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CBER External Seminar - Dr Bouwe Reijenga, University of Oxford

19 June 2023, 1:00 pm–2:00 pm

gee_phd_reijenga

Title: 'The Macroecology of Coexistence'

Event Information

Open to

UCL staff | UCL students | UCL alumni

Availability

Yes

Organiser

Amy Godfrey

Location

G01 Lankester LT
Medawar Building
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Abstract: Ecological communities are assembled through ecological, environmental and historical processes. Ultimately, the timing and occurrence of evolutionary historical processes, such as speciation, colonisation and niche differentiation, is fundamental to assembly. Only speciation generates diversity, colonisation is necessary to establish secondary contact between isolated species, and niche differentiation facilitates coexistence by resource partitioning. However, despite the importance of historical events, history is frequently seen as stochastic and contrasts predictability. Here, by the development of comparative phylogenetic tools and the history captured in molecular phylogenies, I investigate if history truly is unpredictable noise. Specifically, I ask (i) how speciation and colonisation shape contemporary community diversity, (ii) how colonisation is modified by niche differentiation, and (iii) the combined consequences of time available and timing of these processes for the radiation of biodiversity. Taken together, I shed new light on how historical processes and interactions between species can shape the assembly of communities and the diversity of life on Earth. While history acts in various ways over distinct scales, history is not always unpredictable. History has a much greater impact on present-day communities than appreciated, and a re-appraisal of how we view the consequences of history for communities and species diversification is necessary.

About the Speaker

Dr Bouwe Reijenga

Post-Doctoral Research Assistant at University of Oxford

 

Bouwe is a royal society funded postdoctoral researcher in the department of Earth Sciences at the university of Oxford under guidance of Roger Close. At Oxford his research focuses on the biases that the spatial structure of the fossil record introduces for the estimation of speciation and extinction rates. Prior to his postdoc, Bouwe completed his PhD at the Centre for Biodiversity and Environment Research UCL. He has earned a Bsc in ecology and evolution from the University of Groningen, the Netherlands, and Msc degrees awarded by the university of Groningen and University of Montpellier, France, through the Erasmus Mundus Master Programme in Evolutionary Biology. Bouwe’s primary research interest is in understanding how biodiversity is both generated and maintained from palaeobiological, molecular and theoretical perspectives.

More about Dr Bouwe Reijenga