GEE Seminar - Prof. Emily Baird, Stockholm University
Title: "Some Don't Like it Hot: Assessing the Effect of Climate Change on the Morphology and Behaviour of Insect Pollinators"
Academic Host: Seirian Sumner
Abstract: In the temperate regions of northern Europe, Asia and America, bumblebees and butterflies are two of the most essential taxa for pollination. Their great success is largely due to their ability to develop and forage in temperatures colder than those typically required for ectotherm species. However, studies have shown that pollinator populations in temperate climates are decreasing at an alarming rate and one of the factors that is likely responsible for these declines is the rapidly increasing environmental temperature associated with climate change. Exactly how increasing temperatures could contribute to the vulnerability of insect pollinators and how this affects the development and function of the sensory and neural structures and behaviour necessary for foraging remains unclear. In this talk, I will present recent work that my lab has been doing to address this knowledge gap in bumblebees and butterflies.
My research program is focussed on understanding the link between the visual world of animals and how the brain uses visual information to guide behaviour in different environments. To do this, I take a comparative approach that uses a combination of behavioural experiments and anatomical analyses using X-ray micro computed-tomography using bumblebees and dung beetles as primary model systems.
Further information
Ticketing
Open
Cost
Free
Open to
UCL staff
Availability
Yes