Field study for the conservation of the Reptiles of Oman: expedition Spring 2013
La ciencia está llena de SHEroes cuya pasión, trabajo y creatividad han inspirado la biología evolutiva de hoy.
Como parte de nuestro compromiso con la sociedad, el Instituto de Biología Evolutiva (IBE, CSIC-UPF) quiere dar crédito y visibilidad a los logros de las científicas en evolución.
Con ese objetivo, lanzamos la campaña #WhoisyourSHEro para compartir historias de mujeres que han tenido un impacto en la carrera científica de nuestras/os investigadoras/es a través de las redes sociales y la web.
La campaña sigue avanzando a medida que más y más mujeres en evolución inspiran a la comunidad IBE.
Puedes unirte a la conversación a través de las redes sociales con el hashtag #WhoisyourSHEro.
Con la colaboración de la Fundación Española para la Ciencia y la Tecnología - Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación.
Field study for the conservation of the Reptiles of Oman: expedition Spring 2013
IBE Researchers from Salvador Carranza's Group, in collaboration with Omani authorities, have just launched an unprecedented field exploration in Oman, with the goal of describing several new species and mapping all the reptile diversity of the country.
Project: Field study for the conservation of the Reptiles of Oman
The Systematics, Biogeography and Evolution of Reptiles and Amphibians Lab of the Institute of Evolutionary Biology (CSIC - University Pompeu Fabra) and the Ministry of Environment and Climatic Affairs from Oman have started this 5 th of April 2013 a four months expedition to the Sultanate of Oman that will take them to every corner of the country, including some remote and unexplored areas. The main goal of this project is to study the distribution, systematics, evolution and biogeography of the reptiles of Oman, a unique vertebrate group that includes four times more endemic species than mammals, birds and fishes together. With this knowledge, it will be possible to use reptiles as model organisms to enhance conservation prioritization practices in the future by promoting methods that will improve cost-efficiency of conservation actions. Contemporary analysis tools, such as multi-locus phylogenies, multivariate morphological analyses, landscape genetics, Geographical Information Systems (GIS), and Species Distribution Models will be used to tackle our main goal.
For more information on the project please visit: