???global.info.a_carregar???
Since obtaining a doctorate degree in 2015 in the US, I have been the recipient of several prestigious postdoctoral and researcher position awards in recognized institutes of Europe. As an early-stage researcher, I gained skills in the financial management and timely execution of research projects, which culminated in the publication of 28 peer-reviewed articles in established journals in developmental biology, evolution, and ecology. As first and corresponding author, I led students and colleagues to the successful completion of 20 multidisciplinary studies. Contributions also include seven natural history accounts, two book chapters, a book review, two outreach commentaries, and five literature reviews. My research has been supported by funding schemes in France, Germany, Portugal, Sweden, and US. I also contributed to a transnational sub-project funded by the EU. I have contributed as a reviewer for more than 20 indexed journals and one governmental funding agency. I also served on a scientific advisory committee and organized two international symposia. My research lines have motivated new ideas and hypotheses on how organisms develop under normal conditions, interact with suboptimal environments, and undergo structural and functional changes owing to genetically heritable or environmentally induced conditions. By integrating field sampling, laboratory experiments, and advanced biostatistical modelling, I produced foundational knowledge on some of the world’s most endangered vertebrate animals. This work addressed how temperature and oxygen influence physiology, survival, and reproduction. I examined how fluctuating microenvironments impact highly sensitive life stages in reptiles. Using evolution as a natural experiment, my research seeks to test basic theory on how biodiversity is generated. Results on rarely sampled reptile species yielded valuable knowledge on the development of evolutionarily novel alterations of the musculoskeletal system. I am presently principal investigator of a project on the dysregulation of mammalian muscle development. I am responsible for executing machine learning techniques on data generated by leading-edge genomic technologies. My research crosses taxonomic and disciplinary boundaries to inform society about: Important patterns of biodiversity; how organisms withstand changes caused by activities of economic importance to humanity; evolution under human-controlled environments (domestication); and congenital disorders. My current work will elucidate how faulty gene expression contributes to muscular dystrophy in humans. I also study natural populations of species that have received little scientific attention and are susceptible to urbanization and climate warming. Future research will use reptiles as models to understand heart chamber malformations in humans. To raise public awareness, my findings have been disseminated widely via popular science articles, technical reports, interviews with journalists, and outreach activities. Field research was conducted in close collaboration with public institutions that manage natural resources. Preserved specimens and tissues have been donated to museum collections, cryo-banks, and colleagues. My research will continue to release massive amounts of genetic and phenotypic data to public databases. My research has consistently provided training opportunities for young researchers. My work has served as case studies for students to enhance their deductive reasoning capacity, while learning skills in data collection, statistical analyses, and scientific writing. I taught theoretical seminars for undergraduate students and served as guest lecturer in bachelor and PhD classes. I recently taught a master’s-level practical on genomic analyses. Student contributions resulted in three bachelor’s thesis and one master’s thesis, as well as co-authorships in publications and congress presentations.
Identification

Personal identification

Full name
Gerardo Antonio Cordero-Guedez

Citation names

  • Guedez, Gerardo
  • Cordero
  • Cordero, G.A.
  • Gerardo Antonio Cordero
  • Gerardo A. Cordero

Author identifiers

Ciência ID
F115-D9F9-36FC
ORCID iD
0000-0002-9137-1741

Email addresses

  • acordero@ciencias.ulisboa.pt (Professional)

Telephones

Mobile phone
  • 920059211 (Personal)

Addresses

  • Avenida do Brasil 52, 1700-194, Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal (Personal)

Knowledge fields

  • Natural sciences - Biological Sciences - Zoology
  • Natural sciences - Biological Sciences - Developmental Biology
  • Natural sciences - Biological Sciences - Evolutionary Biology
  • Natural sciences - Biological Sciences - Ecology
  • Natural sciences - Biological Sciences - Molecular Biology

