
Two graduate students in the were honored for their conservation biology research on the Hawaiian crow and the Hawaiian thrush at the .
The conference gathered scientists, policymakers, conservation practitioners, educators, students and community members from Âé¶¹´«Ã½ and the Pacific to discuss conservation.
Genevi¨¨ve Blanchet

Blanchet received first place in outstanding graduate student oral presentation. Her research details the genetic diversity of the ʻ²¹±ô²¹±ô¨¡ (Hawaiian crow) population, comparing early and late bottleneck developments to better understand the history, and inform captive population management of this critically-endangered species.
Blanchet is a member of UH Hilo¡¯s Conservation Genomics Research Group and specializes in avian conservation and genomics.
Koa Matsuoka

Matsuoka was awarded runner-up for outstanding graduate poster presentation for his research that examines the diet diversity of the native ʻ¨³¾²¹ʻ´Ç (Hawaiian thrush), ʻ²¹±ô²¹±ô¨¡ crow and other exotic birds to compare each species¡¯ effects on seed rain and seed germination of Hawaiian fruiting plants.
The data may inform resource managers of the impacts reintroducing native fruit-eating birds will have on the plant community in forests where they have been eliminated.
For more about the awardees, go to the UH Hilo news release or .
