimatebufferingofatmospherictemperatures,orsome combinationoftheseandotherfactors.Variationinthedegreeofrangeshiftscouldnotbeexplainedsatisfactorilyby functionaltraits,castingdoubtontheiruseinageneralframeworktopredictfutureresponses. Keywords:Plants,Climatechange,Populationrange,Functionaltraits,Speciesdistribution. EcologicalandEvolutionaryDynamicsinFluctuatingEnvironmentsSymposium MONDAY08:45,ROOM:THEATRE The role of phenological assembly in plant communities ELIZABETHM.WOLKOVICH,HARVARDUNIVERSITY,[email protected] Inrecentyearsincreasingattentionhasfocusedonplantphenologyasanimportantindicatorofclimatechange,asmany plantshaveshiftedtheirleafingandfloweringearlierwithincreasingtemperatures.Asdatahaveaccumulated, researchershavefoundacorrelationbetweenphenologicalresponsestowarmingandplantperformanceandinvasions. Yetalongsidethisincreasinginterestinphenology,importantissuesremainunanswered:responsestowarmingfor speciesatthesamesiteorinthesamegenusvaryoftenbyweeksormoreandtheexplanatorypowerofphenologyfor performanceandinvasionswhenanalyzedacrossdiversedatasetsremainslow.Progresscancomefromtheroleof phenologyinplantcommunityassembly.Inthislightphenologyishypothesizedasacriticaltraitdefiningspecies temporalnichesandthuswemaypredicthowthephenologyandphenologicalcuesofdifferentspecieswithina communitywillvary.HereIgiveanoverviewofthesepredictionsandthentestthemusingtwoapproaches.First,I reviewmeta-analyticfindingsfromlong-termobservationaldataonhowthephenologyofplantspecieswithindiverse communitieshasshifted.NextIshowresultsfromexperimentalandobservationalresearchof28speciesinnortheastern NorthAmericantemperateforests;Ifindthatspecieswithinthiscommunityshowadiversifiedsetofphenologicalcues. Myresultssuggestphenologymaybeacriticalassemblytraitinmanytemperatecommunities.Therefore,shiftsin phenologywithglobalchangemayalsofundamentallydisassembleandreassemblecommunities. SeagrassecologyandconservationalongPacificandAtlanticcoastssymposium TUESDAY10:30,ROOM:OAKBAY2 Secondary production of macrobenthic communities in seagrass (Zostera marina, eelgrass) beds and bare soft-sediments across differing environmental conditions in Atlantic Canada MELISAC.WONG,BEDFORDINSTITUTEOFOCEANOGRAPHY,FISHERIESANDOCEANSCANADA,[email protected] Incoastalecosystems,structuredhabitats(e.g.,eelgrassbeds)areoftenassumedtohavehigherecosystemfunctionthan non-structuredhabitats(e.g.,mudflats).However,suchrelationshipsarealsolikelydependentonthesurrounding environmentalconditions.Inthisstudy,Iexaminetherobustnessofhabitat-specificdifferencesinecosystemfunction (usingsecondaryproductionasametric)foreelgrassandbaresoft-sedimenthabitatslocatedacrossvarying environmentalconditions.Ialsodeterminerelationshipsofsecondaryproductionwithmeasuredenvironmental variables(waterdepth,temperature,exposure,sedimentandplantproperties).Communitysecondaryproductionand theunderlyingfaunalstructurewereestimatedfrombenthicinfaunaandepifauna(=500m).Communityproductionwas higherinseagrasscomparedtobaresedimentonlywhenconditionsincludedhighexposure,sandysedimentswithlow organiccontent,anddeepcoolwater.Multiplelinearregressionsrelatingcommunitysecondaryproductiontothe environmentalvariablesexplained60%ofthevariance,whileconstrainedordinationsexplained16%ofthecommunity structure.Importantdeterminantsofcommunityproductionwereshootdensity,watertemperatureanddepth,and exposure.Communitystructurewasinfluencedbythesevariablesandalsosedimentsandcontentandbelowgroundplant biomass,althoughothervariablesremainunidentified.Thisstudyshowsthathabitat-specificrelationshipsincommunity secondaryproductionandstructuremaynotbeconsistentacrossvaryingenvironmentalconditions.Furthermore, seagrassbedsmaynotalwaysprovidehigherecosystemfunctionthanadjacentbaresoft-sediments.Thisimpliesthat whenusingsecondaryproductiontoevaluateecosystemfunction,thesurroundingenvironmentalconditionsshouldbe consideredinadditiontothepresenceorabsenceofhabitatstructureitself. Physiologicalecology,temperature WEDNESDAY11:45,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Temperature modulation of biological clock gene expression in a reef building coral DANIELM.WUITCHIK,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY,[email