STRILights
Learning from Tropical Nature in 2018
December 20, 2018
Join us to celebrate a few of the discoveries made in 2018.
Join us to celebrate a few of the discoveries made in 2018.
How flexible are bird brains in response to hormones?
The diverse community of students working in the Panamanian tropics learn from each other during STRI’s two-day fellowship symposium.
The back and forth relationship between insects and their food plants may drive tropical biodiversity evolution according to work on Barro Colorado Island’s 50 hectare plot.
Three adventure-seekers meet in the clouds, each with their own reasons to learn more about mysterious jewel-like bees.
The Smithsonian’s first marine lab on Panama’s Caribbean coast invites visitors and researchers to experience the diversity of marine ecosystems within a protected space.
By diving into the past lives of coral reefs, a historical ecologist may protect our present-day reefs from human impacts
Giving rise to the richest alpine flora in the world, interconnections between islands of Andean paramo vegetation flicker off and on as global temperatures rise and fall during the last million years
Yves Basset, who heads insect monitoring efforts for the Smithsonian ForestGEO program and Greg Lamarre, from the University of South Bohemia, present immediate, science-based actions that mitigate insect decline.
A new generation stands on the shoulders of giant (archaeologists)