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Evolutionary Ecology Group

 

Discover our work!

Have a glance at our recent work by watching this online lecture that I held on 16 July 2021 at MPI-SHH.

 

Biography

I completed both my undergraduate and PhD degree here in Zoology. I then stayed on as a Junior Research Fellow at Clare College, after which I was offered a Lectureship in the department, and then a position as Reader. I am now a Professor in Evolutionary Ecology.

Research

My research focuses on understanding patterns of individual movement, with an emphasis on disentangling its proximate mechanisms (e.g. grouping behaviour, territoriality, migratory behaviour, etc.) and its ultimate causes (e.g. fitness benefits, selection in metapopulations).  Work in my group can be split into three broad areas: the study of the costs and benefits of individual movement strategies, including their role in collective decision making; the reconstruction of movement using population genetics, including the role of natural selection in allowing colonists to adapt to new environments; and the spatial ecology of species interactions, including disease dynamics. My research often involves the use mathematical and statistical modelling to make inferences from large ecological and genetic datasets, but we also have a dedicated laboratory to study fish shoaling behaviour and a number of field projects scattered around the world.

Keywords

Movement ecology, population genetics, genomics, evolution, behaviour

Professor of Evolutionary Ecology
Andrea Manica

Contact Details

Room 1.02 David Attenborough Building
Takes PhD students
Not available for consultancy