NRESi Special Lecture: Dr. Karen Hodges, Associate Professor, Biology, University of British Columbia Okanagan - Population Issues at Geographic Range Edges

Date
to
Location
8-166 or webcast (http://www.unbc.ca/nres-institute/colloquium-webcasts)
Campus
Prince George

NRESi, in partnership with TWS UNBC Student Chapter, is hosting a special lecture with Dr. Karen Hodges from UBC-Okanagan. This is a public event and all are welcome to attend! The lecture will also be available via Livestream and Elluminate/Collaborate - http://www.unbc.ca/nres-institute/colloquium-webcasts

Presentation Abstract:

The geographic ranges of species are seldom static, but the causes for the edges of ranges are often unclear. Many conservation laws and policies are structured in ways that protect range edge populations, especially if the range periphery occurs in one jurisdiction but the main range is elsewhere (as occurs in BC’s sage-steppe habitats in the Okanagan and the Vancouver Island garry oak ecosystems). Simultaneously, as global warming continues, many northern peripheral populations are acting as leading edges of range expansion. In this talk, I examine whether we have sufficient biological understanding of range edge populations, and the causes of range edges, to be able to predict which peripheral populations are genuinely valuable enough to warrant separate conservation attention or to predict which range edge populations might expand or contract. In so doing, I examine some conservation policy and data gaps, and I derive a possible classification of range edge types.

Contact Information

Leanne Elliott, NRESi Research Manager
leanne.elliott@unbc.ca
250-960-5018