Spring Semester 2025

 

Thursdays at 3:30-5:00 pm in 346 Leon Johnson Hall. 

Presentations will not be offered virtually this year.

The basis of the Spring Ecology Seminar Series is for Ecology graduate students to gain experience presenting scientific information using a variety of communication methods. Graduate students prepare several presentations and topics presented in a variety of formats. The first session consists of presentations focused on the foundation for their research and the next session is focused on their methods and results (if they have any to share). The second session is whiteboard only (i.e., no slides).

Attendance from campus and extended communities is encouraged and requested.
All who attend will be invited to evaluate each presentation.

Advance notice is requested so that accommodations can be made for special needs.  Contact ecology@montana.edu or (406) 994-4548.

Podcasts

Today's Voices of Conservation Science Podcast Artwork Image



 

In addition to presentations, students are interviewed about their research and what inspired them to get into a career in conservation for the podcast “Today’s Voices of Conservation Science.” You can listen to the podcast on Buzzsprout or on iTunes or Stitcher.

 

Spring Seminar Schedule
Date
Seminar Presentations

March 6

15-minute scientific presentation with slides

Kelson Hickman:Beyond the hook: examining snag and release effects on paddlefish survival and reproduction

Benjamin Weber: Evaluating the success of translocation of bull trout in Glacier National Park

Michael Lant:Understanding recreational use from an ecological context

March 13

15-minute scientific presentation with slides

Allison Sutcliffe: Evaluating the effects of warming on the resistance and resilience of stream communities to drought 

Oscar Dalling:New approaches to estimating abundance of grizzly bears

Benny Bevil: Gross primary production and cutthroat trout in the changing climate

March 20

SPRING BREAK

March 27

15-minute scientific presentation with slides

Max Rubino:Adult mortality as a mechanism for trout population declines in southwest Montana

Jason Gregg: It's not too late for conservation genetics to save birds in the Pacific

Gabriella Eaton: Eviction notice: exploring artificial roosts for bats in northern latitudes

April 3

15-minute scientific presentation with slides

Jayden Skelly:Winter wandering: a pronghorn strategy for surviving severe winters?

Noah Starling:When worlds collide: navigating human-wildlife conflict in a rapidly growing system

Samuel Larkin:Bioenergetic plasticity in response to warming: implications for trophic transfers of energy in aquatic systems

April 10

15-minute scientific whiteboard presentations 

Max Rubino: Fishing, drought, and disease: relative contributions to trout mortality

Allison Sutcliffe:A mesocosm approach: evaluating the effects of warming and drought on stream community dynamics

Michael Lant: Quantifying recreational use in lotic systems

April 17

15-minute scientific whiteboard presentations

Kelson Hickman:Hooked on sustainability: methods for studying effects of snag and release angling on paddlefish

Oscar Dalling:Unmarked but not unseen: estimating grizzly bear density in Yellowstone National Park using camera traps

Noah Starling:Where wildlife meets development: unraveling the drivers of human-wildlife conflict in Montana

April 24

15-minute scientific whiteboard presentations 

Benjamin Weber: Translocations: a possible new conservation tool to preserve bull trout populations

Samuel Larkin:Bioenergetic plasticity in a geothermally-warmed stream system

Gabriella Eaton:Bats, boxes, and buildings: comparing temperatures in innovative bat box designs

May 1

15-minute scientific whiteboard presentations 

Benny Bevil:Gross primary production and cutthroat trout in the changing climate

Jason Gregg:Såli survivors: using genomics to understand an endangered Pacific bird species

Jayden Skelly: Sagebrush and simulations, methods to unravel pronghorn movement