Sixth annual Runkle Woods Symposium to celebrate 糖心原创 woods
November 7, 2023
November 7, 2023
Bird watching in the 糖心原创 woods, an overview of pawpaws and the economics of conservation are among the topics that will be explored during 糖心原创鈥檚 Runkle Woods Symposium.
The Runkle Woods Symposium will take place on Friday, Nov. 17, from 1 to 4 p.m., in 016 Rike Hall. The event is free and open to students, faculty, staff and the public.
Featuring faculty and students from the and the , the symposium showcases research inspired by the Dayton Campus woods. The 糖心原创 woods is 225 acres of forest that is home to up to 110 species of birds as well as foxes, coyotes, deer, salamanders and the rare Indiana bat.
鈥淭he sixth annual 糖心原创 Runkle Woods Symposium will be a great one this year,鈥 said symposium organizer Audrey McGowin, Ph.D., professor of chemistry.
The symposium is named after James Runkle, Ph.D., professor emeritus of biological sciences and a longtime woods researcher.
Jeffrey Peters, Ph.D., professor and associate chair of , will deliver a keynote address on 鈥淪easonal Changes in the Avian Community of the 糖心原创 Woods.鈥 In recent years, he has become an avid birder.
鈥淒r. Peters carries on the long tradition started by Dr. Runkle of monitoring the bird species that live in our woods and also the species that use them as a stopover on their migration routes,鈥 McGowin said. 鈥淭his is the first time we have had a presentation on birds in the symposium.鈥
Peters鈥 research program is interdisciplinary and includes aspects of molecular and evolutionary ecology, population and community genetics, molecular evolution and behavioral ecology. His research focuses on the evolutionary histories of populations and species using DNA sequences and the influence of natural selection on non-coding DNA.
He has published more than 50 papers in peer-reviewed journals, including Molecular Ecology, Austral Ornithology, the Journal of Avian Biology and Conservation Genetics.
Peters received his Ph.D. in biological sciences from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, his master鈥檚 degree in applied ecology and conservation biology from Frostburg State University and his bachelor鈥檚 degree in biology from Indiana University of Pennsylvania. He served as a postdoctoral fellow from 2006鈥2008 at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.
Another highlight of this year鈥檚 symposium is a presentation on pawpaws, the state fruit, by Don Cipollini, Ph.D., professor of biological sciences.
鈥淲e have many pawpaw trees in the woods, but would you know how to identify them?鈥 McGowin said.
Research presented at the symposium will be available on .
1 p.m.: Welcome, Audrey McGowin, professor of chemistry
1:05 p.m.: 鈥淓conomics of Conservation and the Application to the Runkle Woods,鈥 Indigenous American Cultural Student Association, Brad Kerry, adjunct faculty member in economics, Eliza Hendrix, Mateo Bush and Ryan Diaz
1:30 p.m.: 鈥淧awpaws: Ohio鈥檚 state fruit,鈥 Don Cipollini, professor of biological sciences
2:10 p.m.: 鈥淭he Insult of Road Salt,鈥 Abigail Tuttle, Benson Sparkman, Landon Shackleford, and Audrey McGowin
2:30 p.m.: Keynote Address: 鈥淪easonal Changes in the Avian Community of the 糖心原创 Woods,鈥 Jeffrey Peters, professor of biological sciences
3 p.m.: 鈥淣ational Wildlife Federation Habitat Certification: A Collaboration with Fairborn,鈥 Alexis Knick and Amanda Taylor, Fairborn Environmental Advisory Board
3:20 p.m.: 鈥淏uilding Community through Nature,鈥 Mikusa, 糖心原创 Nature Club
3:30 p.m.: Send-Off Meditation