Tempo and Mode Seminar: Evolutionary dynamics and fitness in wild populations
Speakers
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Description
Evolutionary biology is under-pinned by an elegant framework of theoretical models that predict the dynamics of within-population change. Testing this theory empirically is challenging, but I aim to show here how long-term, individual-based studies of wild populations offer unparalleled opportunities for doing so. I explore our current understanding of the theory’s fundamental ingredients: levels of genetic variance, the process of natural selection, and patterns of variation in fitness in the wild. These analyses indicate important – and interesting – implications Of the reality of natural environments for evolutionary dynamics. The talk will contain results about fairy-wrens.
This talk is a practice run for 2018 Presidents’ Award plenary at the Joint Congress on Evolutionary Biology in Montpellier in August 2018, and your feedback is welcome!
Location
Eucalyptus Seminar Room (S2.05), Level 2, RN Robertson Building (46), ANU