Showing posts with label anolis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anolis. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
Talk by Katie Duryea about sexual selection in Anolis-lizards
Posted by Erik Svensson
This Tuesday (October 7 2014, note changed time!) we will listen to our new postdoc Katie Duryea, who will give an informal 1-hour summary of her PhD-thesis research on Anolis-lizards, which was performed at Dartmouth College in the laboratory of Ryan Calsbeek. Feel free to also invite some other folks outside our core lab-group, as Jessica and Tobias are away this Tuesday. Also, note that we will start at 09.00, rather than at 10.30, as we use to. Here is the title:
"Sexual selection and sexual conflict in Anolis lizards: from molecules to populations."
And here is a short description by Katie about the content of her talk:
"I will cover
the effects of male mating order on sperm precedence, the
transcriptomics and molecular evolution of genes expressed during mating
in female anoles, and a population study of sexual
antagonism on male and female body size in anoles."
When: Tuesday October 7 at 09.00!!!
Where: "Argumentet", 2nd floor, Ecology Building
Welcome!
Etiketter:
anolis,
Katie Duryea,
lizards,
sexual selection,
sperm competition
Thursday, March 4, 2010
Lab-meeting on Tuesday 9 March at 13.00 on sexual dimorphism and sex-specific selection
Lab-meeting this coming week will be on Tuesday afternoon (13.00-15.00), not on our usual time on Wednesday mornings. We will discuss a recent paper in Evolution by our Dartmouth colleagues Robert Cox and Ryan Calsbeek on sexual size dimorphism and sex-specific selection in Anolis-lizards:
This paper should be of interest because of its links to sexual conflict, and incidentally, Bob and Ryan also has a Science-paper that will soon come out on how females manipulate offspring sex depending on the sire's body size in an adaptive fashion, i. e. a resolution of intralocus sexual conflict that you can read more about in this previous blogpost on one of my recent papers on another lizard species (Uta stansburiana).
When to meet? Tuesday March 9, 13.00
Where: "Darwin" room, 2nd floor, Ecology Building
Any fika-volunteer?
This paper should be of interest because of its links to sexual conflict, and incidentally, Bob and Ryan also has a Science-paper that will soon come out on how females manipulate offspring sex depending on the sire's body size in an adaptive fashion, i. e. a resolution of intralocus sexual conflict that you can read more about in this previous blogpost on one of my recent papers on another lizard species (Uta stansburiana).
When to meet? Tuesday March 9, 13.00
Where: "Darwin" room, 2nd floor, Ecology Building
Any fika-volunteer?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)