that complete the
form in support of the letter by *15 September* will be added to the final
document before submission.
Please feel free to share the letter and support form with colleagues,
Ngā mihi and thanks,
Emma Carroll
University of Auckland – Waipapa Taumata Rau, Aoteaora New
ibuir para desvendar a biodiversidade do mar profundo. A consulta e
envolvimento dos povos indígenas no processo de atribuição do nome
científico desta espécie serve também como modelo para o alargamento do
actual espectro cultural do sistema de nomenclatura científica.
cheers
Emma Carroll
Ruthe
isotópicos seriam uma forma de comparar
retrospectivamente a condição nutricional das fêmeas de BFA em distintas
áreas reprodutivas.
And a blog is available for a lay summary as well:
https://tohoravoyages.ac.nz/how-can-we-measure-stress-in-whales-new-research-suggests-a-useful-new-tool/
Emma Carroll
.
thank you
Emma Carroll
Rutherford Discovery Fellow | Senior Research Fellow
Te Kura Mātauranga Koiora | School of Biological Sciences
Te Whare Wānanga o Tāmaki Makaurau | University of Auckland
e: e.carr...@auckland.ac.nz | t: @EmzLCarroll
w: whalednalab.auckland.ac.nz |
https
ings highlight the application of ABC
approaches to infer the connectivity in mobile species with complex
population histories and, currently, low levels of differentiation.
Emma Carroll PhD
Member of the Young Academy of Scotland
Outgoing Marie Curie Research Fellow
Scottish Oceans Institute and
pen access
version of the full paper is available at:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10./eva.12600
kind regards
Emma Carroll
Genetic and genomic monitoring with minimally invasive sampling methods
Emma L. Carroll, Mike W. Bruford, J. Andrew DeWoody, Gregoire Leroy, Alan
Strand, Lis
ble for free download at:
http://www.int-res.com/articles/esr2015/28/n028p147.pdf
Thank you!
--
Emma Carroll PhD
Newton International Fellow
Scottish Oceans Institute
University of St Andrews
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Dear All,
we are pleased to announce the publication of a new paper on right
whaling industry around New Zealand and Australia, published recently
in PLoS One:
CITATION
Carroll EL, Jackson JA, Paton D, Smith TD (2014) Two Intense Decades
of 19th Century Whaling Precipitated Rapid Decline of Right
subantarctic wintering
grounds. Despite these promising signs, the distribution of NZ SRWs
remains primarily concentrated in the NZ subantarctic.
--
Emma Carroll PhD
Postdoctoral Researcher
Molecular Ecology and Evolution | School of Biological Sciences
University of Auckland | phone 64 9 3737599 x 71762
for female reproductive cycles in a
superpopulation capture-recapture framework. Ecological Applications.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/12-1657.1
Accounting for female reproductive cycles in a superpopulation
capture-recapture framework
Emma Carroll 1,*, Simon Childerhouse 2, Rachel M. Fewster 3
; 1990; 2000)
Tristan da Cunha (IWC 2001; Best et al 2009)
Uruguay (Costa et al 2003)
Emma Carroll PhD
Molecular Ecology and Evolution | School of Biological Sciences
University of Auckland | ecar...@aucklanduni.ac.nz
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