Languages

Language Speaking Reading Writing Listening Peer-review
Spanish; Castilian (Mother tongue)
English Proficiency (C2) Proficiency (C2) Proficiency (C2) Proficiency (C2) Proficiency (C2)
Portuguese Intermediate (B1) Intermediate (B1) Intermediate (B1) Intermediate (B1) Intermediate (B1)
German Intermediate (B1) Intermediate (B1) Elementary (A2) Intermediate (B1) Elementary (A2)
Education
Degree Classification
2015/05/08
Concluded
Gerardo Antonio Cordero (Doctor of Philosophy)
Major in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Iowa State University, United States
"Phenotypic evolution and repeatability in turtles" (THESIS/DISSERTATION)
2009/06/18
Concluded
Gerardo Antonio Cordero (Bachelor)
Major in Environmental Sciences
Oregon State University, United States
"A morphometric reassessment of Neotoma cinerea (Bushy-Tailed Wood Rat) subspecies in Oregon" (THESIS/DISSERTATION)
Affiliation

Science

Category
Host institution
Employer
2021/01/08 - Current Researcher (Research) Universidade de Lisboa Faculdade de Ciências, Portugal
Universidade de Lisboa Faculdade de Ciências, Portugal
2018/07/01 - 2021 Postdoc (Research) Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen Fachbereich III Geowissenschaften, Germany
2018/04/15 - 2018/12/15 Postdoc (Research) Centro de Ecologia Evolução e Alterações Ambientais, Portugal
2015/05/17 - 2017/05/18 Postdoc (Research) Lunds Universitet Biologiska institutionen, Sweden
2009/08/01 - 2015/05/09 Research Assistant (Research) Iowa State University Department of Ecology Evolution and Organismal Biology, United States
2009/04/18 - 2009/08/01 Research Trainee (Research) Oregon State University, United States
2008/08/20 - 2009/03/01 Research Assistant (Research) Oregon State University Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, United States
2008/05/01 - 2008/08/15 Research Trainee (Research) Jug Bay Wetlands Sanctuary , United States
Projects

Grant

Designation Funders
2023/11/27 - Current DYSTRO-NET2: Gene Regulatory Networks of LAMA2-CMD Based on Single-Nucleus Sequencing
24933
Principal investigator
AFM-Téléthon
Ongoing
2018/01/07 - 2020/09/30 Reconstructing Major Transitions in Animal Evolution: Neck Retraction in Turtles
1196478
Principal investigator
Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen, Germany
Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung
Concluded
2013/06/01 - 2015 DISSERTATION RESEARCH: Phylogenetic patterns and processes of repeated morphological evolution in turtles
Principal investigator
National Science Foundation Directorate for Biological Sciences, United States
National Science Foundation
Concluded
2012/07 - 2013/06 Development and Evolution of a Novel Body Plan: The Turtle's Shell
ISF#12-02
Principal investigator
Iowa Science Foundation
Concluded

Contract

Designation Funders
2021/08/01 - 2027/07/31 Modelling molecular responses to stress at the tissue microenvironment in a mouse model for muscular dystrophy
2020.02097.CEECIND/CP1605/CT0006
Researcher
Universidade de Lisboa Faculdade de Ciências, Portugal
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
Ongoing
2019/01/01 - 2019/12/31 Centro de Ecologia, Evolução e Alterações Ambientais
UID/BIA/00329/2019
Fundação da Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal

Fundação Gaspar Frutuoso, Portugal

FCiênciasID Associação para a Investigação e Desenvolvimento de Ciências, Portugal

Universidade de Lisboa Centro de Ecologia Evolução e Alterações Ambientais, Portugal

Universidade de Lisboa Faculdade de Ciências, Portugal

Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
Concluded
2018 - 2018 DYSTRO-NET: A Network-Based Approach Towards Illuminating the Gene Regulatory Landscape of MDC1A
21920
Integration into Research Grant Fellow
AFM-Téléthon
Concluded
Outputs

