The Institute of Ecology and Evolution (IE2) facilitates research and graduate education in ecology and evolutionary biology. The center fosters a collegial and stimulating intellectual environment for world-class research in molecular evolution, evolutionary genetics, evolution of development, and microbial, population, community, and ecosystems ecology.
IE2 maintains close ties to the UO Departments of Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science, Geography, Geology, and Landscape Architecture, as well as the Institutes for Molecular Biology, Neuroscience, and Marine Biology.Together, IE2's students and faculty are working in the laboratory and the field to address fundamental and applied questions about the organization and history of life on earth.

IE2 Members Impress Children with Molecules, Microscopic Worms
IE2 members showed off the wonders of DNA at the 2010 University Day at the Science Factory, a local childrens' science museum.
Paul Cziko (Doctoral Candidate, Thornton Lab) and Robin Brown (Undergraduate, Cresko Lab) provided the children (ages 4-12) with the opportunity to extract DNA from strawberries using non-toxic reagents available at grocery stores. After a hands-on, easy protocol which included lysing the cells (dish soap), releasing bound proteins (table salt), and filtering out the cellular debris (coffee filter), the children marveled as long strands of gooey DNA precipitated out of solution upon the addition of alcohol to the filtrate. Each of the budding scientists went home with a small tube of isolated strawberry DNA.

John Willis (Post-doctoral Research Associate, Phillips Lab) showed off examples of the nematode worm C.elegans whose DNA had been genetically modified for research purposes. He explained the power of manipulating DNA within organisms for biological research, and gave the children the opportunity to look at worms expressing the red fluorescent protein (RFP) from a jellyfish gene under an epi-illumination microscope. Children learned to discern males from females, and transformed from un-transformed worms as they slithered around on their bacterial lawn inside the petri dishes.

IE2 members participate in University Day each year, held by the Science Factory once per year in the winter. Chemists, physicists, psychologists, and physiologists from the University of Oregon participate in the outreach event to help inspire the next generation of scientists. This year's event attracted over 250 visitors. Read more about the museum at
http://www.sciencefactory.org/
Jessica Green Named 2010 TED Fellow
Jessica Green, an assistant professor in IE2, is one of 25 innovators selected to receive at 2010 TED Fellowship. TED is a small nonprofit organization that focuses on providing free access to talk by leaders in technology, entertainment and design. You can read about TED here, see the list of 2010 recipients, and check out their press release.
Wide Media Coverage for Recent Thornton Lab Nature Publication
Jamie Bridgham and Joe Thornton recently published a paper on the irreversibility of glucocorticoid reception evolution, along with their collaborator Eric Ortlund at Emory University. The research is so compelling that it has generated considerable commentary, in Science, The New York Times, The New York Times (again), and Nature. Those who missed Joe's seminar on October 5th should read the paper to see what everyone is talking about.
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