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Staff Information> Research Staff

DR RUSSELL BONDURIANSKY

| Research | Publications |

 
 
ACADEMIC CAREER
Australian Research Fellow (2007-) University of New South Wales
Australian Postdoctoral Fellow (2004-2007) University of New South Wales
Ph.D. (2004) University of Toronto
B.Sc., M.Sc. University of Guelph
 
I am recruiting students for a variety of interesting lab- and field-based Honours and PhD projects. Contact me for more information.
 
 
 
 
Russell Bonduriansky
 
RESEARCH INTERESTS
  • Sex-specific selection and the evolution of sexual dimorphism
  • Mating systems and sexual conflict
  • Genetic and environmental effects on the expression of secondary sexual traits
  • Evolution and expression of ageing
 
Neriid females feeding (left); Rearing larvae in the lab (right)
 
Effects of diet on body size and shape: these neriid flies are siblings reared on contrasting larval diets (males at left, females at right). Males reared on poor food resemble females, but their brothers reared on rich food develop extremely long heads, antennae and legs.
 
 
What happens at the genetic and phenotypic levels when selection acts differently on homologous traits in males and females?
 
Many traits are expressed in both sexes, but subject to different selection pressures ('sex-specific selection'). In particular, some male traits are subject to sexual selection, while the homologous female traits are not. Sex-specific selection generates an evolutionary tug-of-war that drives the divergence of male and female morphology, behaviour and life history, resulting in sexual dimorphism. I use both theoretical and empirical approaches to understand the workings of sex-specific selection (particularly sexual selection), and its consequences for the evolution of genetic systems and phenotypes. I am particularly interested in mechanisms that modify mendelian systems of inheritance, in the effects of environment and individual condition on trait expression within and across generations, and in the evolution of body shape (allometry).
 
Cowan Field Station (left) and a piophilid carrion fly (right)
 
 
Why do some individuals age more rapidly than others? How does ageing affect sexual selection? How is ageing expressed in natural populations?
 
The evolution of ageing represents a fundamental puzzle within evolutionary biology. Although we know that the expression of ageing is affected by environmental factors, much of our knowledge of ageing comes from captive populations maintained in environments that are very different from those in which they evolved. Thus, we know little about how ageing is expressed in wild populations exposed to a multitude of mortality risks and stresses. Equally little is known about sources of variation in ageing among individuals, and the effects of ageing on sexual selection. I pursue both lab- and field-based research on these questions, focusing on several species of flies.
 
Predatory tree skink (left), mating antler flies (centre), and male marked 'H' (right)
 
 
 
SEE ALSO
 
CONTACT DETAILS
Room 450F
Tel: +61 2 9385 3439
Fax: +61 2 9385 1558
Email: r.bondurianskyunsw.edu.au
 
Neriids mating at sunset