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8th February: The evolution of nuptial gift-giving 

February 8, 2023 @ 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm

The evolution of nuptial gift-giving 

Anders Charmouh – School of Biological Sciences, University of Aberdeen 

Wed 8th February, 13:00 – 14:00, Cottrell Lecture Theatre V1 and streamed on Teams
This seminar is open to all staff, students and affiliates of the University of Stirling. The seminar is hosted by Biological and Environmental Sciences (BES). 

Who this may appeal to: The talk will be of interest to anyone interested in evolutionary biology, particularly those with an interest in frequency-dependent selection, mating system evolution, sexual conflict, individual-based modelling, and model development in general.

Abstract: Nuptial gift-giving has been documented in several taxonomic groups such as insects, snails, birds, squid, arachnids and humans. Although this trait has evolved many times independently, no general framework has been developed to predict the conditions necessary for nuptial gift-giving to evolve. Here, we use a time-in time-out model to derive analytical results describing the requirements necessary for selection to favour nuptial gift-giving. Specifically, selection will favour nuptial gift-giving if the fitness increase caused by gift-giving exceeds the expected gift search time times the encounter rate of the opposite sex. Selection will favour choosiness in the opposite sex if the value of a nuptial gift exceeds the inverse of offspring processing time multiplied by the rate at which mates with nuptial gifts are encountered. We test these results using an individual-based model applied to a system of nuptial gift-giving spiders, Pisaura mirabilis, by estimating parameter values using experimental data. The results provide a general framework for understanding conditions under which evolution of nuptial gift-giving will occur. Our results also provide novel insight into the evolution of fake or worthless nuptial gifts.

Bio: Anders Charmouh completed his undergraduate degree in Aarhus (Denmark) before joining University of Aberdeen’s School of Biological Sciences where he is currently finishing his PhD. His current work covers diverse topics in theoretical evolutionary and population genetics, ranging from studying mating system evolution to refining tools for modelling the distribution of fitness effects of mutational effects. His approach varies from building and running spatially and genetically explicit individual-based simulation models to constructing analytical models based on classical results from theoretical population genetics or evolutionary game theory. From spring 2023, Anders will be working as a postdoctoral research fellow at Bioinformatics Research Centre (Aarhus, Denmark) where he will be constructing new models of selection on gametes and use non-negative matrix factorization approaches on genomic datasets to study mutational processes in sperm cells.

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Date:
February 8, 2023
Time:
1:00 pm - 2:00 pm

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