I’ve got a new paper out in PNAS (here, open access) on testing space-for-time substitution using fossil pollen data. The main message: the assumption that they are substitutable is valid, at least over broader scales of space and time!
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Space-for-time substitution can work!
← Opportunities for testing and improving biogeographic models that include biotic interactions UC Merced has a nice article on my latest paper! →
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Summer Research Opportunity: Surveying Small Mammals in Yosemite National Park
Application Deadline: April 9th, 2023 Anticipated Timeline: May 30th, 2023 – August 11th, 2023 Compensation: full time, $15.50-17.73/hour We are currently looking for an undergraduate…
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Welcome to 2023 in the Blois lab!
Great news to start off the year! The Blois lab had two papers accepted over the winter break. The first was a paper led by…
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New postdoc opportunity! NSF-funded Postdoc Positions in Paleoecology and Species Distribution Modeling
Marta Jarzyna at Ohio State and I were just awarded a new NSF grant to investigate the spatial and temporal non-stationarity of processes structuring communities.…
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Cave excavations!
Exciting news! This summer, we will be excavating two small test deposits from caves in Sequoia-Kings Canyon National Park, primarily working in the park during…