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Biology Ribble Endowment Seminar

"Old and New: Trait Evolution in Natural Populations"

Dr. Molly Schumer leaned up against a stone wall with one arm across her waist holding the other arm while smiling.Dr. Molly Schumer | Schumer Lab

Bio:
Molly Schumer is an Assistant Professor in Biology. She is interested in genetics and evolutionary biology. After receiving her PhD at Princeton, she did her postdoctoral work at Columbia and was a Junior Fellow in the Harvard Society of Fellows and Hanna H. Gray Fellow at Harvard Medical School. Current research in the lab centers on understanding the genetic mechanisms of evolution, with a focus on natural populations.

Abstract:
The diverse branches of life on earth trace to a common root. In the past two decades, a revolution in genome sequencing has allowed researchers to make unprecedented progress in understanding the evolution of life on earth at the genetic level. Our lab is interested in why and how new species arise, and what genetic changes underlie their ability to adapt to the environments in which they live. To study these questions, we use an interdisciplinary approach – melding genomics and evolution with molecular biology, behavior, and physiology. Our work leverages an emerging model system, swordtail fish or Xiphophorus, where we can study genetics and evolution  using experimental and natural populations.

Date:
Location:
THM 116

"Old and New: Trait Evolution in Natural Populations"

Dr. Molly Schumer leaned up against a stone wall with one arm across her waist holding the other arm while smiling.Dr. Molly Schumer | Schumer Lab

Bio:
Molly Schumer is an Assistant Professor in Biology. She is interested in genetics and evolutionary biology. After receiving her PhD at Princeton, she did her postdoctoral work at Columbia and was a Junior Fellow in the Harvard Society of Fellows and Hanna H. Gray Fellow at Harvard Medical School. Current research in the lab centers on understanding the genetic mechanisms of evolution, with a focus on natural populations.

Abstract:
The diverse branches of life on earth trace to a common root. In the past two decades, a revolution in genome sequencing has allowed researchers to make unprecedented progress in understanding the evolution of life on earth at the genetic level. Our lab is interested in why and how new species arise, and what genetic changes underlie their ability to adapt to the environments in which they live. To study these questions, we use an interdisciplinary approach – melding genomics and evolution with molecular biology, behavior, and physiology. Our work leverages an emerging model system, swordtail fish or Xiphophorus, where we can study genetics and evolution  using experimental and natural populations.

Date:
Location:
THM 116

"Adaptation in Arabidopsis through Space and Time"

Pictured is Dr. Jesse Lasky wearing a plaid collared navy with pink and yellow button up shirt.Dr. Jesse Lasky | Lasky Lab

Bio:
Dr. Jesse Lasky attended Kenyon College and received his BA in Biology and a PhD in Ecology Evolution & Behavior at UT-Austin. Dr. Lasky was a postdoc at Columbia University and is now a faculty member at Penn State University, in addition to being the herbarium director.

Abstract:
Global patterns of population genetic variation through time offer a window into evolutionary processes that maintain diversity. Over time, lineages may expand or contract their distribution, causing turnover in population genetic composition. At individual loci, migration, drift, and selection (among other processes) may affect allele frequencies. Museum specimens of widely distributed species offer a unique window into the genetics of understudied populations and changes over time. Here, we sequenced genomes of 130 herbarium specimens and 91 new field collections of Arabidopsis thaliana and combined these with published genomes. We sought a broader view of genomic diversity across the species, and to test if population genomic composition is changing through time. We documented extensive and previously uncharacterized diversity in a range of populations in Africa, populations that are under threat from anthropogenic climate change. Through time, we did not find dramatic changes in genomic composition of populations. Instead, we found a pattern of genetic change every 100 years of the same magnitude seen when comparing Eurasian populations that are 185 km apart, potentially due to a combination of drift and changing selection. We found only mixed signals of polygenic adaptation at phenology and physiology QTL. We did find that genes conserved across eudicots show altered levels of directional allele frequency change, potentially due to variable purifying and background selection. Our study highlights how museum specimens can reveal new dimensions of population diversity and show how wild populations are evolving in recent history.

Watch the seminar here!

