STRI News, July 24, 2015

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stri.si.edu/sites/strinews

JUL 24, 2015

Coryphopterus curasub. Researchers based their identification of this new species on this female specimen, shown after preservation (above) and before preservation (below).

New reef fish found off Curaçao.

Coryphopterus curasub. Los investigadores basaron la identificación de esta nueva especie en este espécimen de una hembra que se muestra después (arriba) y antes de su preservación (debajo).

Full story: www.stri.si.edu issuu.com/strinewspanama

SEMINARS BEHAVIOR DISCUSSION GROUP MEETING Tues., Jul. 28, 2pm Jay Falk Tupper Large Meeting Room Female-limited polymorphism in hummingbirds: Testing the hypotheses TUPPER SEMINAR Tues., Jul. 28, 4pm Nathan Jud, University of Florida Tupper Auditorium Fossil lianas and the Miocene rainforests of Panama PALEOTALK DOUBLE FEATURE Wed. Jul. 29, 4pm Amanda Waite University of Florida From ocean gateway closure to land bridge exposure: Insights from Caribbean paleoceanography Alexander Correa-Metrio Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México The Holocene in tropical Mexico: critical transitions of a non-stationary climatic system CTPA GALETA PUBLIC TALK Jue. 30 de julio, 7pm Steve Paton STRI Fuerte de Lesseps, Batería Morgan El clima de Panamá y el fenómeno del niño BAMBI SEMINAR Thur., Jul. 30, 7:15pm Margaret Crofoot University of California – Davis Barro Colorado Island Collective Behavior in Complex Societies: Lessons from Tracking Wild Baboons

WHAT’S HAPPENING AT STRI? FIELD COURSES and SPECIAL EVENTS Nudibranchs Workshop July 22 – August 6 Contact person: Rachel Collin University of California, Riverside Tropical Ecology field course July 26 - August 22 Contact person: Louis Santiago Golden Frog Festival August 14 - 30 Contact person: Jimena Pitty


¡CHISPA! Program graduation

Graduación del programa ¡CHISPA!

¡ChISPA! is a science mentoring program for young people from Panama City neighborhoods including El Chorrillo, Santa Ana and Curundú. One of its primary objectives is to expose young people to different fields of science and professional roles: from field biologists to science journalists and from leading environmentalists to paleontologists. Participants teamed up with Smithsonian scientists to experience science and conservation first hand.

¡ChISPA! es un programa de tutorías en ciencias que trabaja con niños de barrios de la ciudad de Panamá incluyendo El Chorrillo, Santa Ana y Curundú. Uno de sus principales objetivos es exponer a los jóvenes a diferentes áreas de la ciencia y a distintos roles profesionales, que van desde biólogos de campo a periodistas científicos y desde paleontólogos a líderes ambientales. Los participantes se unieron con científicos del Smithsonian para experimentar ciencia y la conservación de primera mano.

208 young people have participated in ¡ChISPA! since it was launched in 2012. The program continues to partner with the NGO, Movimiento Nueva Generación, funded by a three-year grant from the United States State Department. Among the participants at the “chisperos” graduation, held on July 17, were Kevin O’Reilly, Deputy Chief of Business at the U.S. Embassy; Juan Carlos Cordoba, Executive Director of Movimiento Nueva Generación and Oris Sanjur, Associate Director for Scientific Administration at the Smithsonian in Panama.

En ¡ChISPA! Han participado alrededor de 208 jóvenes desde que inició en el 2012. El programa continua trabajando con la ONG Movimiento Nueva Generación, y una donación de 3 años por parte de la Embajada de los Estados Unidos. La graduación de los “chisperos” se realizó el pasado 17 de julio. Entre los participantes y oradores se encontraban Kevin O’Reilly, Ministro Consejero de Negocios de la Embajada de Estados Unidos, Juan Carlos Córdoba, Director Ejecutivo del Movimiento Nueva Generación y Oris Sanjur, Directora Asociada para la administración Científica por parte del Smithsonian en Panamá.


DEPARTURES

ARRIVALS Christina Campbell California State University Northridge Dietary Alcohol Ingestion by Free-ranging Spider Monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi): An Evaluation of the “Drunken Monkey” Hypothesis Scott Cinel University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Predator foraging behavior Gamboa and Barro Colorado Island Carleen Rodriquez University of California – Riverside Field Course - Plant Ecology: a University of California, Riverside Course in Gamboa Galeta Station, Gamboa, Tupper and Barro Colorado Island Wayne Sousa University of California – Berkeley Patterns and mechanisms of canopy tree regeneration in a Caribbean mangrove forest Galeta Station

Alexander Zimmermann and Stephan Jacobi University of Potsdam Ecosystem Services in the Panama Canal Watershed Tupper and Agua Salud Douglas Jones, Nathan Jud and Ian Cannon University of Florida Field Course - Geology and Paleontology of Panama and the Panama Canal Center for Tropical Paleoecology Margaret Crofoot University of California – Davis Robert Lessnau, Michelle Faehr and Megan O’Keefe Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden FOOD FOR THOUGHT: Does “smart foraging” explain how primates can afford big brains? Barro Colorado Island Anna Normand University of Florida Matthew Costa University of California, San Diego Soil Nutrient Dynamics Bocas del Toro, Tupper and Galeta Station

PUBLICATIONS McCaffery, R.; Richards-Zawacki, C.; Lips, K. 2015. The demography of Atelopus decline: Harlequin frog survival and abundance in central Panama prior to and during a disease outbreak. Global Ecology and Conservation 4: 232-242. DOI: 10.1016/j.gecco.2015.07.003 Orzechowski, E. A.; Lockwood, R.; Byrnes, J. E.K.; Anderson, S. C.; Finnegan, S.; Harnik, P. G.; Lindberg, D. R.; Liow, L. Hsiang; L., Heike K.; McClain, C. R.; McGuire, J. L.; O’Dea, A.; Pandolfi, J. M.; Simpson, C.l; Tittensor, D. P. 2015. Marine extinction risk shaped by trait–environment interactions over 500 million years. Global Change Biology DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12963 Luiz, O. J.; Allen, A. P.; Robertson, D. R.; Floeter, S. R.; Madin, J. S. 2015.Seafarers or castaways: ecological traits associated with rafting dispersal in tropical reef fishes. Journal of Biogeography DOI: 10.1111/jbi.12574 Hemond, E. M.; Vollmer, S. V. 2015. Diurnal and nocturnal transcriptomic variation in the Caribbean staghorn coral, Acropora cervicornis. Molecular Ecology. DOI: 10.1111/ mec.13320 Liu, H.; Xu, Q.; He, P.; Santiago, L. S.; Yang, K.; Ye, Q. 2015. Strong phylogenetic signals and phylogenetic niche conservatism in ecophysiological traits across divergent lineages of Magnoliaceae. Scientific Reports 5: 12246 DOI: 10.1038/ srep12246 Farine, D. R.; Whitehead, H. 2015. Constructing, conducting, and interpreting animal social network analysis. Journal of Animal Ecology DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.12418

Daniel Buitrago To Parque Nacional Santa Fe, Veraguas. For a fieldtrip on birds diversity at the Santa Fe, Veraguas National Park and the importance of camera traps Saskia Santamaria To Los Santos, Panama To visit research sites used for courses and to follow up on former students as part of the Leadership Program Rachel Collin To Bocas Del Toro To oversee administration at the Research station Apolinar Guerrero To Bocas Del Toro To train on the use of catalogue, data base, opening of an Illiad account and entering articles in SRO, as well as maintenance and revision of the book collection Jacob Slusser To Pedasi, Los Santos To facilitate ELTI’s Ecological Restoration in Cattle Ranching Landscapes Course

strinews@si.edu Questions/comments Preguntas/comentarios

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