Participate in our seminars, public lectures and other events, or watch past event recordings.

Upcoming events

Jordan Douglas
19 Mar 2026 | 1 - 2pm

The molecular clock hypothesis proposes that evolutionary change occurs as a temporally regular process, occurring at a rate that might fluctuate through time, but still remains more-or-less consistent.

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Matthew Doyle
26 Mar 2026 | 1 - 2pm

Matthew's laboratory focuses on the incredibly multifunctional Omp85 protein superfamily which conduct essential processes in the outer membranes of all Gram-negative bacteria such as protein folding, insertion, and translocation reactions, as well as lipid transport reactions.

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Past events

Diego C
11 Mar 2026 | 4 - 5pm

Phenotypic plasticity is an important adaptation for organisms that live under fluctuating environmental conditions.

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Kate O'Hara
6 Mar 2026 | 1 - 2pm

In this presentation, I show that geographically widespread triploid parthenogenetic forms of the Australian gekkonid Heteronotia binoei are considerably diverse despite their clonal reproductive mode, with patterns of SNP variation consistent with two previously identified reciprocal hybrid origins and numerous backcrossing events.

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reshma
25 Feb 2026 | 12 - 1pm

There is growing industry interest to develop the allotetraploid oilseed Brassica carinata for the production of sustainable aviation fuel.

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Ciara Wallis
16 Feb 2026 | 1 - 2pm

Throughout my PhD, I determined the transport mechanisms of two proteins that we show break the standard channel / transporter definitions and instead function as anion “chansporters” - proteins that exist somewhere on the spectrum between transporters and channels.

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Florian Busch
13 Feb 2026 | 3:30 - 4:30pm

Estimations of the gross primary productivity (GPP) of land ecosystems are key to accurately predict the global carbon cycle.

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Renhong Yan
13 Feb 2026 | 12 - 1pm

Heteromeric amino acid transporters (HATs) play essential roles in the transport of amino acids, thyroid hormones, and various amino acid–like drugs. Mutations in HATs are associated with several inherited disorders, including cystinuria, lysinuric protein intolerance, and autism spectrum disorders.

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