Presentations

Seminars

The uninvited guests of flowers: the consequences of ambush predators for plants and their pollinators. Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany (2013).

The uninvited guests of flowers: how ambush predators affect pollinator foraging behavior. Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Jena, Germany (2013).

Invasion potential and community vulnerability: what is the role of evolution? Queens College, Queens, New York (2013). Rice University, Houston, Texas (2013).

Community vulnerability to invasion: what is the role of evolution? Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York (2012).

Host-parasite coevolution and the joint control of virulence. Washington State University, Pullman, Washington (2011).

Eco-evolutionary dynamics of species interactions. Washington State University, Pullman, Washington (2011).

The establishment of introduced species: when does genetic diversity matter? Washington State University, Pullman, Washington (2010).

Exploitation of mutualism: three's a crowd. Palouse Ecology, Evolution and Systematics: Washington State University & University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho (2010).

Evolutionary dynamics of mutualism. University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona (2009).

Competition stabilizes mutualism: model predictions and preliminary empirical support. Invited seminars: University of Neuchatel, Neuchatel, Switzerland (2007); Université Joseph Fourier, Grenoble, France (2007); Université Paris-Sud, Orsay, France (2007).


Contributed Presentations


Jones, E.I. and R. Gomulkiewicz. Rapid (co)evolution and the establishment of introduced species. Organized Oral Session on “Community and ecosystem effects of rapid evolution”, Ecological Society of America Annual Meeting, Baltimore, Maryland (2015). *invited speaker

Jones, E.I. The role of competition in the ecology and evolution of cooperation. Organismality Meeting, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri (2015). *invited speaker

Jones, E.I. Cooperation in a competitive world: how competition shapes the ecology and evolution of cooperation within and between species. International Society for Behavioral Ecology, Satellite Symposium: 'Cooperation within and between species: what are the similarities and differences?', New York, New York (2014). *invited speaker

Jones, E.I., S.L. Nuismer and R. Gomulkiewicz. Darwin’s conundrum revisited: does phylogenetic distance predict invasibility? Evolution, Raleigh, North Carolina (2014). (link to video)

Jones, E.I. Rapid evolution and species invasions. Mathematical Biosciences Institute workshop: Rapid Evolution and Sustainability, Columbus, Ohio (2013) (link to video) * invited speaker

Jones, E.I. Community vulnerability to invasion: what is the role of evolution? Mathematical Biology Conference: "Biological invasions and evolutionary biology, stochastic and deterministic models", Universite de Lyon, Lyon, France (2013). * invited speaker

Jones, E.I., S.L. Nuismer and R. Gomulkiewicz. Does evolution make communities more vulnerable to invasion? EVO-WIBO, Port Townsend, Washington (2012); Evolution, Ottawa, Canada (2012).

Jones, E.I., A.C. Piazza and M. Dybdahl. A coevolutionary model of virulence: the role of the host in generating the “curse of the Pharaoh”. Evolution, Norman, Oklahoma (2011).

Jones, E.I. The consequences of exploitation for plant-pollinator mutualism. Mathematical Biosciences Institute workshop: Coevolution and the Ecological Structure of Plant-Insect Communities, Columbus, Ohio (2011) (link to video) * invited speaker

Jones, E.I. and R. Gomulkiewicz. Evolution, coevolution and the success of species invasions. Evolution, Portland, Oregon (2010).

Jones, E.I., R. Ferriere and W.F. Morris. Coevolution of hosts, mutualists and exploiters. Evolution, Moscow, Idaho (2009); EVO-WIBO, Port Townsend, Washington (2010).

Jones, E.I. and A. Dornhaus. The effect of predation risk on pollinator foraging. International Behavioural Ecology Congress, Ithaca, New York (2008).

Jones, E.I., R. Ferriere and J.L. Bronstein. Coevolution between mutualists and exploiters. Evolution, Minneapolis, Minnesota (2008).

Jones, E.I., R. Ferriere and J.L. Bronstein. Coevolutionary dynamics of mutualists and exploiters: The stabilizing effect of competition. Evolution, Stony Brook, New York (2006).



Posters

Jones, E.I., S.L. Nuismer, and R. Gomulkiewicz. An ecophylogenetic approach to novel predator-prey interactions. Gordon Research Conference on Predator-Prey Interactions. Ventura, California (2014).

Jones, E.I., R. Ferriere and W.F. Morris. Coevolution of hosts, mutualists and exploiters. European Society of Evolutionary Biology, Turin, Italy (2009). (link to abstract)

Jones, E.I., C.N. Jack, B.R. Walker, E.R. Sundstrom, N.J. Mehdiabadi and J.E. Strassmann. Two species chimeras: Cooperation or cheating? Rice Undergraduate Research Symposium, Houston, Texas (2004).


Student Posters

Howe-Kerr, L., C. Randolph, and E.I. Jones. Flower shape affects bumblebee foraging behavior in the presence of predators. Rice Undergraduate Research Symposium, Houston, TX (2015); University of Houston Ecology and Evolution Student Symposium, Houston, TX (2015).

Martini, A., P. Stamper, M. Willey, and E.I. Jones. Effects of predation risk on bumble bee foraging behavior. Rice Undergraduate Research Symposium, Houston, TX (2015).

Randolph, C., L. Howe-Kerr, and E.I. Jones. Effect of predation risk and flower shape on bumblebee pollination. Rice Undergraduate Research Symposium, Houston, TX (2015).

Sabo, N. and E.I. Jones. Modeling the interaction between competition and traplining in bumblebees. Rice Undergraduate Research Symposium, Houston, TX (2015).

Colburn, Z., E.I. Jones and M. Dybdahl. Do parasites make you hungry or slow? Parasite-induced change to consumption and its ecological and evolutionary implications. Washington State University Showcase for Undergraduate Research and Creative Activities, Pullman, Washington (2013).

Miller, C., D.W. Crowder, E.I. Jones and W.E. Snyder. Colorado potato beetle vitality against pathogens after exposure to predators. Showcase for Undergraduate Research and Creative Activities, Pullman, Washington (2013).

Colburn, Z., E.I. Jones and M. Dybdahl. When parasites affect host competition: An eco-evolutionary model of exploitation, defense, virulence, and prevalence. Washington State University Showcase for Undergraduate Research and Creative Activities, Pullman, Washington (2012); EVO-WIBO, Port Townsend, Washington (2012).

Colburn, Z., E.I. Jones and M. Dybdahl. The evolution of virulence when parasites affect host competitive ability. Washington State University Undergraduate Poster Competition, Pullman, Washington (2011) -- Second place, Computer Science, Mathematics, Interdisciplinary.

Hensz, C., A.C. Piazza, E.I. Jones and M. Dybdahl. Adaptive dynamics of parasite virulence and host sensitivity in a coevolving system. Washington State University Undergraduate Poster Competition, Pullman, Washington (2010) -- Honorable mention, Biological Sciences.