Publications

Book chapter
  1. Zhang, Z.; Cordero, G.A.; Werneburg, I. "Embryology and life history of Reptilia with a focus on the organogenesis of squamates". In Handbook of Zoology. 2024.
    Accepted
  2. Cordero, G.A.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Der Schildkrötenpanzer als Modell für Bionik, Biomechanik und skeletale Plastizität.". In Phylogenie, Funktionsmorphologie und Bionik. Texte zum 60. Phylogenetischen Symposium in Tübingen, 249-258. Scidinge Hall Verlag Tübingen, 2020.
Journal article
  1. Cordero, G.A.; Holloway, A.; Eme, J.; Janzen, F. J.; Hicks, J.; Conlon, F.; Bruneau, B.; Pollard, K.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Comparative transcriptomics of the heart illustrates challenges to extending classical theory to gene expression trends in animal development". Development, Genes and Evolution (2024):
    Submitted
  2. Cordero, G.A.; Pérez-González, C.E.; Solberg, L.M.; Doody, J.S.; Plummer, M.V.; Janzen, F. J.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Geographic variation in incubation temperatures promoting viable offspring production in broadly co-distributed turtles.". Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A: Ecological and Integrative Physiology (2024):
    Under revision
  3. Cordero, G.A.; Melita Vamberger; Uwe Fritz; Flora Ihlow. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Skeletal repatterning enhances the protective capacity of the shell in African hinge-back tortoises (Kinixys)". The Anatomical Record 306 6 (2023): 1558-1573. https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.24954.
    Open access • 10.1002/ar.24954
  4. Cordero, G.A.; Gerardo A. Cordero; Katie Birk; Sarah Ruane; Stephen A. Dinkelacker; Fredric J. Janzen. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Effects of the egg incubation environment on turtle carapace development". Evolution & Development 25 2 (2023): 153-169. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ede.12425.
    10.1111/ede.12425
  5. Cordero, G.A.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Turtle Shell Kinesis Underscores Constraints and Opportunities in the Evolution of the Vertebrate Musculoskeletal System". Integrative Organismal Biology 5 (2023): 1-23. https://doi.org/10.1093/iob/obad033.
    Open access • 10.1093/iob/obad033
  6. Cordero, G.A.; Ingmar Werneburg. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Domestication and the comparative embryology of birds". Journal of Experimental Zoology Part B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution 338 8 (2022): 447-459. https://doi.org/10.1002/jez.b.23144.
    Open access • 10.1002/jez.b.23144
  7. Rory S. Telemeco; Eric J. Gangloff; Cordero, G.A.; Essie M. Rodgers; Fabien Aubret. "From performance curves to performance surfaces: Interactive effects of temperature and oxygen availability on aerobic and anaerobic performance in the common wall lizard". Functional Ecology 36 10 (2022): 2544-2557. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2435.14147.
    Open access • 10.1111/1365-2435.14147
  8. Cordero, G.A.; Evangelos Vlachos. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Reduction, reorganization and stasis in the evolution of turtle shell elements". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 134 (2021): 892-911. https://doi.org/10.1093/biolinnean/blab122.
    10.1093/biolinnean/blab122
  9. Cordero, G.A.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Disentangling the correlated evolution of body size, life history, and ontogeny in miniaturized chelydroid turtles". Evolution & Development (2021): https://doi.org/10.1111/ede.12386.
    10.1111/ede.12386
  10. Daniel Núñez-León; Cordero, G.A.; Xenia Schlindwein; Per Jensen; Esther Stoeckli; Marcelo R. Sánchez-Villagra; Ingmar Werneburg. "Shifts in growth, but not differentiation, foreshadow the formation of exaggerated forms under chicken domestication". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (2021): https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2021.0392.
    10.1098/rspb.2021.0392
  11. Gerardo A Cordero; Anastasiia Maliuk; Xenia Schlindwein; Ingmar Werneburg; Oleksandr Yaryhin. "Phylogenetic patterns and ontogenetic origins of limb length variation in ecologically diverse lacertine lizards". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 132 2 (2021): 283-296. https://doi.org/10.1093/biolinnean/blaa183.
    10.1093/biolinnean/blaa183
  12. Gerardo A. Cordero. "Transcriptomic similarities and differences between the limb bud AER and unique carapacial ridge of turtle embryos". Evolution & Development (2020): https://doi.org/10.1111/ede.12351.
    10.1111/ede.12351
  13. Cordero, G.A.; Sánchez-Villagra, Marcelo R.; Werneburg, Ingmar. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "An irregular hourglass pattern describes the tempo of phenotypic development in placental mammal evolution". Biology Letters 16 5 (2020): 20200087. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2020.0087.
    10.1098/rsbl.2020.0087
  14. Cordero, G.A.; Samantha Stearns; Kevin Quinteros; Chelsea M. Berns; Steven M. Binz; Fredric Janzen. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "The postembryonic transformation of the shell in emydine box turtles". Evolution & Development 21 6 (2019): 297-310. https://doi.org/10.1111/ede.12307.
    10.1111/ede.12307
  15. Cordero, G.A.; Methling, Caroline; Tirsgaard, Bjørn; Steffensen, John F.; Domenici, Paolo; Svendsen, Jon C.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Excess postexercise oxygen consumption decreases with swimming duration in a labriform fish: Integrating aerobic and anaerobic metabolism across time". Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A: Ecological and Integrative Physiology 331 10 (2019): 577-586. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jez.2322.
    10.1002/jez.2322
  16. Kouyoumdjian, Laura; Gangloff, Eric J.; Souchet, Jérémie; Cordero, G.A.; Dupoué, Andréaz; Aubret, Fabien. "Transplanting gravid lizards to high elevation alters maternal and embryonic oxygen physiology, but not reproductive success or hatchling phenotype". Journal of Experimental Biology 222 (2019): 1-16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jeb.206839.
    10.1242/jeb.206839
