Mikkel Skovrind
Postdoc
Section for Molecular Ecology and Evolution
Øster Farimagsgade 5, bygning 7, 1353 København K
I see myself as a classical naturalist driven by a fundamental curiosity - with a state of the art toolbox to help me answer fundamental biological questions of how, when and where the genomic patterns we can observe today arose. I am currently doing a postdoc at the GLOBE Institute UCPH where I am working with Arctic whales, primarily belugas, investigating their evolutionary and demographic histories in a range wide context. Throughout my career I have gained experience with generating and analyzing genomic data from both ancient and modern samples. I think genomic analyses becomes even more powerful when they are combined with other data types, thus I have also worked with, telemetrics, stable isotopes and habitat modelling. My research usually has a non-genetic component such as environment, ecological or phenotype data as I believe the inclusion of supporting data makes the impact of the genomic result much greater and helps put their implications in perspective.
ID: 161747997
Most downloads
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150
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Marine spawning sites of perch Perca fluviatilis revealed by oviduct-inserted acoustic transmitters
Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
Published -
144
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Mind the gut: genomic insights to population divergence and gut microbial composition of two marine keystone species
Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
Published -
130
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Mitochondrial genome divergence between beluga whales in Baffin Bay and the Sea of Okhotsk
Research output: Contribution to journal › Letter › Research › peer-review
Published