12/09/2013 News

Presentación de Tesis: Behavioral changes, ecological niches and adaptive diversification in pigeons and doves

Share

El investigador del CREAF Oriol Lapiedra nos presenta su tesis doctoral el próximo 30 de septiembre a las 11h. El objetivo de esta tesis es obtener una visión integrada de los mecanismos que han comportado la diversidad biológica actual del grupo de las palomas (orden Columbiformes) mediante la incorporación de un factor clave que ha sido ampliamente ignorado en los estudios evolutivos: el papel del comportamiento de los animales.

Tesis Oriol Lapiedra
Portada tesis Oriol Lapiedra

 AUTOR:

Oriol Lapiedra

DIRECTOR:

Daniel Sol

DIA, LUGAR Y HORA:

30 de septiembre en Sala de Graus de Biociències, a las 11h

ABSTRACT:

The extraordinary diversity in ecology, morphology and behavior of species across the tree of life has long interested researchers. Understanding why and how lineages diversify in phenotype and species numbers remains, however, a major challenge in evolutionary biology because evolutionary diversification is a complex process influenced by a number of factors of diverse nature. This thesis aims to provide an integrated picture of the mechanisms that have led to the current biological diversity of a major vertebrate clade by incorporating a crucial factor that has largely been neglected in evolutionary studies: the role of behavior. During this thesis I have used comparative phylogenetic and experimental approaches to investigate the question that changes in behavior can shape evolution by allowing individuals to modify the way they interact with their environment -their ecological niche-. Such changes can modify the way selective pressures affect populations, thus favoring divergent selection that can promote adaptive diversification.

 

Related news

News
IPBES Namibia
News

IPBES publishes two reports to transform the way we engage with nature, conserve it and survive

News
IPBES CREAF
News

CREAF Participates in IPBES's First Plenary in Africa

News
DORI
News

CREAF commits to open research information