BEACON is a consortium of
- BEACON 2021 Annual Report
- BEACON 2020 Annual Report
- BEACON 2019 Annual Report
- BEACON 2018 Annual Report
- BEACON 2017 Annual Report
- BEACON 2016 Annual Report
- BEACON 2015 Annual Report
- BEACON 2014 Annual Report
- BEACON 2013 Annual Report
- BEACON 2012 Annual Report
- BEACON 2011 Annual Report
- BEACON 2010 Annual Report
- Strategic Plan (Updated November 2018)
Member Resources
animal behavior antibiotic resistance Avida bacteria BEACON Researchers at Work big data bioinformatics Biological Evolution communication Computer Science Cooperation development Digital Evolution diversity Drosophila E. coli ecology Education Engineering Evolution 101 evolutionary algorithms Evolutionary Applications Evolutionary Computation experimental evolution Field Biology fitness fitness landscapes genetic algorithms genetics genomics hyenas Kellogg Biological Station long term evolution experiment mate choice mutations Outreach phylogenetics plant biology predator-prey Research Experiences for Undergraduates sexual selection speciation Synthetic biology video Viruses
Category Archives: BEACON Researchers at Work
A microbe-dependent world: studying the legume-rhizobia symbiosis for a more sustainable future
This post is by MSU grad student Shawna Rowe Living in a world full of fascinating visual elements and intriguing macro-organisms often results in people forgetting the most abundant group of earth’s inhabitants— microbes. Microbes are not only the most … Continue reading
Male battles split species apart
This post is by MSU postdoc Jason Keagy How do species form? Stated more precisely, how does one species become two? This turns out to be an immensely difficult question to answer, because 1) species are not always distinct entities (species … Continue reading
Can evolution help us rebuild native habitats?
This post is by MSU graduate student Anna Groves. If you look at the lyrics of two of the most iconic songs in American history, you’ll find that both reveal the composers’ fondness for the wide open spaces of our … Continue reading
UI BEACON Director James Foster to Receive Highest Faculty Rank at the University of Idaho
This post is by UI IBEST Communications Coordinator Amberly Beckman. The University of Idaho recently named Prof. James A. Foster a University Distinguished Professor, the highest rank for faculty at the University. Foster is one of only fourteen faculty members to receive … Continue reading
BEACON in the News: (How) does a bear walk in the woods?
This week BEACON grad student Katie Shine and her PhD advisor Craig McGowan at the University of Idaho are getting a lot of news coverage for their research investigating bear locomotion using live bears from Washington State University (grizzlies) and … Continue reading
Introducing BEACON’s New Science Outreach and Communication Postdocs
This post is by MSU postdoc Alexa Warwick. Alexa Warwick is the new Evolution Education and Outreach Postdoc at BEACON working with Dr. Louise Mead. Alexa worked on her Ph.D. with Drs. Emily Lemmon and Joseph Travis at Florida State … Continue reading
A Mighty Mouse and a Scientist in Training: A Story of Physiological and Personal Evolution
This post is by Okemos High School student Maddie Stover working in Dr. Ashlee Rowe’s lab in the Neuroscience Program & Department of Integrative Biology at MSU. A particularly effective nervous system makes the four-inch grasshopper mouse quite a fearsome … Continue reading
Deputy Director Charles Ofria Receives College of Engineering Withrow Distinguished Scholar Senior Award
BEACON is very excited to congratulate our Deputy Director Charles Ofria on his selection for the College of Engineering Withrow Distinguished Scholar Senior Award. This is the MSU College of Engineering’s highest award for research and a significant achievement. The … Continue reading
A niche in time: adaptations in sensory processing associated with temporal niche
This post is by MSU graduate student Andrea Morrow. People often associate certain physical adaptations with an animal’s temporal niche, i.e. daily activity pattern. For example, some nocturnal animals have larger eyes, larger corneas, or higher concentrations of rod cells than … Continue reading
How lemur social networks shape microbial transmission
This post is by UT Austin graduate student Amanda Perofsky. Primates exhibit diverse ecological and behavioral patterns, ranging from solitary foragers to several hundred individuals, as in the multi-level societies of hamadryas baboons [1]. Many wild primates live in social … Continue reading