Hello, Ecologists.

I append below the Call for Papers for the 2008 WFO (Western Field
Ornithologists) annual conference, to be held October 9-12, 2008, in San Mateo,
California. (San Mateo is in the Bay Area, just south of San Francisco.) For a
general overview of the conference, check out:

  http://www.wfo-cbrc.org/

More details at:

  http://www.wfo-cbrc.org/33rd%20Annual%20Meeting.pdf

Looks to be a great meeting, with superb speakers (keynote address by Carla
Cicero), fantastic field trips (including special pelagics offered by
Shearwater Journeys), a fine mix of workshops and expert panels, and the usual
camaraderie that is so characteristic of WFO meetings. And something else: Lots
of new blood at WFO these days, with important contributions from a great new
crop of young field ornithologists, and a generally high level of enthusiasm
and ambition in the organization.

Ted Floyd
tedfloyd57 AT hotmail.com
Lafayette, Boulder County, Colorado

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Call for Papers for the 33rd Annual Meeting of Western Field Ornithologists

Abstracts are now being accepted for presentations at the 33rd annual meeting
of Western Field Ornithologists, to be held 9�12 October 2008 in San Mateo,
California.

Oral presentations should reflect original research or summarize existing
unpublished information and should be presented in a manner that will be of
interest to serious amateur and professional field ornithologists. Papers
presented at other conferences will be considered provided that the material
has not already been published.

Talks relating to the following themes are solicited:

* Status, distribution, migration, and population dynamics of birds
* Systematics and biogeography of birds
* Ecology, behavior, and evolution of birds
* New information on avian field identification problems
* Descriptive field identification
* Science-based conservation and management of birds
* Techniques for field study of birds, including censusing, monitoring, and
other methods; and results of studies applying such techniques

Research described should apply to birds of the WFO region: western North
America (from Alaska through Mexico, and the Great Plains to the Pacific coast)
and the eastern Pacific Ocean. All talks should identify study objectives,
describe methods and data analysis, present results, discuss the significance
of the research, and propose future research directions.

We expect to allot 15 minutes per oral presentation, including 3 minutes for
questions and discussion. Dialogue between presenters and audience is a
hallmark of WFO meetings.

An abstract of your presentation should be submitted electronically to Debbie
Van Dooremolen(Debbie.VanDooremolen AT snwa.com) no later than 15 June 2008. All
queries and submissions must be via e-mail, and all abstracts must be submitted
in exactly the following format:

YOUR LAST NAME, YOUR FIRST NAME, CO-AUTHOR NAMES (Times, 10-point type, all
caps). Title of your talk (Times, 10-point type, bold). Your affiliation and/or
sponsoring organization(s), if any, complete mailing address (Times, 10-point
type, in italics), e-mail address (Arial, 9-point type).

Brief (300-word maximum) summary of the objectives, methods, results,
significance, and generality of your study (Times, 10-point type, normal).

Submissions should include a brief (60-word maximum) bio for the primary
author.

For more information about the meeting, visit the WFO web site at
www.wfo-cbrc.org. We look forward to seeing you in San Mateo!
_________________________________________________________________
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