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Better red than dead? Fiery frills win more contests in the Australian Frillneck Lizard

by Whiting | May 26, 2013 | Animal signals, Communication, Lab news, Publications, Sexual selection

Dave Hamilton, Martin Whiting and Sarah Pryke Recently, the Pryke Lab published its first paper on a reptile—the iconic Frillneck Lizard (Chlamydosaurus kingii). Both males and females have frills and until now, the consensus has always been that frills play a role in...

Dispatches from the field: Australian Geographic expedition to the Kimberley, WA

by Whiting | May 14, 2013 | Cane toad cognition, Cane toads, Lab news, Lizard Lab adventures

The Kimberley in Western Australia is a vast expanse of wilderness, famous for its pristine gorges and unique fauna. It’s also home to the highest species richness of goannas—up to 10 are sympatric in some areas. Sean Doody (University of Tennessee and Newcastle),...

Tadpoles need friends too!

by Whiting | Feb 14, 2013 | Behaviour, Frog, Lab news, Publications, Science news, Social behaviour

A major interest in our lab is social behaviour and why animals live in groups. Group formation has evolved numerous times independently in many different species. Understanding the proximate mechanisms and ultimate (evolutionary) factors driving group formation is a...

Lizard Lab launches Instagram account!

by Whiting | Feb 2, 2013 | Lab news

For those of you with Instagram accounts, the Lizard Lab has just launched it’s own account: lizardlab Please follow us! Here’s a sample of our Instagram photos:

Grant Webster wins best honours/masters student presentation at ASH!

by Whiting | Feb 2, 2013 | Lab news

The Australian Society of Herpetologists (ASH) just concluded its annual conference at Point Wolstoncroft at Lake Macquarie. The conference was one of the largest ASH meetings ever–maybe the largest (I forget), with 170 delegates. Martin, Dan, Siobhan and Grant...

Sex in the lizard world: Promiscuous females and protective males

by Whiting | Jan 26, 2013 | Lab news, Publications, Science news, Sexual selection, Water skink project

The sex life of Australian water skinks (Eulamprus) has received considerable attention in the past few decades. The Keogh Lab documented alternate reproductive tactics in E. heatwolei and Jess Stapley’s PhD focused in part, on fitness consequences of ARTs. More...
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We acknowledge the traditional custodians of the Macquarie University land, the Wattamattagal clan of the Darug nation, whose cultures and customs have nurtured, and continue to nurture, this land, since the Dreamtime.  We pay our respects to Elders past, present and future.

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