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This year’s European Human Behaviour and Evolution Association (EHBEA) Conference, hosted at Northumbria University in the historic Newcastle-Upon-Tyne from April 14-17, will bring together scholars in human behaviour and evolution research. EHBEA has a special focus on interdisciplinary approaches, bridging evolutionary research with social, cultural, comparative, and biological perspectives to advance our understanding of human behaviour. Key themes include (but are not limited to) cognition, cooperation, competition, culture, health, language, mate choice, methods in the behavioural sciences, reproduction, and social learning. EHBEA 2025 will foster inclusive and thought-provoking academic exchange, with sessions designed to accommodate a broad cross-disciplinary audience and a wide array of presentations in the form of symposia, talks, poster presentations, and plenaries. Whether you are presenting or simply attending, you will have the opportunity to network with peers from across Europe and beyond. The conference will conclude with a celebratory gala dinner on Thursday evening, hosted at a beautiful independent Art gallery, The Biscuit Factory. ... [Information des Anbieters]
Our Spring conference is an opportunity to showcase your animal behaviour research to a global audience! The three day event will be split into a one-day workshop and two days of conference sessions. [Information des Anbieters]
We will be very pleased to organize our congress, which we had to take a long break due to reasons beyond our control, in Iaşi, Romania on 19-21 May 2025 and to see you among us. Of all living creatures, birds are the group that is most at risk from environmental deterioration caused by human activity. Even the remotest ecosystem is affected in some way, raising the possibility that isolation will afford insufficient protection to any species; migrants are at special risk because they travel through areas where resting and feeding stopovers have diminished or disappeared. Degraded wetlands, remnants of natural woodlands, the large-scale replacement of coastal vegetation by concrete inevitably will reduce the diversity of ecosystems whose features cannot be replicated by open waters created for leisure, by single-species woodland plantations or by gardens and parks, although these do offer advantages to adaptable bird species. Species that are habitat specialists can all too easily be driven to extinction. Although mankind and birds have co-existed remarkably well in many parts of the world until recently, it can be argued that the relentless pace of extinction of bird species is symptomatic of world-wide ‘simplification’ of plant, insect, mammal, and fish species as a consequence of industrial-scale mass production of food for humankind, whose vulnerability to catastrophe would appear to be increasing because food ‘crops’ are monocultures produced at densities not tolerated in nature and potentially at risk from disease evolution. In the Palearctic, Nearctic and Oriental regions, primary habitats for birds are diminishing at rates that are often severe and increasing. Thousands of insect species are believed to have become extinct before they have been described, putting many hundreds of bird species at risk as one of their primary food sources reduces. However, it is likely that the more subtle effects of removing insect species from complex ecosystems, especially the forced changes to the food chains, few of which have been studied at all, will have severe and unpredictable effects in the longer term. The 8th International Eurasian Ornithology Congress aims to bring together ornithologists and bird lovers in general, to create a platform for knowledge exchange and to discuss the problems and their solutions. This Congress welcomes all humanitarians who care about nature, particularly avifauna. All subjects related to birds will be deal in Congress sessions; there will be no other restriction on the topic of a presentation. Also, we orginze "Wildlife Malaria Network (WIMANET) symposium" coleboreted with WIMANET COST Action within the congress Your attendance at this Congress will be our privilege and honour. We are looking forward to greeting you in Iaşi on 19-21 May 2025. ... [Information des Anbieters]
SCB's 32nd International Congress for Conservation Biology (ICCB 2025), hosted by the SCB Oceania Region, will take place in Brisbane/Meanjin, Australia at the Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre (BCEC) from 15-19 June 2025! Read the philosophy statement here. ICCB is the premier global meeting for conservation scientists and professionals, including researchers, students, agency personnel, environmental educators, practitioners, and other conservation stakeholders. Attendees gather for lively discussions and scientific presentations on the nexus between biodiversity conservation and genetics, ecology, biogeography, anthropology, history, psychology, economics, conservation marketing, religion, and more. ... [Information des Anbieters]
We look forward to meeting you and welcoming you all to our beautiful City of Light for the 2025 TCS Summer Meeting and hope you will have a marvelous time attending the conference and enjoying the Parisian way of life for at least a few days. Bienvenue ! [Information des Anbieters]
The 4th Crossing the Paleontological-Ecological Gap meeting and 3rd Conservation Paleobiology symposium will be held jointly, from July 27 to August 1, 2025, at the University of Zurich, Switzerland. The CPEG meeting aims to bring palaeontologists and ecologists together to share ideas, data and methods in research areas that are studied by both, but typically independently (e.g., community and population ecology, food web dynamics, extinction mechanisms and conservation). On this occasion, the meeting will be merged with the 3rd Conservation Paleobiology Symposium to promote the application of palaeobiological and ecological records to the conservation, management, and restoration of biodiversity. ... [Information des Anbieters]
AETFAT members have met every 3 years since 1951. It is the largest conference on African botany, bringing together hundreds – sometimes thousands – of participants each year. The next AETFAT conference will take place from 3 to 8 August 2025 in Accra, Ghana. It marks the 75th anniversary of the association and is being held for the first time in West Africa. ... [Information des Anbieters]