Search results
The Institute of Evolutionary Science of Montpellier (ISEM – University of Montpellier, CNRS, IRD, EPHE, CIRAD, INRAP) has been focusing research on biodiversity origins and dynamics and the associated evolutionary mechanisms.
- ISEM
ISEM - Homepage - ISEM - ISEM
- Sharing knowledge
Sharing knowledge - Homepage - ISEM - ISEM
- News & Events
Forest Fire Season, UNJA Postgraduate Program Holds Public...
- Governance & Administration
Governance & Administration - Homepage - ISEM - ISEM
- Research areas
Research at ISEM is based primarily on the observation,...
- Research departments & teams
Home > Research at ISEM > Research departments & teams...
- ISEM
The Institute of Evolutionary Science of Montpellier (ISEM – joint research unit 5554) has been focusing research for over 40 years on biodiversity origins and dynamics and the associated evolutionary mechanisms and processes.
ISEM's research concerns the origin and dynamics of biodiversity, as well as the modalities and mechanisms of its evolution. The unit's researchers are interested in both current and past biodiversity, studying a wide range of organisms and environments, and combining approaches based on...
The Institute of Evolutionary Science of Montpellier (ISEM – University of Montpellier, CNRS, IRD, EPHE, CIRAD, INRAP) has been focusing research on biodiversity origins and dynamics and the associated evolutionary mechanisms.
Within the Conservation and Domestication (ConsDom) Department of UMR ISEM, a team from CIRAD is working to design and foster fish farming systems capable of coping with the food security challenges of the future, in terms of both quantity and safety, while respecting the environment and the health of human societies.
Programmes. Research at ISEM. Field, experimental and theoretical research on fundamental evolutionary biology issues concerns both current and past biodiversity, while encompassing a broad range of organisms and environments.
We are a group of researchers from the CNRS and from the University of Montpellier working at the Institute for Evolutionary Sciences (ISEM) in Montpellier, France. We are generally interested in describing, quantifying and understanding biodiversity responses to global changes.