Evolutionary and Ecological Functional Genomics
https://www.nature.com/articles/6801015

Martin Feder, Department of Organismal Biology & Anatomy / The University of Chicago


Evolutionary and Ecological Functional Genomics (EEFG) refers to research regarding genetic variations in order to better understand the functional significance of genetic changes in natural environments and how this may affect the evolutionary processes. These studies include investigators who try to combine evolution, ecology, functional analysis (physiology, biochemistry, neurobiology, endocrinology, functional morphology, etc.), and genetics in a single research program. This site provides descriptions of the various genetic research projects and serves as a forum for publishing and sharing research data. There is a list of upcoming events and conferences as well as a collection of websites containing genomic research information. This resource is part of the Biocomplexity collection. http://serc.carleton.edu/biocomplexity/

This description of a site outside SERC has not been vetted by SERC staff and may be incomplete or incorrect. If you have information we can use to flesh out or correct this record let us know.


Part of the Cutting Edge collection. The NAGT/DLESE On the Cutting Edge project helps geoscience faculty stay up-to-date with both geoscience research and teaching methods.

Cutting Edge
This resource is referenced here:
Subject: Biology:Diversity, Biology, Evolution, Ecology
Resource Type: Scientific Resources:Overview/Reference Work
Grade Level: College Upper (15-16), Graduate/Professional