GRADUATE/PROFESSIONAL TRAINING - SMITHSONIAN-MASON SCHOOL OF CONSERVATION
Front Royal, Virginia, USA

The Smithsonian-Mason School of Conservation is excited to be offering a number 
of new courses in the second half of 2018. These courses are 10 to 12-day 
intensive residential programs hosted in our sustainably-built Academic Center 
on the grounds of Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Front Royal, 
Virginia, USA. All courses offer continuing education credits (CEUs) and some 
can be taken for graduate credit. Limited scholarships are available for 
eligible applicants. See our upcoming offerings below and check out our website 
(http://SMConservation.gmu.edu) for more course details and pricing.

NON-INVASIVE TECHNIQUES AND APPLICATIONS IN WILDLIFE ENDOCRINOLOGY  (NEW!)
July 23 - August 3, 2018 (apply before May 14)
The purpose of this course, taught by the experts at the National Zoo's 
Endocrinology Laboratory, is to provide theoretical information and practical 
experience in using endocrine monitoring techniques for assessing reproductive 
status and welfare in wildlife species, both in captive and wild scenarios. 
Lectures will cover aspects of basic biology, theory of immunoassay 
methodology, reproductive endocrinology and stress physiology, and examples of 
data obtained from in-situ and ex situ studies of wildlife species. Extensive 
lab work will include demonstrations and hands-on experience in sample (urine 
and feces) processing and analysis using enzyme immunoassay technology. 
Computer lab sessions will include basic and advanced data analysis techniques. 
Participants will also work on independent group projects where they will apply 
what they have learned and complete a full lab analysis and data interpretation 
themselves. A comprehensive endocrine training manual will be provided to 
course participants. 

ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION OF MIGRATORY BIRDS
September 17-28, 2018           
Led by the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center, this course teaches the most 
current methods in the research of migratory birds including theoretical 
concepts, field and laboratory methods (e.g. mist-netting, banding, tissue 
sampling, stable isotope geochemistry, geolocators and radio telemetry), data 
analysis (including distance sampling and mark-recapture statistics) and 
applied conservation strategies.
Participants will be mist-netting and handling birds during many mornings of 
the course, and will also learn to prepare museum voucher study skins.

BIOINFORMATICS ANALYSIS FOR CONSERVATION GENOMICS  (NEW!)
October 10-19, 2018 
This course is designed to provide attendees at any career stage with a 
theoretical understanding of the methods used in conservation genomics along 
with the practical skills necessary to design and carry out the analysis 
component of a conservation genomics study. While an introduction to the 
theoretical aspects of each of the analytical steps will be given, the emphasis 
of the course will be on hands-on training, enabling the participants to 
complete the analysis steps behind a conservation genomics study. Thus, the 
course will follow the format of short lectures introducing each analytical 
step, followed by hands-on activities during which students will complete the 
corresponding analysis. The course will begin with an overview of conservation 
genomics, comparison of different next generation sequencing platforms, and the 
analytical factors to consider when beginning a conservation genomics study. 
The rest of the course will focus on the bioinformatics analysis behind a 
conservation study, including: genome assembly (trimming, assembly techniques, 
quality assessment), genome annotation, mapping low coverage genome data to a 
reference genome, SNP calling, demographic analysis, and estimation of 
genome-wide diversity. These steps will all be accomplished with real data used 
in a recent conservation genomics study and performed on the Smithsonian High 
Performance Computing Cluster (SI/HPC). By the end of the course, attendees 
will have acquired the necessary background and applied knowledge to implement 
genomic analyses for the conservation of endangered species.

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