On May 4-6, 2015, the Triangle Center for Evolutionary Medicine (TriCEM),
the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent) and the Duke Tropical
Conservation Initiative (DTCI) will be hosting a Catalysis Meeting on
"Biodiversity, Conservation and Infectious Disease."  The organizers are
Charles Nunn, Hillary Young, Gavin Smith and Jeffrey Vincent. The
application Deadline is March 14.  Details on the meeting are below.



The goal of the meeting is to understand how changes in biodiversity impact
infectious disease risk in humans and wildlife.  Remarkably little effort
has synthesized either theory or data on the efficacy of biodiversity and
conservation practices as a disease management strategy, the effects of
different anthropogenic changes on infectious disease risk in the tropics,
or the impacts of different conservation strategies on human health.  We
will take a broad view on this important issue by examining the many
potential links between changes in biodiversity and infectious disease
risk, and by considering the diversity of ways to investigate these
questions using empirical and theoretical approaches.  We will also engage
with the conflicting views that natural systems appear to buffer some
disease risks, yet they can also serve as the source of new infectious
diseases.



The meeting will be composed of approximately 10 researchers from Research
Triangle universities (Duke, UNC-Chapel Hill, NC State, and NC Central),
with another 25 participants from outside the Triangle.  All travel
expenses will be covered for non-Triangle participants, and
meeting-associated meals covered for all participants.  In building the
participant list, we seek a wide range of interests, approaches, and
experience levels.  Thus, we welcome modeling approaches, field biologists,
and those with expertise in meta-analysis, and graduate students, postdocs,
and faculty.  At the meeting, we will work toward specific outputs, which
will include a special "theme" issue in a high-impact journal that
synthesizes diverse views on this important topic, and development of
future working groups to investigate specific questions in greater depth.



For those wishing to participate in the Catalysis Meeting - including
scientists from the Research Triangle Universities - we ask that you fill
out a brief application at this link: http://goo.gl/forms/LuCWB5Vhgm.  We
will begin inviting participants after March 14.



For questions, please contact Charles Nunn at [email protected].

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