A photo with dried Arabidopsis thaliana, also known as thale cress, taped to an off white sheet of paper. There is a bright white square piece of paper in the bottom left corner that has writing. The title of this sheet of paper is "Herbier du Bureau de Botanique appliquee, Petrograd.".

Date:
Location:
THM 116

"Adaptation in Arabidopsis through Space and Time"

Pictured is Dr. Jesse Lasky wearing a plaid collared navy with pink and yellow button up shirt.Dr. Jesse Lasky | Lasky Lab

Bio:
Dr. Jesse Lasky attended Kenyon College and received his BA in Biology and a PhD in Ecology Evolution & Behavior at UT-Austin. Dr. Lasky was a postdoc at Columbia University and is now a faculty member at Penn State University, in addition to being the herbarium director.

Abstract:
Global patterns of population genetic variation through time offer a window into evolutionary processes that maintain diversity. Over time, lineages may expand or contract their distribution, causing turnover in population genetic composition. At individual loci, migration, drift, and selection (among other processes) may affect allele frequencies. Museum specimens of widely distributed species offer a unique window into the genetics of understudied populations and changes over time. Here, we sequenced genomes of 130 herbarium specimens and 91 new field collections of Arabidopsis thaliana and combined these with published genomes. We sought a broader view of genomic diversity across the species, and to test if population genomic composition is changing through time. We documented extensive and previously uncharacterized diversity in a range of populations in Africa, populations that are under threat from anthropogenic climate change. Through time, we did not find dramatic changes in genomic composition of populations. Instead, we found a pattern of genetic change every 100 years of the same magnitude seen when comparing Eurasian populations that are 185 km apart, potentially due to a combination of drift and changing selection. We found only mixed signals of polygenic adaptation at phenology and physiology QTL. We did find that genes conserved across eudicots show altered levels of directional allele frequency change, potentially due to variable purifying and background selection. Our study highlights how museum specimens can reveal new dimensions of population diversity and show how wild populations are evolving in recent history.

Watch the seminar here!

A photo with dried Arabidopsis thaliana, also known as thale cress, taped to an off white sheet of paper. There is a bright white square piece of paper in the bottom left corner that has writing. The title of this sheet of paper is "Herbier du Bureau de Botanique appliquee, Petrograd.".

Date:
Location:
THM 116

"Adaptation in Arabidopsis through Space and Time"

Pictured is Dr. Jesse Lasky wearing a plaid collared navy with pink and yellow button up shirt.Dr. Jesse Lasky | Lasky Lab

Bio:
Dr. Jesse Lasky attended Kenyon College and received his BA in Biology and a PhD in Ecology Evolution & Behavior at UT-Austin. Dr. Lasky was a postdoc at Columbia University and is now a faculty member at Penn State University, in addition to being the herbarium director.

Abstract:
Global patterns of population genetic variation through time offer a window into evolutionary processes that maintain diversity. Over time, lineages may expand or contract their distribution, causing turnover in population genetic composition. At individual loci, migration, drift, and selection (among other processes) may affect allele frequencies. Museum specimens of widely distributed species offer a unique window into the genetics of understudied populations and changes over time. Here, we sequenced genomes of 130 herbarium specimens and 91 new field collections of Arabidopsis thaliana and combined these with published genomes. We sought a broader view of genomic diversity across the species, and to test if population genomic composition is changing through time. We documented extensive and previously uncharacterized diversity in a range of populations in Africa, populations that are under threat from anthropogenic climate change. Through time, we did not find dramatic changes in genomic composition of populations. Instead, we found a pattern of genetic change every 100 years of the same magnitude seen when comparing Eurasian populations that are 185 km apart, potentially due to a combination of drift and changing selection. We found only mixed signals of polygenic adaptation at phenology and physiology QTL. We did find that genes conserved across eudicots show altered levels of directional allele frequency change, potentially due to variable purifying and background selection. Our study highlights how museum specimens can reveal new dimensions of population diversity and show how wild populations are evolving in recent history.

Watch the seminar here!

A photo with dried Arabidopsis thaliana, also known as thale cress, taped to an off white sheet of paper. There is a bright white square piece of paper in the bottom left corner that has writing. The title of this sheet of paper is "Herbier du Bureau de Botanique appliquee, Petrograd.".

