Author Archives: Jeremy Yoder

About Jeremy Yoder

Jeremy B. Yoder is an Associate Professor of Biology at California State University Northridge, studying the evolution and coevolution of interacting species, especially mutualists. He is a collaborator with the Joshua Tree Genome Project and the Queer in STEM study of LGBTQ experiences in scientific careers. He has written for the website of Scientific American, the LA Review of Books, the Chronicle of Higher Education, The Awl, and Slate.

What we're reading: Ancestral haplotype identification, narcolepsy and influenza, and phony baloney in the supplement aisle

In the journals Brandvain, Y., T. Slotte, K. M. Hazzouri, S. I. Wright, and G. Coop. 2013. Genomic identification of founding haplotypes reveals the history of the selfing species Capsella rubella. PLoS Genet. 9:e1003754. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1003754. Due to the recency … Continue reading

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Sequencer to the stars

The Molecular Ecologist receives a small commission for purchases made on Bookshop.org via links from this post. No single person is responsible for the revolution in genetic data collection that has reshaped biology over just a handful of decades, but if you had … Continue reading

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What we're reading: Mating advantages for rare males in guppies, a new species of dolphin in Australian waters, and DNA sequencers on Mars

In the journals Hughes, K. A., A. E. Houde, A. C. Price, and F. H. Rodd. 2013. Mating advantage for rare males in wild guppy populations. Nature. doi: 10.1038/nature12717. Hereweuse highly replicatedexperimentalmanipulationsofnatural populations to showthatmales with rare colour patternshave higher … Continue reading

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What we're reading: Frequency-dependent selection on mitochondria, divergence versus admixture mapping, and the PubMed Commons

In the journals E Kazancıoğlu, Arnqvist G. 2013. The maintenance of mitochondrial genetic variation by negative frequency-dependent selection. Ecology Letters. doi: 10.1111/ele.12195. We assessed the change in mitochondrial haplotype frequencies over 10 generations of experimental evolution in 180 seed beetle … Continue reading

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Molecular ecology views: Metapopulation dynamics from lab flasks to tidal pools

Our co-blogger Peter Fields is joining the lab of Dieter Ebert at the University of Basel this fall, and he sent along these photos of the Ebert group’s long-term work on the metapopulation dynamics of parasite infection in Daphina water … Continue reading

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What we're reading: Adaptive genetics of pines, population structure of rats in the city, and the fallout

In the journals Eckert AJ, JL Wegrzyn, JD Liechty, JM Lee, WP Cumbie, JM Davis, B Goldfarb, CA Loopstra, SR Palle, T Quesada, CH Langley and DB Neale. 2013. The evolutionary genetics of the genes underlying phenotypic associations for loblolly … Continue reading

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What we're reading: The predictive power of NSF grant reviewers, the peer-review sting, and more shutdown science

In the journals Goodman BA, L Schwarzkopf, & AK Krockenberger. 2013. Phenotypic integration in response to incubation environment adaptively influences habitat choice in a tropical lizard. The American Naturalist, 182(5): 666-73. doi: 10.1086/673299. Using a split-clutch design, we incubated eggs … Continue reading

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What we're reading: A new review of landscape genetics, science in the shutdown, and how to not be That Dude.

In the journals Petren, K. 2013. The evolution of landscape genetics. Evolution. doi: 10.1111/evo.12278. Evolutionary landscape genetics is the study of how migration and population structure affects evolutionary processes. As a field it dates back to Sewall Wright and the … Continue reading

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What we're reading: GWAS hits lost in translation, the mutational load of range expansions, and killing the comments section to save science

In the journals Carlson, C. S., Matise, T. C., North, K. E., Haiman, C. a., Fesinmeyer, M. D., Buyske, S., … Kooperberg, C. L. (2013). Generalization and dilution of association results from European GWAS in populations of non-European ancestry: The … Continue reading

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What we're reading: The tiger genome, pooled sequencing for population genomics, and more fretting about academic careers

In the journals Cho YS et al. 2013. The tiger genome and comparative analysis with lion and snow leopard genomes. Nature Communications 4:2433. doi: 10.1038/ncomms3433. Through comparative genetic analyses of these genomes, we find genetic signatures that may reflect molecular … Continue reading

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