This is a past event
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Food, Sex, and a Hummingbird:
The purple-throated carib of the Lesser Antilles

Professor Ethan Temeles
Thomas B. Walton, Jr. Memorial Professor of Biology

Tuesday, September 30, 2014
12:30 p.m. EDT

Amherst College Campus
Stirn Auditorium

This lecture is simultaneously being recorded and broadcasted live as part of the Virtual Lecture Series.

Sexual differences in size and morphology are widespread in animals. Charles Darwin drew attention to these differences and offered explanations for their evolution based on mate competition and mate choice, reproductive roles, and competition for food resources. Although ample evidence has been obtained for the roles of mating behavior and reproductive roles in the evolution of sex differences, little evidence exists for the role of food competition in the evolution of sex differences. Prof. Temeles will discuss his ground-breaking research on sexual dimorphism and food competition in the purple-throated carib hummingbird, and the role hummingbirds have played in shaping our understanding of sex differences. His lecture also will feature beautiful photographs and videos of hummingbirds of the Eastern Caribbean.

Supplemental Materials:

R.S.V.P
Kindly R.S.V.P.

Questions? Please contact Carly Nartowicz at cnartowicz@amherst.edu
or (413) 542-5366.