Jennifer is a postdoctoral researcher with experience in macroecology, macroevolution, biogeography and community ecology. Her interest is to understand the origin and maintenance of geographic patterns of biodiversity as well as the mechnisms that underlie species coexistence. Seh has worked in a broad array of topics related to conservation biology and the improvement of predictive distribution models for their application to biogeography, paleontology or conservation biology.
Jennifer has joined our research team as a postdoctoral researcher supported by the project "Habitability space for biodiversity: applying Liebig's Law of the Minimum to global change biogeography ", leaded by Sara Villén-Pérez and funded by Comunidad de Madrid.
Together with Fernanda Alves-Martins, Ignacio Morales-Castilla, Enrique Andivia and Sara Villén-Pérez, she is working to forecast the fate of tree species in North America under climate change scenarios, considering the limitation imposed by precipitation and temperature to population numbers. Let's see what they find!
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