protected] PETERD.VIZE,UNIVERSITYOFCALGARY CoralsoftheGreatBarrierReefreproduceonceayearinahighlysynchronizedmassspawningevent.Thisisaneffective strategytomaximizefertilizationandtocoincidewithfavorableoceanconditionsforlarvaldevelopment,dispersaland settlement.Coralsutilizevariousenvironmentalcuestodeterminetimeofreproduction.Notably,seasonalincreasesin temperaturemayinitiategametogenesisandpreparecoralforspawning.Furthermore,coralssensechangesinmoonlight andtimespawningtoaspecificlunarphase.Inthisexperiment,areef-buildingcoral,Acroporamillepora,wascollected andplacedintotwoflow-throughexperimentalaquariaattheHeronIslandResearchStationtomimicsummerand winterwatertemperatures.RNAwasisolatedandsampledfromcoraltissueatmultiplepointsthroughoutthedayand acrossthelunarmonth.FromthisRNAthetranscriptomicresponsetochangesinmoonlightandseasonaldifferencesin wintervssummertemperaturewasexploredusingnext-generationRNA-seq.RNA-seqdatawasanalysedtoelucidate genesinvolvedinalunarclockthatchangewithtemperature. Keywords:Coralreef,Experiment,Reproduction,Temperaturemodulation. Complexcoevolution:understandinghowcoevolutionmayoperatedifferentlyacrossdiverseinteractiontypes, systems,andscalessymposium TUESDAY08:30,ROOM:NEWCOMBERBCM Sanctions, partner recognition, and variation in mutualism JEREMYYODER,UNIVERSITYOFBRITISHCOLUMBIA,[email protected] PETERTIFFIN,UNIVERSITYOFMINNESOTA Mutualismscanbestabilizedagainstinvasionbynon-cooperativeindividualsbyputtingsuch"cheaters"ataselective disadvantage.Selectionagainstcheatersshouldeliminategeneticvariationinpartnerqualityyetsuchvariationisoften foundinnaturalpopulations.Oneexplanationforthisparadoxisthatmutualismoutcomesaredeterminednotonlyby responsestopartnerperformance,butalsobypartnersignals.Amodelofmutualistcoevolutionincludingbothsanctions againstnon-cooperativepartnersandrecognitionofpartnersignalsallowsvariationtopersistwithoutdestabilizingthe interaction.Theseresultspredictthatmutualistscanmaintainvariationinrecognitionofpartnersignals,orintheability tosanctionnon-cooperators,withoutdestabilizingmutualism,andreinforcethenotionthatstudiesofmutualismshould considercommunicationbetweenpartnersaswellastheexchangeofbenefits. Keywords:Interactions,Mutualism,Coevolution,Modeling. Animaldiet TUESDAY11:30,ROOM:WCOAST A temporal shift in prey species availability decreases trophic diversity in community structure among a predator assemblage in a changing Arctic DAVIDJ.YURKOWSKI,UNIVERSITYOFMANITOBA,[email protected] NIGELE.HUSSEY,UNIVERSITYOFWINDSOR;AARONT.FISK,UNIVERSITYOFWINDSOR;MARIANNEMARCOUX,FRESHWATERINSTITUTE, FISHERIESANDOCEANSCANADA;STEVENH.FERGUSON,UNIVERSITYOFMANITOBA,FRESHWATERINSTITUTE,FISHERIESANDOCEANS CANADA ClimatechangeismostpronouncedintheArcticleadingtonorthwardshiftsinspeciesdistributionswithalterationsto inter-specificinteractionsandresultantdietshiftsofendemicArcticpredators.However,theeffectsofclimate-driven dietaryshiftsfrommultipleconcurrentpredatorsonoverallcommunitystructurehasnotbeenquantified.Here,duringa 30-yearperiod(1982-2012)ofincreasingseatemperatureanddecreasingseaiceextentinCumberlandSound,we examinedthestructureofanear-apexpredatorassemblagepriorto(1982-2002)andafter(2004-2012)anincreasein theavailabilityofcapelinaseacanaryforawarmingclimate.Stableisotopeswereusedtoassessshiftsindiet,nichesize andcommunity-widemetricsinaBayesianframeworkforbeluga(n=88),ringedseals(n=228),Greenlandhalibut(n=5) andanadromousArcticchar(n=68).After2004,theconsumptionofforagefishincreasedforGreenlandhalibut(79% versus95%)andbytwo-fold(29%versus69%),three-fold(12%versus35%)andfour-fold(12%versus49%)forArctic char,belugaandringedseals,respectively,suggestingflexibilityinforagingtactics.Anassociatedtemporalshifttowards alesstrophicallydiverseandmoretrophicallyredundantpredatorassemblageoccurredwherepredatorsnowplay similartrophicrolesbyprimarilyconsumingpreyfromthepelagicenergypathway.Thisincreaseinresource heterogeneitybetweenpelagicandbenthicenergypathwayscouldintheorydecoupleanddestabilizeArcticecosystem structurebyincreasingitssusceptibilitytoperturbations.Thesechangessignifyclimate-drivenecologicalregimeshifts