In this course, you will familiarize yourself with conservation genetic concepts and get first-hand insight into conservation practice. The course accommodates various aspects of conservation genetics including a field excursion to the threatened habitat of the alpine/nival zone, interaction with conservation practitioners and hands-on practice using conservation genetic methods. The module combines elements of a seminar, field work and a computer lab.
- Викладач: Gwee Chyi
- Викладач: Wolf Jochen
- Викладач: Yakupova Aliya
In this course we will consider phenotypic evolution in natural populations, and how this is influenced by different types of selection, neutral drift, genetics and development. Students will learn how adaptive change is studied in different contexts and with a variety of methods. The course will also introduce students to primary scientific literature, as well as critically assess and design research intended to address evolutionary questions. The aim of the course is for students to begin thinking as evolutionary biologists.
The course is taught in English, reflecting its role as the working language of science.
- Викладач: Kalmar Gergo
- Викладач: Kara Aysegül
- Викладач: Merrill Richard
- Викладач: Mueller Sarah
- Викладач: Wright Daniel
- Викладач: Dingemanse Niels
- Викладач: Franssen Susanne
- Викладач: Gompel Nicolas
- Викладач: Grath Sonja
- Викладач: Merrill Richard
- Викладач: Nieuwenhuis Bart
- Викладач: Ramnarine Timothy
- Викладач: Stibor Herwig
- Викладач: Stockenreiter Maria
- Викладач: Tuni Cristina
- Викладач: Wolf Jochen
- Викладач: Zhang Natascha
- Викладач: Parsch John
- Викладач: Alcami Ayerbe José
- Викладач: Merrill Richard
- Викладач: Castillo Vicente Sara
- Викладач: do Nascimento Pereira Ricardo
- Викладач: Hagberg Linda
- Викладач: Metzler Dirk
- Викладач: Mueller Sarah
- Викладач: Grath Sonja
- Викладач: Merrill Richard
- Викладач: Nieuwenhuis Bart
- Викладач: Parsch John
- Викладач: Pozzi Andrea
Sexual reproduction is the most common mode of reproduction in nature, however, its existence is one of the biggest problems in evolutionary biology. Why did sexual reproduction, a costly form of reproduction, evolve and why is it maintained? What led to the evolution of the two specialized groups ‘males’ and ‘females’? How does sex and the existence of sexes affect evolution at the genetic and genome level? In this seminar, based on classical and recent literature, we discuss these topics from the fundamental theory to recent genomic insights.
- The seminar takes place every Thursday 17:00 - 18:30
- Each week two people will give a short presentation on the topics to be discussed that week.
- The presentations are followed by a group discussion on one or two papers.
- The topics that will be discussed are:
- The many costs of sexual reproduction
- Benefits of recombination
- Benefits of sexually produced variation
- Evolution of sexual asymmetries: mating types
- Evolution of sexual asymmetries: anisogamy
- Evolution of sexual asymmetries: separate sexes
- Diversity of sex determination systems
- Environmental sex determination
- Sex chromosome evolution
- Sex chromosome turnover
- Sexual selection and sex chromosomes
- Sexes and “sex roles”
- Викладач: Berenguer Millanes Cristina
- Викладач: Nieuwenhuis Bart
- Викладач: Merrill Richard
- Викладач: Parsch John
- Викладач: Wolf Jochen
- Викладач: Franssen Susanne
- Викладач: Grath Sonja
- Викладач: Nieuwenhuis Bart
- Викладач: Tuni Cristina
- Викладач: Warmuth Vera-Maria
- Викладач: Wolf Jochen
- Викладач: Grath Sonja
- Викладач: Nieuwenhuis Bart
- Викладач: Warmuth Vera-Maria
- Викладач: Wolf Jochen
- Викладач: Franssen Susanne
- Викладач: Grath Sonja
- Викладач: Nieuwenhuis Bart
- Викладач: Tuni Cristina
- Викладач: Warmuth Vera-Maria
- Викладач: Wolf Jochen
- Викладач: Haug Joachim
- Викладач: Mikeladze-Dvali Tamara
- Викладач: Zhang Natascha