News & Stories

FestEVOLVE 2013: Celebrating Charles Darwin & the Evolution of Life

Evolution explains how amazing organisms came to be and links us all together on one giant tree of life. But how does evolution happen? How long does it take? And how does it help us better understand and explore the biodiversity that we see today? Visit the Beaty Biodiversity Museum and get hands-on with museum specimens in the lab, learn about current biodiversity research, and participate in daily programming that highlights relationships among species.

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Fifty Years in Serengeti

In April, the Museum’s Biodiversity Lecture Series took us to the exquisite Serengeti with Dr. Anthony R.E. Sinclair at a presentation titled, 50 Years in Serengeti: the Story Behind the Science. It’s easy to see why Dr. Sinclair is passionate about this World Heritage Site. Delighting us with stories of acacia trees, elephant, wildebeest, and lions, Dr. Sinclair truly brought us into his research life in Serengeti.

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Fungi Get into the Summer Spirit

For people who have visited the UBC Point Grey campus two weeks ago and strolled along Main Mall, you might have noticed some laminated signs that stuck up from the ground. Did your curious mind drag you closer to investigate? They were identification signs for mushrooms that have sprung up on the grassy patches along Main Mall.

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Goldfish: Pretty Pets or Pernicious Pests?

The introduction of exotic species and their potential to become invasive is one of the leading causes of the declining status of native biodiversity. In addition, costs to the economy from the prevention, control, elimination, and the mitigation of effects of exotic/invasive species, and costs from lost opportunities are estimated to be in the hundreds of billions of dollars per year worldwide. For Canadian freshwater fishes, exotic/invasive species are the second most important cause of extinction or extirpation (after habitat loss and degradation).

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Ildiko Szabo Becomes Member of AOU Committee on Bird Collections

Congratulations to Ildiko Szabo, Assistant Curator of the Cowan Tetrapod Collection at the Beaty Biodiversity Museum, for becoming a member of the American Ornithology Union (AOU) Committee for Bird Collections. The AOU was founded in 1883 and is the oldest and largest North American society for the scientific study of birds. This AOU sub-committee represents both traditional and non-traditional collections, including skins, skeletons, fluid-preserved material, eggs and nests, genetic resources, and sound or video holdings.

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Happy Birthday, Charles Darwin!

February 12 is Darwin Day. To celebrate his birthday and the evolution of life, the Beaty Biodiversity Museum has hosted its annual Bake a Cake for Darwin Contest, as part of FestEVOLVE 2013.

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INVOKING VENUS: Artist Talks

If you haven’t visited the Beaty Biodiversity Museum lately, there is no better time than now to see INVOKING VENUS, Feathers and Fashion, an exhibition of photo-based images by Catherine Stewart and accessories from the clothing collections of Claus Jahnke and Ivan Sayers. Using bird specimens from the Beaty Biodiversity Museum, Vancouver-based Stewart explores the role colour, patterning and adornment play in courtship and attraction. Interested in more in depth insights? Join the artists as we explore various fascinating topics related to this exhibition.

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Photos: A Passion for Plumage

To launch INVOKING VENUS, Feathers and Fashion, a special exhibition of photo-based artwork by Catherine Stewart and accessories from the clothing collections of Claus Jahnke and Ivan Sayers, the Beaty Biodiversity Museum held an extravagant fashion show on February 7, 2013.

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