The Student Conference on Conservation Science series started in Cambridge and have expanded with Brisbane, Beijing, Bangalore and New York.
SCCS is the largest international conference in conservation science, where students and early career scientists are welcomed and have the chance to present their research, learn from each other and meet with experts of the field who can offer them guidance in their future careers.
In 2015, Hungary joined this inspiring event and organizes a conference, especially for young scientists from all around Europe to build a network among the presented parts of the continent.
Keynote Speakers
Costanza Geppert is a researcher at the University of Padova, in Italy. After a MSc thesis on the effectiveness of flower strips and organic farming to support pollinators at Goettingen University (DE), she was awarded her PhD for studies on climate change effects on plants and herbivore insects at the University of Padova. Currently, she works on social-ecological systems, ecosystem services and human-nature connections, with a focus on insects. She teaches a course on insects under global change.
Yann Clough is Professor in Environmental Sciences and Assistant Director for Research at the Centre for Environmental and Climate science (CEC), Lund university, Sweden. He studied agriculture in France and the Netherlands, and did his PhD in Agroecology in Göttingen, comparing biodiversity in organic and conventional agriculture. His work focusses on the links between land-use, biodiversity, ecosystem services and resilience to climate change in farm and farm forest landscapes in temperate and tropical agricultural systems. Much of his research is interdisciplinary, and international collaboration currently includes participation in H2020 Safeguard (European Pollinators) and UPSCALE (Upscaling push-pull technology in East Africa). He currently leads the ERC Project DrivenByPollinators aimed at assessing the role of pollinators in mediating effects of landscape-scale land-use effects on plant communities.
More speakers to be added.