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Institute of Ecology and Evolution
Institute of Ecology and Evolution Homepage Menu Inhalt Kontakt Suche Sprachwahl Wichtige Seiten Portal UniBE Faculties & Institutes Faculty of Science Biology Institute of Ecology and Evolution Faculties & Institutes Faculty of Science Biology Institute of Ecology and Evolution Institute of Ecology and Evolution Menu öffnen Menu schliessen Institute of Ecology and Evolution Homepage Studies About us Divisions Schliessen Divisions Aquatic Ecology & Evolution Behavioural Ecology Conservation Biology Evolutionary Ecology Evolving Interactions Population Genetics Terrestrial Ecology Theoretical Ecology and Evolution Portal UniBE Search Search Search The Institute of Ecology & Evolution at the University of Bern is devoted to research and teaching in all aspects of ecology and evolution, and aim to provide a scientific basis for the understanding and preservation of our living world. We study the mechanisms by which organisms respond to and interact with their environment, including phenotypic responses at individual level, change in gene frequencies at population level, change in species composition and abundance at community level, and the functioning of whole ecosystems. The institute has core research facilities, including several different field stations in Switzerland, extensive aquarium and animal husbandry facilities, and state-of-the-art molecular genetics laboratories. It also maintains institutional bonds with the Eawag Centre of Ecology, Evolution & Biogeochemistry, the Natural History Museum of Bern, Institute of Bee Health, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Bern, the Swiss Ornithological Institute, and the Doctoral School in Ecology & Evolution of Western Switzerland. Applications The IEE is not accepting new applications for SNSF or ERC Starting grants for the calls of fall 2024 and spring 2025 at this time. News and Events On predicting the evolution of pathogens Many viruses and bacteria species that threaten human health consist of multiple distinct strains, or genotypes. A lot of this genetic variation affects features of the pathogen that are recognized by the human adaptive immune response. Consequently, although an individual may have been previously infected by one strain, that prior infection may provide only partial protection against infection by another strain of the same pathogen species in the future. Using mathematical modelling, we showed how the specificity of the partial protection acquired through prior infection, combined with the genetic architecture of the pathogen species, shapes the evolutionary dynamics of multi-strain pathogens. The novel epidemiological-population genetic framework we developed holds promise for developing pathogen-specific recommendations of intervention strategies against multi-strain pathogens. D. McLeod/C. Bank Revealing human impacts on freshwater biodiversity using AI New research reveals previously unobservable human pressures on freshwater biodiversity in Switzerland, though the use of explainable artificial intelligence tools. This research addresses a seemingly simple question: Within the areas that a species could naturally live, where do humans impact a species the most? A major finding was that, for multiple species of fish, around 90% of habitable rivers in Switzerland are negatively impacted by human use. Concerningly, several threats often acted together to deplete the river’s suitability for a species, even if naturally the species could live there. By quantifying the relative role of natural factors and human influences, these insights could help improve the future for biodiversity in Switzerland by guiding restoration efforts towards the most efficient actions that alleviate threats in the areas where biodiversity is under most pressure. IEE - C. Waldock 2024/10/14 First-ever IEE Symposium successfully held On September 11 and 12, our first symposium was organized at the Natural History Museum in Bern. This one-and-a-half-day event was attended by more than 80 members of the institute including MSc students, PhD candidates, postdocs, technicians, administrative staff and PIs. There were several talks grouped into five overlapping research themes across different divisions. A dedicated poster session was also organized during the symposium. The symposium fostered a vibrant exchange of knowledge, underscoring the diverse expertise and collaborative spirit of our institute. IEE - M. Thakur 2024/09/16 Afrikanische Expertise bringt die Universität voran Professorin Margaret Owuor und Vizerektor Hugues Abriel sprechen über die Gründe und Pläne für die Initiative Afrique, die vorhandene Forschungskompetenzen an der Universität Bern bündeln will. www.uniaktuell.unibe.ch IEE 