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Applied Functional Biology: Linking Ecological Morphology to Conservation and Management
Integrative and Comparative Biology
  • Eric McElroy, College of Charleston
  • Diego Sustaita, California State University, San Marcos
  • Lance D McBrayer, Georgia Southern University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-19-2020
DOI
10.1093/icb/icaa076
Abstract

Many researchers work at the interface of organisms and environment. Too often, the insights that organismal, or functional, biologists can bring to the understanding of natural history, ecology, and conservation of species are overlooked. Likewise, natural resource managers are frequently focused on the management of populations and communities, while ignoring key functional traits that might explain variation in abundance and shifts in species composition at these ecological levels. Our intention for this symposium is two-fold: (1) to bring to light current and future research in functional and ecological morphology applicable to concerns and goals of wildlife management and conservation and (2) to show how such studies can result in measurable benchmarks useful to regulatory agencies. Symposium topics reveal past, present, and future collaborations between functional morphologists/biomechanists and conservation/wildlife biologists. During the SICB 2020 Annual Meeting, symposium participants demonstrated how data gathered to address fundamental questions regarding the causes and consequences of organismal form and function can also help address issues of conservation and wildlife management. Here we review how these, and other, studies of functional morphology, biomechanics, ecological development morphology and performance can inform wildlife conservation and management, principally by identifying candidate functional traits that have clear fitness consequences and population level implications.

Comments

Georgia Southern University faculty member, Lance McBrayer co-authored Applied Functional Biology: Linking Ecological Morphology to Conservation and Management.

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Citation Information
Eric McElroy, Diego Sustaita and Lance D McBrayer. "Applied Functional Biology: Linking Ecological Morphology to Conservation and Management" Integrative and Comparative Biology Vol. 60 Iss. 2 (2020) p. 402 - 412
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/lance-mcbrayer/148/