  17. Cordero, G.A.; Kevin Quinteros; Fredric J. Janzen. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Delayed trait development and the convergent evolution of shell kinesis in turtles". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 285 1888 (2018): 20181585-20181585. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2018.1585.
    10.1098/rspb.2018.1585
  18. Cordero, G.A.; Liu, Haibo; Wimalanathan, Kokulapalan; Weber, Rachel; Quinteros, Kevin; Janzen, Fredric J.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Gene network variation and alternative paths to convergent evolution in turtles". Evolution & Development 20 5 (2018): 172-185. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ede.12264.
    10.1111/ede.12264
  19. Cordero, G.A.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Is the Pelvis Sexually Dimorphic in Turtles?". The Anatomical Record 301 8 (2018): 1382-1389. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ar.23831.
    10.1002/ar.23831
  20. Cordero, G.A.; Telemeco, Rory S.; Gangloff, Eric J.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Reptile embryos are not capable of behavioral thermoregulation in the egg". Evolution & Development 20 1 (2017): 40-47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ede.12244.
    10.1111/ede.12244
  21. Telemeco, Rory S.; Gangloff, Eric J.; Cordero, G.A.; Polich, Rebecca L.; Bronikowski, Anne M.; Janzen, Fredric J.. "Physiology at near-critical temperatures, but not critical limits, varies between two lizard species that partition the thermal environment". Journal of Animal Ecology 86 6 (2017): 1510-1522. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.12738.
    10.1111/1365-2656.12738
  22. Cordero, G.A.; Andersson, Bea Angelica; Souchet, Jeremie; Micheli, Gaëlle; Noble, Daniel W.A.; Gangloff, Eric J.; Uller, Tobias; Aubret, Fabien. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Physiological plasticity in lizard embryos exposed to high-altitude hypoxia". Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A: Ecological and Integrative Physiology 327 7 (2017): 423-432. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jez.2115.
    10.1002/jez.2115
  23. Cordero, G.A.; KARNATZ, Matthew L.; SVENDSEN, Jon C.; GANGLOFF, Eric J.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Effects of low-oxygen conditions on embryo growth in the painted turtle, Chrysemys picta". Integrative Zoology 12 2 (2017): 148-156. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1749-4877.12206.
    10.1111/1749-4877.12206
  24. Cordero, G.A.; Berns, C. M.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "A test of Darwin's 'lop-eared' rabbit hypothesis". Journal of Evolutionary Biology 29 11 (2016): 2102-2110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jeb.12938.
    10.1111/jeb.12938
  25. Schwanz, L. E.; Cordero, G.A.; Charnov, E. L.; Janzen, F. J.. "Sex-specific survival to maturity and the evolution of environmental sex determination". Evolution 70 2 (2016): 329-41. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26767911.
    10.1111/evo.12856
  26. Telemeco, R. S.; Gangloff, E. J.; Cordero, G.A.; Mitchell, T. S.; Bodensteiner, B. L.; Holden, K. G.; Mitchell, S. M.; Polich, R. L.; Janzen, F. J.. "Reptile embryos lack the opportunity to thermoregulate by moving within the egg". Am Nat 188 1 (2016): E13-27. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27322129.
    10.1086/686628
  27. Svendsen, J. C.; Tirsgaard, B.; Cordero, G.A.; Steffensen, J. F.. "Intraspecific variation in aerobic and anaerobic locomotion: gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata) and Trinidadian guppy (Poecilia reticulata) do not exhibit a trade-off between maximum sustained swimming speed and minimum cost of transport". Front Physiol 6 (2015): 43-43. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25741285.
    10.3389/fphys.2015.00043
  28. Cordero, G.A.; Quinteros, K.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Skeletal remodelling suggests the turtle's shell is not an evolutionary straitjacket". Biol Lett 11 4 (2015): 20150022-20150022. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25878046.
    10.1098/rsbl.2015.0022
  29. Cordero, G.A.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Re-emergence of the Painted Turtle (Chrysemys picta) as a reference species for evo-devo". Evolution & Development 16 4 (2014): 184-8. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24980987.
    10.1111/ede.12082
  30. Cordero, G.A.; Janzen, F. J.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "An enhanced developmental staging table for the painted turtle, Chrysemys picta (Testudines: Emydidae)". Journal of Morphology 275 4 (2014): 442-55. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24301536.
    10.1002/jmor.20226
  31. Cordero, G.A.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Book look". Developmental Dynamics 242 1 (2013): 95-96.
    10.1002/dvdy.23890
  32. Cordero, G.A.; Reeves, Rebecca; Swarth, Christopher W.. "Long Distance Aquatic Movement and Home-Range Size of an Eastern Mud Turtle, Kinosternon subrubrum, Population in the Mid-Atlantic Region of the United States". Chelonian Conservation and Biology 11 1 (2012): 121-124. http://dx.doi.org/10.2744/ccb-0874.1.
    10.2744/ccb-0874.1
  33. Cordero, G.A.; Epps, Clinton W.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "From Desert to Rainforest: Phenotypic Variation in Functionally Important Traits of Bushy-Tailed Woodrats (Neotoma cinerea) Across Two Climatic Extremes". Journal of Mammalian Evolution 19 2 (2012): 135-153.
    10.1007/s10914-012-9187-0
Magazine article
  1. Cordero, G.A.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "The Turtle's Shell", Current Biology, 2017
  2. Cordero, G.A.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Encouraging students to utilize museum resources in ecology, evolutionary and conservation biology", Bulletin of the British Ecological Society, 2009
  3. Cordero, G.A.. Corresponding author: Cordero, G.A.. "Voices of hope in a rapidly changing world", Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America, 2008
Online resource
  1. Cordero, G.A.; Janzen, F. J.. Does life history affect molecular evolutionary rates?. 2013. https://www.nature.com/scitable/knowledge/library/does-life-history-affect-molecular-evolutionary-rates-101925082/.
Activities

