Animal Colouration
19.–20. Mai 2016
Researchers working in many subdisiplines of biology are currently very interested in the evolution and mechanisms underlying animal colouration and its perception. This workshop is unique in bringing together academics working on a great variety of topics relating to colouration including sexually selected colouration (think of parrot feathers), protective colouration (brown mice), the development of colouration (genetic and environmental influences), colour pigments and morphological structures (birds’ eggs and feathers), colour perception (eyes of primates and octopi), and colour in humans (skin, clothes and warfare). Over two days, we aim to throw around ideas about colouration with a view to initiating a major review of this skyrocketing field.
Convener
Kontakt
Teilnehmer
Will
Allen
Swansea University
Kevin
Arbuckle
University of Liverpool
George
Chaplin
Pennsylvania State University
Innes Cameron
Cuthill
Fellow
2015/2016
Universität Bristol
Mark E.
Hauber
Cornell University
Geoffrey
Hill
Auburn University
Nina
Jablonski
Pennsylvania State University
Chris
Jiggins
University of Cambridge, UK
Almut
Kelber
Lund University
Johanna
Mappes
University of Jyväskylä
Justin
Marshall
University of Queensland
Richard
Merrill
King's College Cambridge
Daniel Robert Colaco
Osorio
Fellow
2015/2016
Universität Sussex, Brighton
Richard O.
Prum
Fellow
2015/2016
Yale University
Nicholas
Roberts
University of Bristol
Alexandre
Roulin
Fellow
2015/2016
Universität Lausanne
Hannah
Rowland
University of Cambridge
Tom
Sherratt
Carleton University
John
Skelhorn
Newcastle University
Mike
Speed
University of Liverpool
Mary
Caswell Stoddard
Harvard University
Devi
Stuart-Fox
Fellow
2015/2016
Universität Melbourne
Elizabeth
Tibbetts
University of Michigan
Laszlo
Talas
University of Bristol
Barbara A.
Caspers
Fellow
2015/2016
Universität Bielefeld