Schedule of Presentations

Mathematical/Statistical Biology Research

Dalhousie University


9:00 Welcome and introductions

9:30 Huaichun Wang
Computational Molecular Evolution: Modelling Rates and Patterns of Evolution of Macromolecules and Inferring the Tree of Life

9:45 Alex Georgallas

Plants, Shading, Logistic Growth and Diffusion Limited Aggregation: A Link

Alex Georgallas, Greg Bishop, Yousef Papadopoulos and Alan Fredeen

10:00 S. Swaminathan
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Dalhousie University
A Model for Recognition Processes


10:15 -- 10:45 Coffee break

10:45 Jeff Musgrave
University of New Brunswick, Fredericton

A biological invasion is the introduction and spread of exotic organisms outside their native range.

11:00 Majid Jaberi Douraki
University of New Brunswick, Fredericton
Dynamics of a higher order non-autonomous difference equation

11:15 Sylvia Churcher,
Dalhousie University

Available methods for calculating the biodiversity of microbial samples

11:30 Yijun Lou

Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Memorial University of Newfoundland
A Climate-Based Malaria Transmission Model with Age-structure

11:45 Andy Foster

Dept of Mathematics and Statistics, Memorial University
A dynamical systems model to predict mercury content in lake fish


12:00 -- 13:30 LUNCH at University Club, Great Hall


13:30 Lisa Kanary

University of New Brunswick

Model of Aquatic Invasive Species Search Effectiveness

13:45 Chad S Gilbert

Department of Engineering Mathematics & Internetworking, Dalhousie University
Sustainability of scallops on Georges Bank: The role of larval transport

(Chad S. Gilbert, Wendy C. Gentleman, Catherine L. Johnson, Claudio DiBacco, James M. Pringle & C Chen)

14:00 Wendy Gentleman

Dept. of Engineering Mathematics and Internetworking, Dalhousie University
Functional responses and ecosystem dynamics: How clearance rates explain the influence of satiation, food-limitation and acclimation.

Wendy C. Gentleman & Anna B. Neuheimer

14:15 Anna Neuheimer

Engineering Mathematics and Internetworking
How to build and use individual-based models (IBMs) as hypothesis testing tools.

Anna B. Neuheimer (Dalhousie University), Wendy C. Gentleman (Dalhousie University), P. Pepin (Fisheries and Oceans Canada), E.J.H. Head (Fisheries and Oceans Canada)


14:30 Coffee break

14:45 Shovonlal Roy

Department of Oceanography, Dalhousie University
Sized-structured phytoplankton biomass under mixed-layer modulation: A mathematical model

15:00 Luju Liu
Department Mathematics and Statistics, Memorial University of Newfoundland
A Tuberculosis Model with Seasonality
15:15 Julie Horrocks (Guelph), David Hamilton (Dalhousie), Hal Whitehead (Dalhousie)
A likelihood approach to estimating abundance from binary acoustic data

15:30 Tamara Romanuk

Dalhousie University
Species Invasion in Complex Food Web Networks

15:45 Deborah Buszard, David Iron and Brian Pellerin

Dalhousie University
A Mathematical Model to Optimize Yearly Fruit Number and Predict Crop Weight in Apple Trees

16:00 Sina Adl

Organic agriculture cannot replace conventional agriculture
Sina Adl
1, David Iron2 and Theodore Kolokolnikov2
1Department of Biology & 2Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Dalhousie University

16:15 David Iron
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Dalhousie University
The Role of Feedback in the Formation of Morphogen Territories


16:30 Social in University Club, Pub