2024/08/22 Heat extremes can increase ecological debts In a new review paper published in Trends in Ecology and Evolution, Gerard Martínez-De León and Maddy Thakur from the Terrestrial Ecology division synthesise the main mechanisms mediating population and community responses to heat extremes, as well as their associated costs. Biological mechanisms immediately buffering the impacts of heat extremes can have lagged costs –known as ‘ecological debts’- that are likely to become more prevalent as populations or communities recover after extreme events. Gerard and Maddy propose a conceptual framework to infer how responses to heat extremes unveil over time, highlighting the roles of ecological debts in predicting population and community stability in a changing world. Phage accelerate the spread of antibiotic resistance In a new publication in Nature Communications, Chujin Ruan (Eawag), Dave Johnson (Eawag & UniBe), and co-workers show that phage predation can increase the spread of plasmid-encoded antibiotic resistance. As a bacterial community grows across a surface, phage predation prevents any one bacterial genotype from persisting at the biomass periphery. This consequently maintains more spatial intermixing between different bacterial genotypes, which in turn increases the probability that a plasmid can transfer between a donor and a potential recipient cell. These findings have implications for the design and application of phage therapy. Teacher of the Year 2023 - 2024 Prof Dr. Eva Ringler was awarded "Teacher of the Year" for third year Biology students specializing in Ecology and Evolution and Dr. Stephan Peischl for second year lecture "Statistik für Biologie". 2024/06/24 Majda Bohutínská wins the John Maynard Smith Prize from the European Society for Evolutionary Biology! Dr. Magdalena (Majda) Bohutínská, a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions postdoctoral fellow in the Division of Evolutionary Ecology and at Charles University in Czechia, has won the 2024 John Maynard Smith Prize from the European Society for Evolutionary Biology (ESEB)! This prize recognizes an outstanding young evolutionary biologist and is named after John Maynard Smith, an eminent evolutionary biologist and former President of ESEB. Majda's unlimited creativity, energy and enthusiasm for biology are an inspiration for all of us, and we are very lucky to have her as our colleague here in Bern! Majda will give the 2024 John Maynard Smith Prize Lecture at the next joint Evolution meeting, held in July 2024 in Montreal, Canada. Catherine Peichel New video highlights Margaret Owuor’s research in the Amazon The Institute of Ecology and Evolution is pleased to share a short video on the research on the coast of the Amazon that Prof. Dr. Margaret Owuor, a National Geographic Explorer and Integrative Biodiversity Conservation Science Professor at the Wyss Academy for Nature at the University of Bern, is doing together with her colleague and National Geographic Early Career Leadership Mentor Prof. Angelo Bernardino from the Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo. The research is organized under the National Geographic and Rolex Perpetual Planet Amazon expedition and focuses on the Ecological function, Climate Change and Socio-economic assessment of mangrove forests in the Amazon. Brazil’s mangroves provide ecosystem services for millions of people and store massive amounts of carbon. Yet, with the world’s attention focused on the region’s rapidly diminishing rainforests, this unique ecosystem has remained chronically overlooked. Until now. This work led to the discovery of a mangrove forest thriving in freshwater. As mangroves are known to grow only in seawater, this discovery tells us of the adaptive abilities of these important ecosystems. Furthermore, through multidisciplinary research tools such as drones, interviews and sampling, the explorers confirm that these mangroves store twice as much carbon as terrestrial forests and their importance to local communities for fisheries. This work assessed the values that the communities living adjacent to mangroves place on the mangrove ecosystem services for their well-being. The results of this research are under review. IEE Poster session We had a very nice and diverse poster session at the IEE on Wednesday, 18 October, attended by researchers from all institutes at the Department of Biology and beyond. Science - Cycles of fusion and fission enabled rapid parallel adaptive radiations in African cichlids Much of biodiversity is generated through adaptive radiations. The cichlids of the East African Great Lakes are a textbook example of an adaptive radiation. Joana Meier and colleagues published a paper in Science showing that this radiation is indeed as young as 16'000 years and has evolved