You are cordially invited to the Linnaean Society of New York's next meeting on 
Tuesday, April 9th, at 7 p.m. 

Our programs are free, open to the public, and hosted on Zoom. To receive the 
Zoom invitation, you must register using the following link: 
https://www.linnaeannewyork.org/events/dr-ben-winger-april-2024/

After brief announcements, our esteemed guest speaker, Ben Winger, will share 
his fascinating research and insights on the wonder of bird migration and the 
theory of how it evolved. 

The Evolution of Seasonal Migration in Birds 
Bird migration is one of our world’s most celebrated natural wonders. But how 
and why did bird migration evolve? The answer to this question may seem obvious 
(birds fly south for the winter, of course!) but like any interesting 
scientific question, the answer becomes more complex the more we learn. When 
and where did the migratory patterns we see today originate? How can we 
possibly answer this question given that birds have a poor fossil record? Why 
do migratory birds fly so far during migration, only to come back to the very 
same breeding locations each year? Why don’t more birds hibernate instead of 
migrating? Ben Winger will discuss research that he has been conducting for the 
past 15 years on these and other questions related to the evolution of bird 
migration. He will share what he has learned about the evolution of migration 
and outline the questions that remain difficult to answer. He will also discuss 
how learning about the evolution of bird migration informs the conservation of 
migratory birds in our rapidly changing world.

Ben Winger is assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at the 
University of Michigan, where he is also the curator of birds at the 
university’s Museum of Zoology. Ben is an ornithologist and evolutionary 
biologist with broad interests in the ecology, behavior, and evolution of 
birds. His research on the evolution of bird migration has won awards from the 
American Ornithological Society, the Ecological Society of America, and the 
Society of Systematic Biologists, and has been featured in popular media such 
as Radiolab, National Geographic Magazine, and Living Bird. Ben received his 
B.A. from Cornell University in 2007 and his Ph.D. from the University of 
Chicago in 2015. He and his students study a wide variety of questions related 
to bird speciation, migration, and conservation.
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