Hi!

We just wanted to send out a reminder that for those interested in attending 
the "Rethinking Lagenorhynchus" workshop (especially undergraduate, graduate, 
and postdoctoral students) that there is travel funding available to get you to 
and from San Francisco for the workshop and meeting.  Please see below for the 
original workshop announcement and details about how to apply for the funding. 
Please send any questions/comments/concerns our way!

Thanks,
Nikki and Erin

----------

We are happy to announce we will be running a full-day workshop entitled 
"Rethinking Lagenorhynchus: advancing our knowledge on taxonomy, genetics, 
acoustics, morphology, and population structure to make conservation gains" at 
the Biennial in San Francisco on Sunday, December 13th.  We would like to 
encourage anyone working on any of the species within this genus, and close 
relatives (Lissodelphis, Cephalorhynchus), to attend.  See full description of 
the workshop below or on the SMM conference 
website<https://www.marinemammalscience.org/conference/workshops/#Lagenorhynchus>.
  Speakers will be invited, however if anyone has particular interest in 
presenting their work at this workshop please let us know.

Registration
Registration for the workshop should be done through the conference 
website:https://www.marinemammalscience.org/conference/conference-registration/.
The registration fee is US $80.00 if registered prior to September 15, 2015.  
If you register after the 15th the registration fee increases to US $90.00, so 
make sure to sign up early.

Travel Funding
Thanks to a successful grant application, we are thrilled to be able to offer 
some funding to help cover costs of travel for undergraduate, graduate and 
postdoctoral students that are planning on attending, and possibly presenting 
their work at the workshop (presenting at the workshop is not required to be 
eligible to receive the funding).  Preference will be given to students 
involved in molecular genetics work, although all interested in attending the 
workshop will be considered.

If you are interested in receiving travel funds to attend the workshop, please 
respond to the following:

1) Provide name of institution, level of education, current advisor.
2) What is your most relevant experience related to this workshop?
3) What is your main interest in attending this workshop?
4) How will attending this workshop contribute to your current work and/or 
career?

* Incomplete responses will not be considered.  Please limit submissions to no 
more than 1 page, 12pt font, single-spaced.

Responses should be emailed to Erin Ashe ([email protected]) and Nikki 
Vollmer ([email protected]) no later than August 7th, 2015 to be considered for 
funding.

Please let us know if you have any questions, and see you in December!

Thank you,

Nikki and Erin



Rethinking Lagenorhynchus: advancing our knowledge on taxonomy, genetics, 
acoustics, morphology, and population structure to make conservation gains
            Research and management efforts in marine mammal conservation often 
hinge on a definition of the biological unit to conserve, whether that is a 
population, subspecies, or species. However, for some groups, such as the 
diverse genusLagenorhynchus, information on demographics, general biology, and 
intra-/inter-specific relationships is often lacking, and our statistical power 
to detect declines in these species is generally poor. In recent years, 
acousticians and geneticists have been developing independent lines of evidence 
suggesting it may be time to consider reclassification of 
Lagenorhynchusspecies, and the relationships among Lagenorhynchus, 
Cephalorhynchus and Lissodelphis are currently under debate.
            To better understand the current state of the field regarding the 
complex classification of species within these groups, there is a need to bring 
together researchers investigating taxonomy, genetics, acoustics, morphology, 
and conservation status of Lagenorhynchus and close relatives. The Society for 
Marine Mammalogy Biennial Meeting in San Francisco provides an invaluable 
opportunity for a workshop focused on integrating Lagenorhynchus scientists for 
this purpose. This workshop will provide a platform for researchers to compare 
lessons learned and to build new collaborations with international colleagues 
who have experience studying Lagenorhynchus. Our target audience includes 
researchers working at all academic levels (principle investigators, postdocs, 
graduate students, etc.) on Lagenorhynchus, Cephalorhynchus, andLissodelphis, 
and specifically scientists with expertise in taxonomy, molecular genetics, 
conservation, demography, and acoustics. Main goals of this endeavor are to 
identify partnerships and expertise, where genetic samples are held, and 
potential funding sources to conduct analyses where needed. We also aim to 
submit a review paper formulated from workshop discussions to a peer-reviewed 
journal (potential journals: Conservation Biology, Biological Reviews, Marine 
Mammal Science) that will summarize the current knowledge of Lagenorhynchus 
species and suggest avenues for future funding and research. This workshop will 
initiate and promote correspondence among people working on these species, 
build productive collaborations at a global scale, and combine resources and 
lessons learned to allow us to study, collectively, these dolphins at 
ecologically meaningful spatial scales. Finally, if consensus is reached 
through workshop activities, the workshop chairs will make a taxonomic 
recommendation to the SMM Taxonomy Committee for reclassification of the 
species currently within the genus Lagenorhynchus.
            The format for this workshop is a full day (8 hrs.) meeting. The 
morning will be allocated to approximately 5 speakers who will each give a 
brief (15-20 min.) presentation to share the current state of knowledge on the 
key themes (genetics, acoustics, morphology, taxonomy, stock structure, and 
conservation) and include time for questions from participants. The afternoon 
will be dedicated to discussion identifying research questions, next steps, 
partnerships/collaborations, and assess topics worthy of publication that have 
emerged from the workshop. We will also identify regional experts who could 
benefit from guidance from international colleagues in these disciplines, and 
ultimately aim to conceptualize and develop a global research plan to 
reevaluate Lagenorhynchus using multiple lines of evidence.


Nicole Vollmer, Ph.D.
Postdoctoral Fellow
NOAA/NMFS/National Systematics Laboratory
Smithsonian Institution Natural History Museum
PO Box 37012, MRC 0153
Washington, DC 20013-7012
202-633-2137
[email protected]
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