havealreadyoccurredintheArcticwithimplicationsonthetrophodynamicsandfunctioningoftheecosystem. Keywords:Foodweb,Arctic,Stableisotopes,Foraging,Interactions,Marine. Remotecameranetworkstoscaleupecologicalinsightsandconservationapplicationssymposium TUESDAY08:45,ROOM:THEATRE A new Automated Behavioural Response system to integrate playback experiments into camera trap studies LIANAZANETTE,WESTERNUNIVERSITY,[email protected] MICHAELCLINCHY,WESTERNUNIVERSITY;JUSTINSURACI,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;BADRUMUGERWA,WESTERNUNIVERSITY; MICHAELDELSEY,UNIVERSITYOFVICTORIA;JUSTINESMITH,UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIASANTACRUZ;CHRISWILMERS,UNIVERSITYOF CALIFORNIASANTACRUZ;DAVIDMACDONALD,OXFORDUNIVERSITY Howanimalsrespondtoanthropogenicdisturbancesisacorecomponentofconservationbiologyandhowtheyrespond topredatorsandcompetitorsisofequallycentralimportancetowildlifeecology.Cameratrapshavebecomeacriticaltool inwildliferesearch,providingafullyautomatedmeansofobservinganimalswithoutneedinganobserverpresent, permittingdatatobecollectedonrareorelusivespeciesandinfrequentevents.Snapshotsfromcameratrapshavebeen usedtogaugebehaviour,but,lackingexperimentalcontrols,suchdatapermitonlycorrelationalanalysespotentiallyopen toconfoundingeffects.Playbackexperimentsprovideapowerfulmeanstodirectlytestthebehaviouralresponsesof animals,enablingstronginferencesandrigorousconclusionsnotsubjecttothepotentialconfoundsaffectingsnapshot data;theprincipalfactorlimitingtheuseofplaybackexperimentsbeingtheneedtohaveanobserverpresent.We developedanAutomatedBehaviouralResponsesystem(ABR)comprisingacustom-builtmotion-sensitivespeaker systemthatcanbepairedwithanycameratrap.DeployingourABRsinUganda,CanadaandtheUSApermittedusto directlyexperimentallytesttheeffectsofanthropogenicdisturbances,andinteractionsamonglargecarnivores,inspecies asdiverseaselephants,blackbears,chimpanzeesandcougars;experimentsthatwouldbecompletelyinfeasiblewithout theABR.Byintegratingtherigourplaybackexperimentsprovidewiththecapacitycameratrapsoffertostudyanyanimal anywhere,theABRcanbothgreatlyexpandtherangeofresearchquestionsconservationbiologistsandwildlife ecologistscanaddressandimprovethequalityoftheresultingconclusions. Invasivespecies WEDNESDAY11:45,ROOM:SAANICH When two invasive species meet: Potential interactions between Asian jumping worms and common buckthorn CARLYZITER,UNIVERSITYOFWISCONSIN-MADISON,[email protected] MONICATURNER,UNIVERSITYOFWISCONSIN-MADISON Therelationshipbetweenbioticinvasionandecosystemservices(ES)iscomplex,withconsequencesoftenassumed despitelimitedevidence.Thiscomplexityisparticularlyapparentinurbanareas,wherenon-nativeandinvasivespecies compriseasignificantproportionoftotalbiodiversity.Additionally,mostinvasion-ESresearchemphasizessinglespecies, whileatmanagement-relevantscalesmultipleinvaderscanhavecompoundingimpacts.Weconductedreciprocalfield experimentsattheUniversityofWisconsin-MadisonArboretumtoaskhowtheAsianjumpingworm(Amynthas tokioensis),arecentlydiscoveredspeciesinthecityofMadison,mightinteractwithanestablishedinvader,common buckthorn(Rhamnuscathartica)withimplicationsforESinMadisonandthesurroundingarea.Buckthorn,awidespread shrub,isamongthemostharmfulinvadersinMidwesternUSforests,creatingdensethicketsthatreducecarbonstorage, impederecreation,andshelterharmfulcroppests.TheAsianjumpingworm,discoveredinWisconsinin2013,isalargely unstudiedearthwormspeciesexpectedtoimpactlocalforests.Whilefacilitativeinteractionsbetweenbuckthornand invasiveEuropeanearthwormshavebeendocumented,theecologicalconsequencesofexoticAsianspecies,including Amynthas,arerelativelyunknown.Weasked:Doesapositivefeedbackexistbetweenbuckthornandjumpingworms? Specifically:a)arejumpingwormsmoresuccessfulinenvironmentsthathavebeeninvadedbybuckthorn,and;b)Does jumpingwormpresenceincreasebuckthorngermination?Contrarytoexpectationsbasedonwell-studiedEuropean earthwormspecies,wefindlimitedevidenceofpositivefeedbacksbetweenbuckthornandjumpingworms,withpositive implicationsforinvasivespeciesmanagementandlocalESprovision. Keywords:Ecosystemservices,Experiment,Invertebrates,Management,Forest. SensoryandBehaviouralEcologySymposium