United States
Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research

Workshop: Detecting Adaptive Evolutionary Events in Genomes of Polar Species

Detecting Adaptive Evolutionary Events in Genomes of Polar Species Workshop at the Whitney Laboratory for Marine Bioscience, St. Augustine, Florida July 24–27, 2022

National Science Foundation awards #1935635 and #1935672

A two-day workshop will be held at the Whitney Laboratory for Marine Bioscience (University of Florida) during July 24 – 27, 2022. Participants should plan to arrive on the afternoon of July 24th and depart in the afternoon of July 27th. The workshop organizers, Dr. Scott Santagata and Dr. Joseph Ryan, will lead participants through a series of computational exercises having the following goals:

  • Construct orthologous gene assignments (OrthoFinder), prune paralogous genes (PhyloPYPruner), align orthologous gene (MAFFT), and multi-gene phylogenetic relationships (IQ-TREE).
  • Establish collaborative research groups to test for genes under positive selection from diverse organisms and habitats (e.g., polar, terrestrial, marine, tropical) using genomic and transcriptomic datasets.
  • Evaluate current analytical methods for determining positive selection (e.g., PAML, HyPHy) and their statistical significance.

Participants are encouraged to work with their own NGS-based datasets, but sample datasets will also be provided and analyzed using a bioinformatics platform. Applicants with transcriptomic datasets that span ecological boundaries (e.g., high vs. low latitudinal habitats, marine vs. freshwater habitats, deep vs. shallow water habitats, etc.) will be given priority. However, anyone who is interested in learning these techniques is encouraged to apply.

Lodging will be provided in the Research Village Cottages at the Whitney Laboratory at no cost to participants. Funds will also be provided to offset the costs of round trip travel based on the number of participants and demonstrated need. Workshop facilities and housing are in accordance with ADA guidelines, and we will work with any students needing accommodations.

Researchers from underrepresented groups and/or with disabilities are particularly encouraged to apply. Workshop will include a code of conduct to help ensure a safe and inclusive space. The workshop will incorporate structured participation to ensure balance in participation and encourage inclusion. It will include activities that facilitate interaction within small groups. Mentorship opportunities will be facilitated through encouraging post-workshop interaction and mentoring.

To apply please visit http://ryanlab.whitney.ufl.edu/polar_workshop/. The application (due date: June 1st, 2022) requires: A) Current CV, B) 400-word description detailing your research experiences and how this workshop fits into your overall career goals, and C) Estimated funds needed for round trip travel. D) Sars-CoV-2 Vaccination Status. Applications may be accepted after the due date depending on the number of applicants and amount of available funds.