Paper accepted in Ecology and Evolution

5 04 2024

Congratulations Hana for getting your first PhD paper accepted in Ecology and Evolution, and thanks to all our collaborators. All about geographic variation in morphology in mole rats; New insights into morphological adaptation in common mole-rats (Cryptomys hottentotus hottentotus) along an aridity gradient. More to follow.





Congratulations Cecylia

8 03 2024

Huge congratulations to PhD Cecylia who submitted her thesis this week!





New Job

29 02 2024

Very excited that from September I shall be leaving Royal Holloway University of London and heading to the University of Oxford and St Hugh’s College, to be an Associate Professor of Animal Behaviour.





Congratulations Hana

20 02 2024

Congratulations Hana Merchant who passed her viva with Minors! Thanks to examiners Mike Scantlebury and Rudy Riesch.





Congratulations Rosa

19 02 2024

Congratulations Rosa Gleave, whose had her paper accepted in People and Nature. In the paper, we establish whether local ecological knowledge can establish conservation baselines for the critically endagered Blue-crowned Laughtingthursh. More to follow.





Galliformes and their visual fields

15 02 2024

We’ve been busy in France measuring the visual fields of various Galliformes! This is the project of MSc student Alex, in collaboration with Simon Potier and bird breeding specialists.





Eclipse Book

8 02 2024

Excited to see the publication of “Eclipse & Revelation”, edited by Henrike Lange and the late Tom McLeish, to which I contributed a chapter on “Animal Behaviour and Eclipse”.





CASSOWARIES – BBC Wildlife Magazine

6 01 2024

Out now in the BBC Wildlife Magazine is my article on my trip to Mission Beach to see Cassowaries!





Congratulations Hana!!

8 12 2023

Massive Congratulations to PhD student Hana Merchant for submitting their thesis!! It’s been an enjoyable and productive 4 years, full of mole rats, fieldwork in South Africa, and happy times.





New paper out in Current Biology

6 11 2023

Our new paper is out in Current Biology! And great to have the front cover. African Harrier-hawks have a weird visual field, which we believe is linked to their unusual foraging behaviour. You can read it here!