WEDNESDAY08:45,ROOM:OAKBAY1 Rapid evolution in silence: Adaptation to the loss of a sexual signal MARLENEZUK,UNIVERSITYOFMINNESOTA,[email protected] RACHELOLZER,UNIVERSITYOFMINNESOTA;JUSTAHEINEN-KAY,UNIVERSITYOFMINNESOTA Aquaticecology WEDNESDAY11:30,ROOM:ESQUIMALT Thermokarst expansion rates and the effects on long-term soil carbon storage in interior Alaska NATALIEJ.ZWANENBURG,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH,[email protected] MERRITTR.TURETSKY,UNIVERSITYOFGUELPH Permafrostsoilsstoreagloballysignificantcarbonstockbutitisnotclearhowmuchcarbonwillbevulnerableto enhanceddecompositiononcepermafrostthaws.Inice-richpermafrost,thawleadstogroundsubsidencefollowedby inundationofwaterandleadstodramaticecosystemchange(suchasconversionofforestsintowetlandsorlakes).While thereisampleevidenceofthermokarstacrossAlaskaandCanada,wehavealimitedunderstandingofhowthislateral thawimpactsecosystemsandtheircarbonstocks.Thisresearchusedachronosequence(spacefortimesubstitution) approachtoquantifycontrolsonlateralthermokarstexpansionratesanditsconsequencesforsoilcarbonstorage.We collectedmultiplethermokarstcoresin14differentthermokarstfeaturesinthreeecoregionsofinteriorAlaska.We sampled1)newthermokarstatactivemargins,2)olderthermokarstinthecentreofeachfeature,and3)stable permafrostadjacenttoeachfeature.Coresweresegmentedinto3cmdepthintervalsforbulkdensityand%carbon measurements.Preliminaryresultsshowthatthermokarstinitiallyleadstolossofecosystemcarbon,butthatovertime thesefeaturesreaccumulatecarbonthroughnewpeatformation.Thisresearchwillprovideinformationonbothvertical andlateralchangesinsoildevelopmentandecosystemcarbonstoragefollowingthermokarst,andwillfillanimportant knowledgegapaboutthefateofterrestrialcarbonfollowingthawofice-richpermafrost. Keywords:Carbonstorage,Permafrost,Thermokarst,Chronosequence. AttendeeFirstName AttendeeLastName Affiliation(s) Email MadisonJ. Acker LaurentianUniversity [email protected] EmilyM. Adamczyk UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] Sally Aitken UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] LucasJ. Albano UniversityofGuelph [email protected] GeraldineA. Allen UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Justine Ammendolia MemorialUniversity [email protected] Sarah Amundrud UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] Jennifer Anderson UniversityofNewBrunswick [email protected] KathrynM. Anderson UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] StevenR. Anderson UniversityofManitoba [email protected] Sean Anderson UniversityofWashington [email protected] Luke Andersson SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] Fred Andreka HolohilSystems Amy Angert UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] JosephA. Antos UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Michael Arbeider SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] Devin Arbuthnott UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] LuisA. Arias-Medellin UniversityofToronto [email protected] Asma Asemaninejad UniversityofWesternOntario [email protected] Louis Astorg UniversitéduQuébecàMontréal,Groupe interuniversitaireenlimnologieet [email protected] écologieaquatique WilliamI. Atlas SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] DavidN. Awde BrockUniversity [email protected] Erin Baerwald AmericanWindWildlifeInstitute [email protected] Jiaxin Bai McGillUniversity [email protected] ColinJ. Bailey SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] DonaldJ. Baird EnvironmentandClimateChangeCanada, [email protected] UniversityofNewBrunswick KevinR. Bairos-Novak UniversityofSaskatchewan [email protected] SarahJ. Baldwin McGillUniversity [email protected] MatthewJ. Ballinger UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Jennifer Baltzer WilfridLaurierUniversity [email protected] KatherineH. Bannar-Martin FisheriesandOceansCanada [email protected] AdrinaC. Bardekjian TreeCanada,UniversityofBritish Columbia [email protected] Carlos Barreto UniversityofWesternOntario [email protected] Rowan Barrett McGillUniversity [email protected] IsabelC. Barrio UniversityofIceland [email protected] Tegan