Showing posts with label amphibians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label amphibians. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Lab-meeting on November 22: talk on sexual dimorphism in amphibians by Stephen De Lisle




 
































Posted by Erik Svensson

Next week's EXEB-meeting will deal with the evolutionary ecology of sexual dimorphism by new postdoc Stephen De Lisle, who recently defended his PhD at Toronto University in Canada, under the supervision of Prof. Locke Rowe. Stephen has worked with amphibians, particularly newts, using a combination of experiments in mesocosms on single species, and phylogenetic comparative methods of amphibian diversification. An Abstract is appended below.

Time: Tuesday, November 22, 10.00
Place: "Darwin", 2nd floor, Ecology Building


   Ecological Aspects of Sexual Dimorphism

    Abstract:

Sexual dimorphism represents a striking source of diversity in nature, and much of this diversity cannot be fully explained by the direct effects of sexual selection.  This talk focuses on empirically testing and conceptually unifying some of the non-exclusive adaptive causes of sexual dimorphismFirst, I present evidence from a newt indicating significant ecological sexual dimorphism and a possible role for at least some direct ecological causal component of dimorphism. I propose a framework for demonstrating an ecological cause of sexual dimorphism, via character displacement between the sexes, and marshal the first direct evidence in support of this hypothesis. I expand this program to examine how competition-driven disruptive selection, ecological sexual dimorphism and speciation interact during the early stages of adaptive radiation in newts.  These analyses suggest clade-wide character displacement between the sexes, and that evolution of ecological sexual dimorphism may play a key role in niche divergence among nascent species. Finally, I extend the test of dimorphism’s role in diversification to a higher level of organization, across Amphibians. I show that the evolution of sexual dimorphism is and has been a key driver of amphibian diversification by increasing speciation rates and reducing extinction.  These results suggest the novel hypothesis that sexual dimorphism may promote diversification by allowing lineages to exploit sex-specific ecological opportunity. The general conclusions are that sexual dimorphism can have significant ecological impact and even direct ecological causes, and contra traditional views, the evolution of sexual dimorphism in ecologically important traits can have important positive impacts on adaptive diversification.










Welcome Stephen De Lisle - new postdoc!




Posted by Erik Svensson 

I am pleased to introduce my new postdoc Stephen De Lisle, who recently defended his postdoc at University of Toronto, under the supervision of Prof. Locke Rowe. Stephen has a strong experimental evolutionary ecology background, complemented with skills in phylogenetic comparative methods and hence will fit well in to overall research profile of both my lab and the EXEB-environment in general. Stephen will stay in Lund for at least two years from now on, thanks to a large international collaborative grant that Tobias Uller obtained together with me, Charlie Cornwallis and Per Lundberg. Stephen will present some of his thesis research on next year's EXEB-meeting (Tuesday, November 22), which will follow in a separate blogpost. 

About Stephen's research, in his own words:

I am an evolutionary ecologist interested in understanding the adaptive origins of phenotypic diversity. Although my interests are broad, much of my research has focused on testing non-traditional models of sexual dimorphism and understanding how the evolution of such ‘ecological’ sexual dimorphisms may or may not influence the structure of ecological communities and the dynamics of evolutionary radiation.  I do this using a combination of experimental and comparative approached that bridge community ecology, microevolution, and macroevolution. 

Monday, March 28, 2011

Visit by Anssi Laurila Wednesday March 30 2011 and seminar on amphibians






















This coming Wednesday, Prof. Anssi Laurila from the Department of Population Biology and Conservation Biology at Uppsala University will visit Lund and the Aquatic Ecology Section. Anssi studies phenotypic plasticity, local adaptation and quantitative genetics in amphibians, and will give an invited seminar in "Tanken" on the first floor at 10.00 (March 30 2011), as part of the seminar series organized by Aquatic Ecology. Those of you who are interested should take the opportunity to listen and if you want to meet Anssi and discuss research with him, contact Christer Brönmark (christer.bronmark@biol.lu.se) to make an appointment.

Our lab-meeting this Wednesday will take place in "Argumentet", rather than "Darwin" and it is scheduled another time: 12.30, due to another meeting in the lunch room at 14.00 of the Evolutionary Ecology Section. See previous blogposts for info about which papers to discuss.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Updated Wednesday-plans for lab-meeting on October 6

On Wednesday, our lab-meeting will start one hour later, at 11.15, as there is an interesting seminar that starts at 10.00 in the Limnology Section's seminar room "Tanken" (first floor). The talk will be given by Dr. Martin Lind, former PhD-student in Umeå in the laboratory of Frank Johansson, and currently a VR-postdoc at Sheffield University (UK). The title of Martins talk is:

"Local adaptation, gene flow, cost and benefits of phenotypic plasticity"

After the seminar, we walk back to the 2nd floor, and start  our regular lab-meeting at 11.15, i. e. one hour later than usual. This lab-meeting will take place in "Darwin", as has previously been announced. Hopefully, Martin will join us and provide some input on the papers. We will discuss one paper on niche conservatism in North American Jays, and one manuscript of ours that has already been sent out by Maren Wellenreuther. Send Maren an e-mail if you have not yet received this manuscript (maren.wellenreuther@zooekol.lu.se).