Oral presentation

Presentation title Event name
Host (Event location)
2023/09/18 Comparative transcriptomics of the tetrapod heart European Molecular Biology Lab “The evolution of animal genomes” meeting
European Molecular Biology Lab (Sevilla, Spain)
2023/09/07 A systems biology overview of congenital muscular dystrophy phenotypes Frontiers in E3 - 9th cE3c Annual Meeting, Lisbon, Portugal
(Portugal)
2022/10/03 Intrinsic vs extrinsic sources of phenotypic variance in animal development: shell pattern formation in turtles. SEB Animal Biology Early Career Researcher Symposium
Society for Experimental Biology
2019 Support for the developmental hourglass model: Is there a phylotypic stage in mammals? 12th International World Congress of Vertebrate Morphology
(Prague, Czech Republic)
2017 Physiological plasticity promotes successful development in lizards exposed to high-altitude hypoxia Oikos Regional Meeting (Sweden)
Nordic Society Oikos (Lund, Sweden)
2016 Diverse gene networks underlie development of convergent morphologies in turtles Meeting of the European Society for Evolutionary Developmental Biology.
2013 Shell-closing systems likely promoted evolutionary transitions from aquatic to terrestrial ecological niches in turtles Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America
Ecological Society of America (Minneapolis, United States)
2013 Evolution of shell kinesis in turtles: developmental origins of a convergent phenotype during and after embryogenesis Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology Annual Meeting
Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology (San Francisco, United States)