Barry UniversityofCalgary [email protected] TimothyJ. Bartley UniversityofGuelph [email protected] Sean Basquill NovaScotiaDepartmentofNatural Resources [email protected] Andrew Bateman UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Philip Batista UniversityofNorthernBritishColumbia [email protected] RebeccaT. Batstone UniversityofToronto [email protected] a Julia Baum UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Rick Baydack UniversityofManitoba [email protected] David Beauchesne UniversitéduQuébecàRimouski [email protected] Marc-Olivier Beausoleil McGillUniversity [email protected] Emily Behrman UniversityofPennsylvania [email protected] Beatrix Beisner UniversitéduQuébecàMontréal [email protected] Graham Bell McGillUniversity [email protected] MichaelA. Bell StonyBrookUniversity [email protected] JonathanA. Bennett UniversityofBritishColumbiaOkanagan [email protected] AdrienneE. Berchtold SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] Patrick Bergeron Bishop’sUniversity [email protected] CarolynA. Bergstrom UniversityofAlaskaSoutheast [email protected] JoeyR. Bernhardt UniversityofBritishColumbia Kazuhiro Bessho JSPS/TheGraduate UniversityforAdvancedStudies [email protected] a [email protected] om RebeccaJ. Best UniversityofNorthernArizona [email protected] GustavoS. Betini UniversityofGuelph [email protected] Alannah Biega SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] JenniferS. Bigman SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] Cory Bishop St.FrancisXavierUniversity [email protected] Katherine Black WilfridLaurierUniversity [email protected] Morgan Black UniversityofVictoria;VancouverIsland University [email protected] Christopher Blackford UniversityofToronto [email protected] nto.ca Stephanie Blain UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] F.Guillaume Blanchet UniversitédeSherbrooke Guillaume.Blanchet@usherbrooke. ca Léa Blondel McGillUniversity [email protected] Kyle Bobiwash SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] Korryn Bodner UniversityofToronto [email protected] MannfredM.A. Boehm UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] Benjamin Bolker McMasterUniversity [email protected] Maegwin Bonar MemorialUniversity [email protected] MeganGene Bontrager UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] Rudy Boonstra UniversityofTorontoScarborough [email protected] AneeshP.H. Bose McMasterUniversity [email protected] Véronique BoucherLalonde UniversitédeSherbrooke veronique.boucher.lalonde@gmail .com ElizabethG. Boulding UniversityofGuelph [email protected] Jeff Bowman OntarioMinistryofNaturalResourcesand [email protected] Forestry,TrentUniversity MarkS. Boyce UniversityofAlberta [email protected] SeanP. Boyle LaurentianUniversity [email protected] Matthew Brachmann UniversityofGuelph [email protected] Cole Brachmann UniversityofAlberta [email protected] StevenP. Brady KingCounty [email protected] StevenP. Brady DartmouthCollege [email protected] Lucas Brehaut MemorialUniversity [email protected] NorahE.M. Brown UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] Katie Brown UniversityofToronto [email protected] Carissa Brown MemorialUniversity [email protected] Anne Bruneau UniversitédeMontréal [email protected] Kristin Brzeski PrincetonUniversity [email protected] Lauren Buckley UniversityofWashington [email protected] Desiree Bulger UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Daniel Buonaiuto HarvardUniversity [email protected] Joseph Burant UniversityofGuelph [email protected] Theresa Burg UniversityofLethbridge [email protected] Joanna Burgar UniversityofVictoria,UniversityofBritish [email protected] Columbia Lily Burke UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Cole Burton UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] Doreen Cabrera UniversityofExeter [email protected] James Cahill UniversityofAlberta [email protected] Piero Calosi UniversitéduQuébecàRimouski [email protected] ErinK. Cameron UniversityofCopenhagen,Universityof Helsinki [email protected] Rosaline Canessa UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Cameron Carlyle UniversityofAlberta [email protected] Juli Carrillo PurdueUniversity,UniversityofBritish Columbia [email protected] EmmaK. Carroll UniversityofCalgary [email protected] Ralph Cartar UniversityofCalgary [email protected] Bruno Carturan UniversityofBritishColumbiaOkanagan [email protected] Rowshyra Castañeda UniversityofToronto,Universityof TorontoatScarborough [email protected] Lia Chalifour UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Catherine Chamberlain HarvardUniversity [email protected] Julia Charlebois UniversityofOttawa [email protected] Emily Chase AcadiaUniversity [email protected] Carmen Chelick UniversityofBritishColumbiaOkanagan [email protected] Helen Chen WesternUniversity [email protected] Melissa Chen UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] Cheryl Chetkiewicz WildlifeConservationSocietyCanada [email protected] Kyle Chezik SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] Chelsea Chisholm UniversityofCopenhagen [email protected] KatherineS. Christie TheAlaskaSeaLifeCenter [email protected] Cindy Chu OntarioMinistryofNaturalResources [email protected] AlexM. Chubaty NatualResourcesCanada,PacificForestry [email protected] Centre DanielleC. Claar UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Alana Clason UniversityofNorthernBritishColumbia [email protected] Michael Clinchy UniversityofWesternOntario [email protected] Ilona Clocher UniversityofCalgary [email protected] SheilaR. Colla YorkUniversity [email protected] Lynda Collins UniversityofOttawa [email protected] NicholasC. Collins UniversityofToronto [email protected] David Coltman UniversityofAlberta [email protected] ZacchaeusG. Compson UniversityofNewBrunswick [email protected] om TenleyM. Conway UniversityofToronto,Mississauga [email protected] Andrew Cook UniversityofAlberta [email protected] LauraE. Coristine UniversityofCalgary [email protected] Gregoire Cortial UniversityofQuebecatRimouski [email protected] JennyS Cory SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] JuliaYamagishi Costa UniversidadeFederaldeUberlândia [email protected] Isabelle Côté SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] Karl Cottenie UniversityofGuelph [email protected] GarthA. Covernton UniversityofVictoria [email protected] KieranD. Cox HakaiInstitute,UniversityofVictoria, Victoria,VancouverIslandUniversity [email protected] Vanessa Craig CollegeofAppliedBiologyVictoria [email protected] Colleen Crill UniversityofSaskatchewan [email protected] Varina Crisfield RoyalAlbertaMuseum,Alberta BiodiversityMonitoringInstitute [email protected] John Cristiani UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] AnnaL. Crofts MemorialUniversity [email protected] ShannonM. Crowley JohnPrinceResearchForest [email protected] Kim Cuddington UniversityofWaterloo [email protected] Steve Cumming UniversitéLaval [email protected] Douglas Curley UniversityofCalgary [email protected] ColinJ. Curry UniversityofNewBrunswick [email protected] Caitlin Curtis UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Mathieu Cusson UniversitéduQuébecàChicoutimi [email protected] MarkR.T. Dale UniversityofNorthernBritishColumbia [email protected] Angela Danyluk CityofVancouver [email protected] Chris Darimont UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Emily Darling UniversityofTorontoandWildlife ConservationSocietyCanada [email protected] Siobhan Darlington UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Katie Davidson UniversityofVictoria,HakaiInstitute [email protected] LindsayN.K. Davidson SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] Jonathan Davies McGillUniversity [email protected] Rod Davis UniversityofVictoria [email protected] NicolaJ. Day WilfridLaurierUniversity [email protected] Charlotte deKeyzer UniversityofToronto,TheRocky MountainBiologicalLaboratory [email protected] Jessica Deakin WesternUniversity [email protected] Zach Dempsey UniversityofLethbridge [email protected] Danielle Denley DalhousieUniversity [email protected] Allison Dennert SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] Alison Derry UniversitéduQuébecàMontréal,Groupe interuniversitaireenlimnologieet [email