CSEE Annual General Conference, UBC 2024
Photo credit: Andrea Wishart
Mushrooms of the Alaskan temperate rainforest along the Battery Point trail in Haines, Alaska on a break from Yukon fieldwork.
CSEE Annual General Conference, UBC 2024
Photo credit: Stephanie A. Rivest
Researchers record the behaviour of a Painted Lady butterfly (Vanessa cardui) while it drinks nectar from the flowers of an Ocean Spray bush (Holodiscus discolor) in an oak savanna on Vancouver Island, British Columbia.
CSEE Annual General Conference, UBC 2024
Photo credit: Kennedy Zwarych
Red-backed salamander on a zebra mussel podium attached to a unionid mussel.
CSEE Annual General Conference, UBC 2024
Photo credit: Simon Thibodeau
Leptodiaptomus minutus (a lacustrine calanoid copepod) at different life stages: nauplii (bottom left), copepodite (bottom right) and adults (top). The mature female (top left) is seen carrying eggs, while the male 5th leg (used for identification) is visible, and both adults show accumulation of lipid droplets.
CSEE Annual General Conference, UBC 2024
CSEE Annual General Conference, UBC 2024
Photo credit: Kendra Morgan
MSc student Briar Hunter performing an ultrasound on an endangered Oregon Spotted Frog to measure its follicular development in British Columbia.
Photo credit: Ken A. Thompson
A photo of the threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus L.) species pair from Little Quarry Lake, British Columbia. A benthic female is above, and a limnetic female is below.
Photo credit: Justine Le Vaillant
Couple nicheur d'hirondelles bicolores (Tachycineta bicolor).
Photo credit: Lina Aragon Baquero
Measuring gas exchange on a beech sampling. UWaterloo Biology Greenhouse.
Photo credit: Danny McIsaac
DeKay's Brownsnake, Storeria dekayi. Walking the trail at Tommy Thompson Park where I saw several of these small snakes laying in the middle of the trail amongst small sticks. This one was very curious about my camera.
Photo credit: Kevin Bruce
PhD student collecting data along the shoreline on the western coast of Vancouver Island.
Photo credit: Stephanie A. Rivest
A Monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) caterpillar is spotted peaking over a Common Milkweed leaf (Asclepias syriaca) while researchers survey butterfly communities around Montreal, Quebec.
Photo credit: Victoria Marie Glynn
A close up shot of a cauliflower coral (Pocillopora spp.) from Coiba National Park, Panama. The coral's various polyps can be seen, emitting a blue-like fluorescence.
Photo credit: Kristina Tietjen
Professor Julia K. Baum takes a tissue sample of a brain coral (Platygyra spp.) on Kiritimati (Christmas Island, Kiribati).
Photo credit: Stephanie A. Rivest
Bright autumn colours of deciduous forests in Gatineau, Quebec including mostly Sugar Maple (Acer saccharum), White Oak (Quercus alba) and Red Oak (Quercus rubra).
Photo credit: Andrea Wishart
Columbian ground squirrel (Urocitellus columbianus) in the alpine meadow of Ptarmigan Cirque, Peter Lougheed Provincial Park, Alberta. These high-elevation rodents experience a very short active season and hibernate most of the year. Their ecophysiology is under study by researchers at the University of Saskatchewan.
Photo credit: Justin Benjamin
Monitoring Canada goose (Branta canadensis) nests in Wapusk National Park.
Photo credit: Mathilde Salamon
Mathilde Salamon (PhD candidate, Derry lab at UQAM) is sampling zooplankton at the Station de biologie des Laurentides (Quebec) at the onset of winter. Calanoid copepods of the species Leptodiaptomus minutus were identified and their DNA extracted for genomic sequencing.
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From Research to Impact: Mobilizing Knowledge on Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation

From Research to Impact: Mobilizing Knowledge on Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation

From Research to Impact: Mobilizing Knowledge on Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation

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Event Description

CSEE and Canadian Science Publishing invite you to join us for a practical webinar and panel on knowledge mobilization. You’ll learn how to identify your audience, write clear plain language summaries, and discover tools that can help amplify your research impact. This session is designed to give researchers concrete strategies to make their work more impactful—by moving it beyond academia and into the hands of those who can use it to improve policies, practices, and lives.

Bios

Hilary Belleville is a Journal Development Specialist for Canadian Science Publishing (CSP), and a Fellow of the SDG Publishers Compact Action Group. She interacts with various research communities and partners to discover what their needs are from a publisher, and how CSP can best support them. As an advocate for open science, Hilary is dedicated to advancing interdisciplinary research related to the sustainable development goals and strives to make this research discoverable by all. With a bachelor’s degree in environmental practice, Hilary is committed to using science for a more sustainable world.

Andrea Wishart is a Journal Development Specialist for Canadian Science Publishing (CSP), and CSEE’s main partnership contact for the publisher. Holding a PhD in biology, she is expanding her experiences as a researcher into expanding opportunities for authors and editors through new journal initiatives and decreasing barriers to publishing. As long-time member of CSEE and former student councillor, Andrea remains dedicated to strengthening global access to and understanding of ecology, evolution and more. 

To register for this event email your details to student-etudiant@csee-scee.ca

Register using webmail: Gmail / AOL / Yahoo / Outlook

 

Date And Time

2025-12-09 @ 03:30 PM
 

Location

Online event
 

Event Types

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