Drew Anderson
@andersonevolve.bsky.social
890 followers 620 following 250 posts
🧪 🐟 🐠 🧬 PhD in Evolution and Sexual Selection. Study fishes, behavior, genetics, genomics, and hormones. Own views. He/him. Handle is shared across social media Webpage: andersonevolve.com
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andersonevolve.bsky.social
2nd day at new job. Here's what's next to my parking spot. Taking me back to my PhD days. Definitely at a land grant institution. 🙂
Barn with cows.
andersonevolve.bsky.social
Gotta love the post-doc life. I am literally packing for the move for my next post-doc while completing job applications.
Reposted by Drew Anderson
thefishiedoc.bsky.social
I am recruiting 1-2 graduate students (M.S. or Ph.D. track) to join my lab at @psychualberta.bsky.social in Fall 2026! Please share widely, and if you are interested in endocrinology, animal behavior, neuroscience, and/or seasonal biology, I would love to chat! 🐟🧠🧬🍂
andersonevolve.bsky.social
Ha!

As a Miami Hurricane, I will be perpetually annoyed if people call U Minnesota the U.
andersonevolve.bsky.social
Questions and comments are always welcome. If you find this framework interesting, humor me and try it out on situations of cross-sexual transfer or emergent dimorphism to see if it holds up. I was pleased it worked here, but science is all about putting things to the test.
Thanks!
andersonevolve.bsky.social
This was a fun paper and I'll soon have one out about the brain transcriptomics from these fish (yes Androgen Receptors play a big role). We did this while I was a VP with my own Undergrad research lab. They were amazing in this process...
andersonevolve.bsky.social
If you've been thinking about the Challenge Hypothesis, you're not alone. This is complementary. It turns out partner behavior influences observed behavior which correlates with androgens. Thus our evo framework works alongside the environmental one...
Correlations of partner behavior with targeted behaviors.
andersonevolve.bsky.social
For the female larger species we don't see those shifts or a linear correlation with 11KT, but we do see one with T. My guess is females evolved to use T from 11KT as T might have less negative physiological consequences and both interact with androgen receptors (though which ones, we don't know)...
andersonevolve.bsky.social
When females take on male biased behaviors plastically they ramp up more than male tamp down 11kt. In fact their 11kt levels exceed males in some cases--more impressive than T for fishes. We removed categories (size and sex) and still found this correlation with 11KT...
andersonevolve.bsky.social
For the female larger species we expect that the behavior is already linked to androgens, so they should likewise have androgen correlation (instead of say estrogen). Turns out we're correct for plastic transfer in male larger species, but kind of right in evo transfer female larger species...
11kt and t reaction norms for two species.
andersonevolve.bsky.social
We leveraged the evolutionary history of these fishes to infer that the territorial behavior evolved from male-biased behaviors. Thus we expect the behaviors should correlate with androgens (11KT) in the male larger species and females should increase androgens when they become the larger partner..
Graphical representation of the Ancestral Modulation Hypothesis
andersonevolve.bsky.social
We know members of Julidochromis have varying preferred partner size relationships (e.g. Male larger than female), but if put in a situation where they can't do that they will switch roles in nesting behavior. This study confirmed that for our target species...
Figure from paper showing J. transcriptus and J. marlieri shifting behaviors in both sexes based on size.
andersonevolve.bsky.social
I use this paper when discussing evolution, adaptation, and "just so" stories. This is, in my opinion, what Gould and Lewinton were discussing as a Panglossian view.
andersonevolve.bsky.social
Nothing screams good place to rent than the listing saying a stipulation to stay on the property is "no crime"
andersonevolve.bsky.social
Super thankful for my time at Reed College. I got to run a lab, teach, and do some great reseach (more coming soon). Dr. Suzy Renn is an awesome mentor and I can't say enough good things about her.
If anyone has a chance to postdoc at a PUI I encourage them to seriously consider it.
andersonevolve.bsky.social
🧪🐟🦗 Excited to share I'll be taking a postdoc position with Dr. Mingzi Xu in the EEB program at U Minnesota.
I'll be moving out of fishes and into crickets (for now).
Ready for new challenges and applying what I've done in sex bias to inverts
Reposted by Drew Anderson
suegenenoh.bsky.social
Undergrad students often forget about genetic drift as an evolutionary process/ force. If you've also experienced this, we might have a solution for you! Our RIE2 (resources for inclusive evolution education) working group just published a week-length drift module: qubeshub.org/publications...
Teaching genetic drift: new approaches to encourage non-deterministic thinking about evolution
This teaching module is designed to help undergraduate students dismantle preconceived notions about evolution and deepen their understanding of genetic drift as a non-deterministic evolutionary proce...
qubeshub.org
andersonevolve.bsky.social
This is an awesome finding.
jrossibarra.bsky.social
Our paper showing that variation in transcription factor binding sites underlies the majority of additive genetic variance for phenotypic variation in maize is finally out!

Sadly they didn't use our suggested cover image below (made by the inimitable Andi Kur).

www.nature.com/articles/s41...
andersonevolve.bsky.social
Debate rages in my house. Is this a spork?
Utensil with spoon on one end and fork on the other.
andersonevolve.bsky.social
🧪 That terrifying, yet healthy, feeling when you run a new statistical approach/package and the results "make sense".
andersonevolve.bsky.social
I work on mechanisms of cross sexual transfer in fishes. Currently working with behaviors in biparental cichlids. Have some data on brain expression when females engage in male-biased behavior that I'll be publishing soon. Would love to find ways to share it!
andersonevolve.bsky.social
Loved having these fish for awhile.
Sphaerichthys osphromenoides