Please join us via Zoom on Monday, March 8 at 7 PM for *From Redpoll 
Plumage to Chickadee Poop: Insights into Avian Ecology.* The program is 
free and open to the public. *Register here. 
<https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_lkTQ67pHSAufjQuZbNy2dw> *

Black-capped and Mountain chickadees are frequently seen along Colorado’s 
Front Range, where increasing urbanization has altered the tree species 
present. That change in the increasingly suburbanized forest has disrupted 
the food available for insectivorous birds like chickadees, potentially 
disrupting their breeding success as well.

 For her DFO-funded research, CU Boulder undergraduate *Cori Carver* 
monitored chickadee breeding from Boulder to Nederland, conducting 
arthropod surveys and analyzing fecal samples from nestlings to determine 
the effects of human development and activity on the habitats of songbirds.

 Meanwhile . . . Redpolls! Those nomadic finches of the North are notorious 
for presenting identification challenges and a long history of taxonomic 
debate. CU Boulder doctoral student *Erik Funk* examined the genetic basis 
of certain redpoll traits to better understand the evolutionary mechanism 
involved and whether it is resulting in the formation of new species or 
maintaining variation within the species.

 

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