Date:
Location:
THM 116

"Adaptation in Arabidopsis through Space and Time"

Pictured is Dr. Jesse Lasky wearing a plaid collared navy with pink and yellow button up shirt.Dr. Jesse Lasky | Lasky Lab

Bio:
Dr. Jesse Lasky attended Kenyon College and received his BA in Biology and a PhD in Ecology Evolution & Behavior at UT-Austin. Dr. Lasky was a postdoc at Columbia University and is now a faculty member at Penn State University, in addition to being the herbarium director.

Abstract:
Global patterns of population genetic variation through time offer a window into evolutionary processes that maintain diversity. Over time, lineages may expand or contract their distribution, causing turnover in population genetic composition. At individual loci, migration, drift, and selection (among other processes) may affect allele frequencies. Museum specimens of widely distributed species offer a unique window into the genetics of understudied populations and changes over time. Here, we sequenced genomes of 130 herbarium specimens and 91 new field collections of Arabidopsis thaliana and combined these with published genomes. We sought a broader view of genomic diversity across the species, and to test if population genomic composition is changing through time. We documented extensive and previously uncharacterized diversity in a range of populations in Africa, populations that are under threat from anthropogenic climate change. Through time, we did not find dramatic changes in genomic composition of populations. Instead, we found a pattern of genetic change every 100 years of the same magnitude seen when comparing Eurasian populations that are 185 km apart, potentially due to a combination of drift and changing selection. We found only mixed signals of polygenic adaptation at phenology and physiology QTL. We did find that genes conserved across eudicots show altered levels of directional allele frequency change, potentially due to variable purifying and background selection. Our study highlights how museum specimens can reveal new dimensions of population diversity and show how wild populations are evolving in recent history.

Watch the seminar here!

A photo with dried Arabidopsis thaliana, also known as thale cress, taped to an off white sheet of paper. There is a bright white square piece of paper in the bottom left corner that has writing. The title of this sheet of paper is "Herbier du Bureau de Botanique appliquee, Petrograd.".

Date:
Location:
THM 116

"Adaptation in Arabidopsis through Space and Time"

Pictured is Dr. Jesse Lasky wearing a plaid collared navy with pink and yellow button up shirt.Dr. Jesse Lasky | Lasky Lab

Bio:
Dr. Jesse Lasky attended Kenyon College and received his BA in Biology and a PhD in Ecology Evolution & Behavior at UT-Austin. Dr. Lasky was a postdoc at Columbia University and is now a faculty member at Penn State University, in addition to being the herbarium director.

Abstract:
Global patterns of population genetic variation through time offer a window into evolutionary processes that maintain diversity. Over time, lineages may expand or contract their distribution, causing turnover in population genetic composition. At individual loci, migration, drift, and selection (among other processes) may affect allele frequencies. Museum specimens of widely distributed species offer a unique window into the genetics of understudied populations and changes over time. Here, we sequenced genomes of 130 herbarium specimens and 91 new field collections of Arabidopsis thaliana and combined these with published genomes. We sought a broader view of genomic diversity across the species, and to test if population genomic composition is changing through time. We documented extensive and previously uncharacterized diversity in a range of populations in Africa, populations that are under threat from anthropogenic climate change. Through time, we did not find dramatic changes in genomic composition of populations. Instead, we found a pattern of genetic change every 100 years of the same magnitude seen when comparing Eurasian populations that are 185 km apart, potentially due to a combination of drift and changing selection. We found only mixed signals of polygenic adaptation at phenology and physiology QTL. We did find that genes conserved across eudicots show altered levels of directional allele frequency change, potentially due to variable purifying and background selection. Our study highlights how museum specimens can reveal new dimensions of population diversity and show how wild populations are evolving in recent history.

Watch the seminar here!

A photo with dried Arabidopsis thaliana, also known as thale cress, taped to an off white sheet of paper. There is a bright white square piece of paper in the bottom left corner that has writing. The title of this sheet of paper is "Herbier du Bureau de Botanique appliquee, Petrograd.".

Date:
Location:
THM 116