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Behavior
Biology Grad Student Seminar: Joshua Swore & Jackson Tonnies
Gap Junctions in the Freshwater Cnidarian Hydra vulgaris
By: Joshua Swore (Bosma Lab)
Exploring light responsive enhancers in plants
By: Jackson Tonnies (Queitsch Lab)
Carl Bergstrom & Jevin West interviewed in UW News on misinformation in science communication
TED-Ed Video on hummingbirds by Kristiina Hurme, Alejandro Rico-Guevara, & Alyssa Sargent
Carl Bergstrom and Jevin West featured in Grist video
UW Graduate School Profile: Biology graduate student Donavan Jackson
Frugivory and seed dispersal: insights from Madagascar’s biodiverse ecosystems
Many plant species rely on animal frugivores to disperse their seeds. Understanding the value of frugivore-mediated seed dispersal depends upon comprehending the interaction between animals’ foraging behaviors and the patterns of seed dispersal services they provide.
Molecular dialogue between insect eggs and Arabidopsis thaliana
Insect eggs are not passive structures deposited on leaves. They induce plant defenses that inhibit egg development or attract egg predators. Oviposition by the Large White butterfly Pieris brassicae leads to salicylic acid (SA) accumulation and local cell death in Arabidopsis. These responses are activated by a phospholipid elicitor perceived at the cell surface and share molecular similarities with PAMP-triggered immunity (PTI). However, expression of defense genes regulated by the jasmonic acid (JA) pathway are suppressed and larval performance is enhanced.
W.T. Edmondson Endowed Lecture: Through the widow’s web; Using extreme mating behaviour to untangle plasticity
If the traits that confer increased reproductive success vary with environmental context, and information about context is available to juveniles during development, then adaptive developmental plasticity (ADP) may evolve. Here I show how male widow spiders (genus Latrodectus) are useful for testing hypotheses about ADP because their relatively short lifespans and well-documented, extreme mating behaviours allow strong predictions about how phenotypes are expected to shift under variable social contexts.
Aubrey Gorbman Endowed Lecture: Multimodal communication and reproductive-dependent sensory plasticity in an African cichlid fish
Animals live in a multisensory world and use different sensory channels to communicate during crucial behavioral contexts such as aggression and reproduction. Despite the importance of this multimodal communication, there are relatively few species in which information on sender signals and receiver responses are known. How do individuals send information in multiple sensory channels and where is this information processed and integrated in the receiver’s brain to produce context-dependent behaviors?
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