Date: 8 March 2022 @ 13:00 - 14:00

Timezone: Canberra

Biodiversity is crashing and millions of plant and animal species are at the edge of extinction. Understanding the genetic diversity of these species is an important tool for conservation biology but obtaining high quality genomes for threatened species is not always straightforward.

In this webinar Dr Carolyn Hogg speaks about the work she has been doing with the Threatened Species Initiative to build genomic resources to understand and protect Australia’s threatened species. Using examples such as the Kroombit Tinker Frog and the Greater Bilby, Carolyn describes some of the complexities and challenges of generating genomes from short reads and HiFi reads for critically endangered species. She outlines the technologies and resources being used and how these are bridging the gap between genomicists, bioinformaticians and conservation experts to help save Australian species.

*Speaker: *Dr Carolyn Hogg, Australasian Wildlife Genomics Group, The University of Sydney

Who the webinar is for:

Anyone with an interest in the application of genomics to conservation biology.

How to join:

This webinar is free to join but you must register for a place in advance.

Contact: Melissa Burke ([email protected])

Keywords: Conservation genomics, Threatened Species, Bioplatforms Australia, Threatened Species Initiative

Venue: Online

City: Online

Country: Australia

Organizer: Australian BioCommons

Host institutions: Australian Biocommons

Eligibility:

  • First come first served

Capacity: 500

Event types:

  • Workshops and courses

Scientific topics: Genomics


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