Gjesteforelesninger og seminarer - Side 4
Supported by Tømtestifelsen and the Research Council of Norway.
The aim of the symposium is to help the scientific community better understand the impact of environmental (climate) change on biodiversity, by integrating insights from geological time scales (macroevolution) with our current understanding of short-term, microevolution. Open to anyone interested.
By Jeremy Swann from the Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics, Freiburg, Germany. Open for all.
By Quentin Mauvisseau from the Natural History Museum, University of Oslo
Professor Christophe Fraser, University of Oxford.
By Johan Watz from Karlstad University, Sweden
By Ronald Jenner from the Natural History Museum, London, UK
By Andy Foote from NTNU, Norway
Åpne foredrag av Detlef Weigel (Max Planck Institute for Biology Tübingen, Tyskland) og Anna Wargelius (Havforskningsinstituttet, Norge). Arrangementet holdes på engelsk.
Lectures by visiting guest researchers Mesele Yihune Tamene, Tilaye Wube Hailemariam, Nega Tassie Abate, and Gashaw Tilahun Desta
High-Resolution, 3D Imaging of fish mucosal immunology: Discovery of a new lymphoid tissue, organ, and nexus
Dr. Julien Resseguier (Researcher, FYSCELL / Department of Immunology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo)
By Anna Sturrock from the University of Essex, UK
By Rebecca Taylor from Trent University, Ontario, Canada
By Sandra Garces Pastor from UiT The Arctic University of Norway
By Micah Dunthorn from the Natural History Museum, University of Oslo
Eörs Szathmáry, Institute of Evolution, Centre for Ecological Research, Budapest and Parmendes Foundation Pullach/Munich
Åpne foredrag med C. Jessica E. Metcalf og John-Arne Røttingen. Årets tema er: «The topics are the ecology and evolution of hosts and pathogens», og «Translating science to policy – the case of pandemic preparedness and response».
By Simen Sandve from the Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)
By Michael Knapp from University of Otago, New zealand. Please be aware of the change in time.
By Eline Lorenzen from University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
By Colin Olito from Lund University, Sweden.
By Michael Matschiner from the Natural History Museum, University of Oslo