through multiple cycles of fusion and fission of the various lineages evolving during an adaptive radiation. Marcel Haesler 2023/10/10 Nature - A continuous fish fossil record reveals key insights into adaptive radiation Nare sieved for her PhD through tons of sand from Lake Victoria sediment cores reaching down to 8m into sediment layers with an age of up to 17'000 years old. She found a staggering 7'623 fish tooth fossils from which she could reconstruct that all major fish taxa present in today's lake arrived simultaneously as soon as the modern lake began to form. Her results suggest that there is no support for ecological priority effects. Furthermore, among the many taxa colonizing the lake, only cichlids in the new deep open water habitats suggesting that ecological versatility was key to the adaptive radiation. Marcel Haesler 2023/10/10 Welcome Prof. Xiang-Yi Richter Welcome Prof. Xiang-Yi Richter to the IEE. Xiang-Yi is an SNSF Starting Grant Professor and started her Group of Evolving Interactions here on 1 July. Her office is room D105, and her group will be in D148 on the 1st floor. Please stop by to say hello! You can learn more about Xiang-Yi and her research her (link). IEE Timing of antibiotic administration determines the spread of plasmid-encoded antibiotic resistance during microbial range expansion In a new publication in Nature Communications, Yinyin Ma (Eawag & ETH), Josep Ramoneda (Eawag) and Dave Johnson (Eawag & UniBe) show that the timing at which antibiotics are applied to a microbial community determines the ability of an antibiotic resistance-encoding plasmid to spread through the community. Surprisingly, they found a unimodal relationship between plasmid spread and the timing of antibiotic administration, where plasmid spread is maximized at intermediate administration times. This is caused by a delicate balance between the plasmid transfer and loss probabilities. These findings challenge the dogma of “hit hard, hit fast” when designing antibiotic administration strategies. David R. Johnson The genomic consequences of 10,000 generations of isolation in a wild mammal In a new study in Current Biology, Xuejing Wang, Stephan Peischl and Gerald Heckel show that common voles (Microtus arvalis) on the Orkney archipelago have remained completely isolated for more than 5000 years. Orkney voles lost most genetic diversity and harbor high levels of putatively strongly deleterious mutations, yet results of computer simulations and the large current population sizes suggest rather mild effects on their fitness. While isolation leads to genetic deterioration, populations may still escape extinction and persist for very long periods of time. SNSF Scientific Image Competition 2023 Congratulations to Francesca Angiolani, PhD student at the Behavioural Ecology Division! Her image “Searching for a good father” won the first prize in the category "Object of Study" in the SNSF Scientific Image Competition 2023. She even had a second image awarded by the committee. The picture “Cognition roulette” displays a Tokay gecko during a spatial learning experiment in a radial arm maze. BEHAV Prof. Dr. Katie Peichel is elected to the US National Academy of Sciences Congratulation to Katie Peichel, head of our Institute, for her election to the prestigious US National Academy of Sciences in recognition of her distinguished and continuing achievements in research. Our Institute is extremely proud to host and benefit from the presence of such a great scientist and wonderful colleague. IEE Hintermann+Weber Research Prize 2022 awarded to Dr Daniel Slodowicz (PhD) The 2022 Hintermann + Weber prize for applied research in nature conservation has been awarded to a former PhD student of the Conservation Biology Division, Dr Daniel Slodowicz! His thesis entitled «Grassland Restoration: Relative effectiveness of different restoration methods on plant and invertebrate diversity» convinced the jury by the smart approach and a high practical relevance of the presented results. Daniel Slodowicz is the second member of the Conservation Biology Division to receive the prestigious H+W Award after Dr Veronika Braunisch in 2008. Congratulations to Dani for this great achievement! CB 2022/12/05 INSECTS NEED OUR HELP IN A WARMING WORLD, NOW! If no action is taken to better understand and reduce the impact of climate change on insects, we will drastically limit our chances of a sustainable future with healthy ecosystems.’ This warning in a very topical paper in Ecological Monographs comes from 70 scientists (including Maddy Thakur) from 19 countries around the world. But, they also provide ways to help insects in a warming world complete with management strategies. TERR 2022/11/08 Volz Award Winners 2022 The Volz Award for 2022 has been awarded to Annika Freudiger (best publication from MSc thesis: Ecological variation drives morphological differentiation in a highly social vertebrate) and Zuyao Liu (best publication from PhD thesis: Chromosomal Fusions Facilitate Adaptation to Divergent Environments in Threespine Stickleback). They both presented their work as part of the seminar Lecture Series in Ecology and Evolution on November, 1st, 2022. The board of directors congratulates them for their success and whishes them all the best for their upcoming scientific career. IEE Teaching award Congratulation to Prof. Dr. Eva Ringler from our institute, who has received a Science faculty award for her excellent teaching of the lecture "Behavioural ecology, research practical" in the Spring semester 2022. IEE 2022/10/06 Mycorrhizal association matters for plant’s responses to climate warming In a paper published in Nature Communications, Maddy and his collaborators from East China Normal University show that terrestrial plants allocate more biomass to roots in warm and dry environments. In wetter environments, plants’ strategies are dictated by their mycorrhizal association. Plants associated with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi do not have to allocate more biomass to roots in warmer and wetter conditions. Based on a global meta-analysis, these results provide important insights into factors that would alter terrestrial carbon dynamics in response to climate warming and precipitation variability. 2022/08/22 Two Bernese researchers receive SNSF Advanced Grant Two Bernese researchers receive SNSF Advanced Grant Neuropsychologist Katharina Henke and evolutionary biologist Katie Peichel are each receiving a highly endowed SNSF Advanced Grant from the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF). Their research projects deal with the ability to remember despite amnesia and the predictability of evolution. 2022/07/07 How do organisms respond to, and recover after climate extremes? In a recent review, Maddy and his co-authors present an extensive review of literature to show that most taxonomic groups living in terrestrial ecosystems are vulnerable to climate extremes, such as heat waves and prolong periods of drought. They further propose a conceptual framework to better integrate ecology of organisms to predict how they may recover after climate extremes have stopped. 2022/06/24 CELL - The genomic origins of the world’s first farmers In a paper published in Cell, Nina Marchi and colleagues determine the precise genetic origins of the first Neolithic farming populations in Europe and Southwest Asia, as well as the processes and the timing of their differentiation. Demogenomic modeling of high-quality ancient genomes reveals that the early farmers of Anatolia and Europe emerged from a multiphase mixing of a Southwest Asian population with a strongly bottlenecked western hunter-gatherer population after the last glacial maximum. Moreover, the ancestors of the first farmers of Europe and Anatolia went through a period of extreme genetic drift during their westward range expansion, contributing highly to their genetic distinctiveness. This modeling elucidates the demographic processes at the root of the Neolithic transition and leads to a spatial interpretation of the population history of Southwest Asia and Europe during the late Pleistocene and early Holocene. Interview with Wyss Academy Prof. Margaret Owuor An interview with Prof. Dr. Margaret Owuor ahead of the 2022 UN Biodiversity Conference: Margaret Owuor, Professor for Integrative Biodiversity Conservation Science at the Wyss Academy for Nature, knows all too well that policy statements and declarations for conservation are being decided on a global level. Which is one of the reasons why the scientist wants to see such issues broken down to the local level. With this strategy she intends to empower communities in her native Kenya. Which in turn could contribute to the goal of an ecosystem-based management approach. 2022/04/29 JMS Prize Winner 2022 - Catalina Chaparro Congratulations to Catalina Chaparro-Pedraza for receiving the John Maynard-Smitz Prize of the European Society for Evolutionary Biology (ESEB) in 2022! Marcel Haesler Anna Feller wins faculty prize for best PhD thesis 2021! Many congratulations to Anna for winning the faculty prize for best PhD thesis in biology in 2021 at University of Bern! Her thesis is entitled "On the genetic architecture of an adaptive radiation". She studied the genetic architecture of various traits such as head morphology, colour traits and sex determination in Lake Victoria cichlids that form one of the most spectacular adaptive radiations. Marcel Haesler Volz Award 2022 This award will be given every two years for - the best publication, resulting from a master thesis at the Institute of Ecology and Evolution. - the best publication, resulting from a dissertation at the Institute of Ecology and Evolution. The award is endowed with CHF 500.