Fish evolution, phylogeny and systematics
Australian Society of Fish Biology and Oceania Chondrichthyan Society Conference 2016
Days
Sunday, 4th September
Monday, 5th September
Tuesday, 6th September
Wednesday, 7th September
Tracks
Early life history of fishes: implications for conservation and management
Monitoring and observing systems, environmental data and applications to fish and fisheries
Fish movement and population connectivity
Invasive species: impacts, detection and control
Trophic ecology, habitats and ecosystem modelling
Fish evolution, phylogeny and systematics
Fish research in action
Recreational and commercial fisheries
The emergence of socio-ecology in fish and fisheries research
Physiology
Biology, Ecology and Behaviour
Threatened species
Search
Speakers
Fish evolution, phylogeny and systematics
10:00AM - 11:00AM
Wednesday, 7th September
Plenary Hall
Chair: William White
Fish Phylogenetics: Swimming into the 21st Century
-
Peter F Cowman
Population genomics & taxonomy in Australasian fishes: the five Ws and one H (what, why, when, where, who and how)
-
Sharon Appleyard
Australia’s diverse eel fauna: a preliminary overview of their taxonomy and biogeography
-
John J Pogonoski
Fish evolution, phylogeny and systematics
11:30AM - 1:00PM
Wednesday, 7th September
Plenary Hall
Chair: Michael Hammer
A review of the Ocean Sunfishes (Family Molidae) in Australia and New Zealand, using genetics and fisheries by-catch data
-
Marianne Nyegaard
Who’s your mama? Riverine hybridization of threatened freshwater trout cod and Murray cod.
-
Alan Couch
Lates calcarifer
immune transcriptome reveals the Mincle C-Type Lectin Receptor as a partial replacement for TLR4 in LPS recognition in fish
-
Emmanuelle Zoccola
Asexual reproduction in elasmobranchs: who needs claspers anyway?
-
Christine L Dudgeon
Variability in multiple paternity rates for grey reef sharks (
Carcharhinus amblyrhynchos
) and scalloped hammerhead sharks (
Sphyrna lewini
) in Papua New Guinea
-
Madeline E Green
Population structure and phylogeography of the Galápagos shark (
Carcharhinus galapagensis
) across the Pacific.
-
Diana A Pazmino