EDIT: If you have any comments or questions about the presentation, I`d be happy to answer them in the comments below.

EDIT #2: Following the recommendations of several people on twitter I’ve also decided to upload my talk to Figshare, where it was assigned the DOI 10.6084/m9.figshare.106654 since uploading it yesterday it has had 218 views. That’s more than the number of people who have viewed it on this blog, and far more than the number of people who saw it at IBS. I’m a big fan of Figshare!

I should be preparing my talk, but instead I’d like to attach my talk here just in case you can’t be there. I’m presenting in the Biogeography of the Anthropocene session, which should be really great. I’m looking forward to talks by Anthony Barnosky, Naia Morueta-Holme, Carolina Tovar, Kim Diver and Blaise Petitpierre all examining the changes in earth systems, biodiversity and species composition during the last 150 years and into the future, in an age that’s largely defined by the increasing fingerprint of human activity.

My talk will focus on work from my post-doc, looking at how land use change, and climate variability during the settlement era in the upper Midwestern United States has changed the in situ realized niche for several tree species, and has significantly changed composition in both vegetation and the most common vegetation proxy, pollen.

People have been tweeting some of the IBS sessions using the twitter hash tag #ibs13, so maybe someone will be so kind as to tweet mine, and you can follow along with the presentation that I am attaching here.