-. Please send your application until Saturday, 30 April 2022 to susanne.holenstein@unibe.ch. IEE 2022/03/11 Teaching award Congratulations to 4 teachers from our Institute, who have received a Science faculty award for their excellent teaching in Fall semester 2021: - Prof. Dr. Madhav P. Thakur (Advanced concepts in Ecology and Evolution) - Prof. Dr. Raphaël Arlettaz (Conservation Biology research practical) - PD Dr. Jean-Yves Humbert (Conservation Biology research practical) - PD Dr. Veronika Braunisch (Conservation Biology research practical) IEE 2022/03/11 Maddy Thakur has been awarded with an ERC We are very pleased and proud to announce that Prof. Dr. Madhav (Maddy) P. Thakur has been awarded with an ERC Starting Grant to investigate how climate extremes will affect terrestrial biodiversity above and below ground. His project Food webs and biodiversity change in an extreme world (FoBEx) will consist a series of outdoor and indoor experiments to gain a mechanistic understanding of how contemporary biodiversity loss could be linked to anthropogenic climate change. FoBEx will collect high-resolution temporal data of the responses of microorganisms, invertebrates and plants to heat waves and extreme droughts. Maddy started as an assistant professor tenure track at the Institute of Ecology and Evolution (IEE) in August 2020, and is strengthening climate change-biodiversity research at the IEE through his ERC StG Laurent Excoffier 2022/01/27 Climate change and phenology: A new paper in Nature Climate Change A new synthesis conducted by a group of international scientists including Madhav P. Thakur from the University of Bern reveals mismatches between above- and belowground plant phenology due to climate change. These findings are important to understand the consequences of climate change on terrestrial biodiversity. Madhav (Maddy) P. Thakur 2021/12/23 Projet Lac synthesis report published! Today the synthesis report of the Projet Lac is published. It summarises the work of over 10 years in which 35 peri-alpine lakes in Switzerland and neighbouring countries were quantitively fished to the first time resulting in a great fish inventory for the alpine region. One result is the recognition that the large and deep lakes of the region have exceptionally rich fish assemblages because they combine species-rich warm water and species-rich cold water faunas in a unique way: The combination of cold, deep and well oxygenated lakes with geographical proximity to the southern European glacial refugia for warm water fish has led to biogeographical "hybrid communities" rich in warm water species that inhibit the littoral zones and rich in locally endemic cold water species that dominate the open and deep waters (the Galapagos for cold water fish). It is this "hybrid fauna" that explains the richness. It is also the cause of the extreme vulnerability of many species to climate warming and lake pollution. Marcel Haesler 2021/12/09 New paper in PNAS In their experimental study, Sakshi Sharda, Tobias Züst, Matthias Erb and Barbara Taborsky showed that mothers that had been exposed to predator videos during egg maturation laid heavier and more nutrient-rich eggs. The offspring hatching from these eggs had a 50 msec faster flight reflex at an age of three months compared to the control treatment, revealing an adaptive egg-mediated maternal effect on behaviour. New paper in Functional Ecology The environment experienced by an organism can affect the expression of individual traits, such as body shape and behaviour. Such local adaptations might influence sociality on the individual and population levels alike. In a study recently published in Functional Ecology an international team led by IEE MSc-student Annika Freudiger and PI Joachim Frommen showed that environmental settings influence the body shape of cooperatively breeding cichlids. These shape differences were heritable and have the potential to feed back on group structure, thereby highlighting the potential to mediate the evolution and maintenance of complex social systems. 2021/07/19 Previous Next More News Share Facebook E-Mail 𝕏 LinkedIn Print You are here Institute of Ecology and Evolution Contact University of Bern Institute of Ecology and Evolution Baltzerstrasse 6 3012 Bern Phone: +41 31 684 4511 Map Top Weitere Informationen über diesen Webauftritt Wichtige Seiten Map Jobs Library Media Webmail KSL Uni intern Sprachwahl EN Site-Suche Search Search Rechtliches und Impressum © 2024 University of Bern Imprint Legal Notice Unsere Adresse University of Bern Hochschulstrasse 6 3012 Bern Unsere Partner
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