Evolutionary ecologist interested in early-life and parental effects, climate change, infectious diseases. Likes insects, theory and comparative studies.
Leads EVE lab, Bristol UK www.evelab.org
UKRI Future Leaders Fellow, academic mama, from Zimbabwe
Sinead English
Loading...
Our Conversation article here about our new paper on heatwaves and bee fertility theconversation.com/heatwaves-ar...
Read the journal article here: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Don’t forget to get these in by Monday ! 🚨
Congratulations to our 2026 Huxley Award recipient, Matheus Januario Lopes de Sousa, for the educational resource: “evolved: an open-source R package designed for graduate and advanced undergraduate instruction in evolutionary biology”! Read more: shorturl.at/1ZdFE@mjanua...
Four current special issues and calls for papers related to cancer evolution/ecology and mathematical oncology (details also in the alt text for you to copy and search)
So much fun to take 20 @bristolbiosci.bsky.social undergraduate students to Adelboden CH for the 2026 Alpine Interactions field course with @chrisleduck.bsky.social & 2 fantastic PhD demonstrators (Mini Graydon & Kath Leon). Lots of cool insects & larger critters, beautiful views and enthusiasm!
Modern medicine has transformed how we age, with more people surviving to old age with chronic disease. Karen Modig & Marcus Ebeling examine how aging, health, and care should be redefined to reflect these increasingly complex later lives.
🧪 #aging #healthcare
How do cell lineages evolve, and how does that shape trait evolution?
Join our symposium Tracing Evolution Through Cell Lineages (Plön, 12–14 October). Hear perspectives from leading scientists and contribute with your own. Read more at: workshops.evolbio.mpg.de/event/145/
#EvoDevo #StemCell
Link broke, but now alive again here! www.cam.ac.uk/jobs/researc...
Evolutionary landscapes of zygotic genome activation across animals https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.04.16.718233v1
Temporarily keeping parents’ genetic contributions separate promotes normal development, a new mouse study suggests. https://scim.ag/4cZgItZ
Sperm activity in bees dropped after being exposed to heatwave conditions.