Event organisation

Event name
Type of event (Role)
Institution / Organization
2019 - Current Symposium organizer: Mini-symposium on museum-based zoological research. (2019 - 2019)
Symposium (Co-organisor)
Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen Fachbereich III Geowissenschaften, Germany
2016 - Current European Society for Evolutionary Developmental Biology symposium organizer: Evolution and development of skeletal elements (2016 - 2016)
Symposium (Co-organisor)

Event participation

Activity description
Type of event
Event name
Institution / Organization
2019 - 2019 Participant in the Mechanisms of development and evolution workshop
Workshop
Evo-Devo Summer School, Venice, Italy
European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Italy
2019 - 2019 Workshop in Genomics, Ceský Krumlov, Czech Republic
Workshop
Workshop in Genomics
2018 - 2018 Poster: A transcriptomic snapshot of turtle shell morphogenesis.
Meeting
Joint Meeting of the Portuguese, Spanish and French Societies for Developmental Biology
2016 - 2016 Workshop on GePhe database for genetic meta-analyses
Workshop
Loci of Evolution workshop on genetic meta-analyses, Paris, France
2014 - 2014 Poster: Developmental plasticity and the adaptive potential of the turtle’s shell.
Symposium
University of Minnesota Developmental Biology Symposium
University of Minnesota Department of Genetics Cell Biology and Development, United States
2014 - 2014 Introduction to RNA-Seq bioinformatic pipelines
Workshop
University of Texas, Austin Big Data in Biology Summer School

Association member

Society Organization name Role
2018 - Current Portuguese Society for Developmental Biology Member
2016 - Current European Society for Evolutionary Developmental Biology Member

Conference scientific committee

Conference name Conference host
2023/04/11 - 2023/04/15 International Meeting of Early-stage Researchers in Paleontology 2023

Evaluation committee

Activity description
Role
Institution / Organization Funding entity
2017 - Current Grant reviewer for the National Science Centre of Poland
Evaluator

Interview (newspaper / magazine)

Activity description Newspaper / Forum
2019 Interview by Science magazine on the topic of embryonic thermoregulation Science
2019 Interview by New Scientist magazine on the topic of embryonic thermoregulation in reptiles New Scientist
Distinctions

Award

2018 Alexander von Humboldt Postdoctoral Research Fellowship
Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung, Germany
2018 French Muscular Dystrophy Association Postdoctoral Fellowship
AFM-Téléthon, France
2017 Travelling Fellowship
The Company of Biologists, United Kingdom
2017 Research in Museums Grant
VolkswagenStiftung, Germany
2017 EU SYNTHESIS Museum Visit Grant
European Commission, Belgium
2017 Visiting Researcher Grant
Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung, Germany
2016 Meeting organization grant
The Company of Biologists, United Kingdom
2016 Genetics Society Conference grant
Genetics Society, United Kingdom
2015 Postdoctoral scholarship
Knut Och Alice Wallenbergs Stiftelse, Sweden
2014 Best student paper in evolutionary morphology (honorable mention)
The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology, United States
2013 NSF Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant
National Science Foundation, United States
2013 Broadening Participation Award
2013 Graduate Student Research Award
Iowa State University Department of Ecology Evolution and Organismal Biology, United States
2013 ESA Special Project Grants
Ecological Society of America, United States
2012 Iowa Science Foundation Grant
Iowa Science Foundation, United States
2012 Grants-in-Aid of Research award
Sigma Xi the Scientific Research Society, United States
2011 Graduate Student Research Award
Chicago Herpetological Society, United States
2011 Rosemary Grant Award for Graduate Student Research
Society for the Study of Evolution, United States
2011 Herpetological Grant
Nebraska Herpetological Society, United States
2011 Grants-in-Aid of Research award
The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology, United States
2011 Graduate Student Research in Herpetology Award
Chicago Herpetological Society, United States
2010 Brett Stearns Award for Chelonian Research
California Academy of Sciences, United States
2010 Travel scholarship for workshop
2010 Travel scholarship for workshop
2009 Best student paper
Central Plains Society of Mammalogists, United States
2009 GMAP Graduate Research Fellowship
Iowa State University College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, United States
2009 Diversity Mentoring Program Award
Society for Molecular Biology & Evolution, United States
2008 Undergraduate Research, Innovation, Scholarship, and Creativity Grant
Oregon State University, United States
2008 Undergraduate Research Fellowship-Jug Bay Wetlands