protected] écologieaquatique Simone DesRoches UCSantaCruz [email protected] Pauline Deschodt SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] Rodolphe Devillers MemorialUniversityofNewfoundland [email protected] GreatLakesInstituteforEnvironmental [email protected] Research,UniversityofWindsor UniversityofOslo,UPMCUniv,University [email protected] ofBergen Cody Dey Beatriz DiazPauli CatherineM. Dieleman UniversityofGuelph [email protected] MaggieM. Dietterle VancouverIslandUniversity [email protected] Kathleen Dogantzis YorkUniversity [email protected] KimberlyM. Dohms EnvironmentandClimateChangeCanada- [email protected] CanadianWildlifeService Sarah Dolson UniversityofGuelph [email protected] MarcelE. Dorken TrentUniversity [email protected] Emily Drummond UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] Sarah Dudas VancouverIslandUniversity [email protected] Nicholas Dulvy SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] SarahZ. Dungan UniversityofToronto [email protected] Greg Dwyer UniversityofChicago [email protected] Russell Easy AcadiaUniversity [email protected] ChristopherG. Eckert Queen'sUniversity [email protected] Brie Edwards WildlifeConservationSocietyCanada [email protected] Kate Edwards NaturalResourcesCanada [email protected] AaronM. Eger UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Anthony Einfeldt UniversityofNewBrunswick [email protected] Morgan Eisenlord CornellUniversity [email protected] RanaW. El-Sabaawi UniversityofVictoria [email protected] SachaC. Engelhardt UniversitédeSherbrooke [email protected] Philina English SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] DavidJ. Ensing Queen'sUniversity [email protected] Piers Evans MemorialUniversity [email protected] Lesley EvansOgden FreelanceJournalist Dan Farr Brett Favaro MemorialUniversity [email protected] Jamie Fenneman UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] Anne-Laure Ferchaud UniversitéLaval [email protected] Marco Festa-Bianchet UniversitédeSherbrooke [email protected] Alessandro Filazzola YorkUniversity [email protected] Laura Finnegan fRIResearch [email protected] David Fisher UniversityofGuelph [email protected] Alina Fisher UniversityofVictoria [email protected] JasonT. Fisher UniversityofVictoria,InnoTechAlberta [email protected] OwenT. Fitzpatrick UniversityofVictoria,HakaiInstitute [email protected] m Allie Flinn AcadiaUniversity [email protected] Katie Florko YorkUniversity [email protected] Justine Fontaine-Topaloff Centred’ÉtudedelaForêt,Centredela SciencedelaBiodiversitéduQuébec [email protected] Jennifer Foote AlgomaUniversity [email protected] Coreen Forbes UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] Jennifer Forbey BoiseStateUniversity [email protected] Adam Ford UniversityofBritishColumbiaOkanagan [email protected] Jessica Forrest UniversityofOttawa,RockyMountain BiologicalLaboratory [email protected] Leila Forsyth UniversityofToronto [email protected] Julie Fortin UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Caroline Fox DalhousieUniversity,Raincoast ConservationFoundation [email protected] FionaT. Francis SimonFraserUniversity [email protected] Oliver Franklin UniversityofGuelph [email protected] James Franklin UniversityofGuelph [email protected] Gillian Fraser UniversityofVictoria [email protected] ThereseC. Frauendorf UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Megan Frederickson UniversityofToronto [email protected] Esther Frei UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] [email protected] Cameron Freshwater UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Sandra Frey UniversityofVictoria [email protected] Sarah Friesen UniversityofVictoria [email protected] John Fryxell UniversityofGuelph [email protected] AngelaP. Fuentes-Pardo DalhousieUniversity [email protected] Vincent Fugère McGillUniversity [email protected] Jérémie Fuller Angela Fuller Marianne Gagnon Paul Galpern UniversityofCalgary [email protected] Alyssa-Lois Gehman UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] Rachel Germain UniversityofBritishColumbia [email protected] AmandaK. 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