Conference Description
The Microbial Population Biology GRC is a premier, international scientific conference focused on advancing the frontiers of science through the presentation of cutting-edge and unpublished research, prioritizing time for discussion after each talk and fostering informal interactions among scientists of all career stages. The conference program includes a diverse range of speakers and discussion leaders from institutions and organizations worldwide, concentrating on the latest developments in the field. The conference is five days long and held in a remote location to increase the sense of camaraderie and create scientific communities, with lasting collaborations and friendships. In addition to premier talks, the conference has designated time for poster sessions from individuals of all career stages, and afternoon free time and communal meals allow for informal networking opportunities with leaders in the field.
We now know that microorganisms are astonishingly abundant everywhere, and that their activities affect everything from geology to human behavior. However, most of our current insights into microbial populations have come from mathematical models of their evolution and ecology and from laboratory cultures of model species. Unfortunately, ‘culturable’ species are rare exceptions, since most microorganisms will not grow under laboratory conditions. Natural communities of bacteria are also very diverse; individual isolates of the same species typically differ by 10% of their genes, and communities from seemingly identical environments (e.g. the guts of different humans) often contain very different species. Tools to investigate microorganisms in their natural habitats have recently become available. Advances in microscopy allow researchers to examine bacterial communities, and sometimes even identify species, with unprecedented resolution. Metagenomics and other culture-independent approaches, originally applied only at very broad taxonomic levels, are becoming increasingly able to distinguish sequences at the level of species or individual lineages. This conference will bring together research on a wide range of microbial communities, from cheese to caverns, from lakes to lungs, from teeth to the troposphere. In selecting speakers we will prioritize those who will introduce us to new communities and new phenomena, raising exciting new questions about their evolution, diversity, and consequences. Our long-term goals will be to build understanding of the principles governing the properties of these communities. A key objective will be to identify which of these properties can and which cannot be explained by current models of community structure and function.
Note: Please apply early. We expect the conference to be over-subscribed. Although the official application deadline is June 11, 2023 the Chairs will begin reviewing applications in January, and hope to have made most acceptances by April. Once accepted, all must be registered by the registration deadline is: Sunday, June 18, 2023 at 11:59pm EST.
The topics, speakers, and discussion leaders for the conference sessions are displayed below. The conference chair is currently developing their detailed program, which will include the complete meeting schedule, as well as the talk titles for all speakers. The detailed program will be available by March 11, 2023. Please check back for updates.
Microbial Communities of Fermented Foods
Discussion Leaders
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Sijmen Schoustra (Wageningen University and University of Zambia, The Netherlands)
Speakers
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Benjamin Wolfe (Tufts University, United States)
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Delphine Sicard (INRAE, France, France)
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Bernard Moonga (University of Zambia, Zambia)
Intermicrobial Warfare
Discussion Leaders
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Kevin Foster (University of Oxford, United Kingdom)
Speakers
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Melanie Blokesch (EPFL, Switzerland)
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William Smith (University of Manchester)
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Thierry Soldati (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
Origins and Evolution of Animal Epidemics and Pandemics
Discussion Leaders
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Raina Plowright (Cornell University, United States)
Speakers
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Jeff Foster (Northern Arizona University, United States)
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Kathryn Hanley (New Mexico State University)
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Wendy Turner (US Geological Survey, Wisconsin Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit/University of Wisconsin-Madison)
Origins and Evolution of Human Epidemics and Pandemics
Discussion Leaders
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Bill Hanage (Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, United States)
Speakers
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Emma Hodcroft (University of Bern, University of Geneva)
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Nathan Grubaugh (Yale School of Public Health, United States)
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Judith Breuer (Ucl, United Kingdom)
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David Kennedy (The Pennsylvania State University, United States)
Metabolic Interdependencies in Symbioses
Discussion Leaders
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Nicole Dubilier (Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Germany)
Speakers
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Toby Spribille (University of Alberta, Canada)
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Lee Henry (Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom)
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Nicole Gerardo (Emory University, United States)
Interactions in Polymicrobial Infections
Discussion Leaders
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Michael Surette (McMaster University, Canada)
Speakers
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Joao Xavier (Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, United States)
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Michel Koo (University of Pennsylvania, United States)
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Katrine Whiteson (University of California Irvine, United States)
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Chelsie Armbruster (University at Buffalo, United States)
COVID-19
Discussion Leaders
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Bruce Levin (Emory University, United States)
Speakers
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Marc Lipsitch (Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, United States)
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Frank Snowden (Yale University)
Viruses as Drivers of Microbial Dynamics
Discussion Leaders
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Maureen Coleman (University of Chicago, United States)
Speakers
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Debbie Lindell (Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Israel)
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Gil Amitai (Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel)
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Eugene Koonin (National Institutes of Health, United States)
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Matthew Sullivan (Ohio State University, United States)
Planetary-Scale microbiomes
Discussion Leaders
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Paul Falkowski (Rutgers University, United States)
Speakers
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Valeria Souza (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico)
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Naomi Levine (University of Southern California, United States)
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Alyson Santoro (University of California, Santa Barbara, United States)
The GRC Power Hour™
Organizers
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Christina Burch (University of North Carolina, United States)