Andreas Wallberg
@awallberg.bsky.social
82 followers 26 following 16 posts
Population geneticist at Uppsala University with my feet in the ocean, hands on the keyboard and head in the clouds.
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awallberg.bsky.social
And we're off! The #CLUPEA project, with researchers from Uppsala and Stockholm universities, has started! We will do advanced genetic research to understand the molecular mechanisms that enabled the herring to adapt to the Baltic Sea and that may be key for their resilience to climate change.
awallberg.bsky.social
Such an exciting diversity and quality of presentations related to the evolution of vision and opsins at #ESEB2025! I regret we did not organize an associated symposium on these topics. To make up for it, please pop by my poster today (035) and we can have a mini symposium right here!
awallberg.bsky.social
Tomorrow, on campuses across Europe, perplexed researchers will wonder, where did our evolutionary biologist colleagues go? Well it seems to me that we all went to #ESEB2025!
awallberg.bsky.social
I am announcing an open PhD position involving bioinformatics, genomics and machine learning to work on functional prediction of adaptive genetic variation in krill and herring!

www.uu.se/en/about-uu/...

Going to #ESEB2025 @eseb.bsky.social ?

Find me in poster session 1 for a chat!
Reposted by Andreas Wallberg
awallberg.bsky.social
Let us know your thoughts or questions—we’d love to discuss! 9/n
awallberg.bsky.social
Huge thanks to our team at Uppsala University, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences and collaborators—and special shoutout to the local fishermen who inspired this research! 🐟🎣 8/n
awallberg.bsky.social
The piscivorous herring feeds primarily on stickleback, which eat perch and pike larvae and is upsetting the Baltic food-web. Designing policies to avoid overfishing piscivorous herring could be key to control the stickleback and help restore the balance of the Baltic Sea ecosystem. 6/n
awallberg.bsky.social
Why does this matter? In the sensitive Baltic Sea, the food-web is woven by few species and those that go extinct can not easily be replaced. Specialized ecotypes within species, like the piscivorous herring, are therefore extra important to maintain ecosystem stability. 5/n
awallberg.bsky.social
Why did this evolve in the Baltic but not in the Atlantic? Lack of competitors like tuna or mackerel may have driven this adaptation, underscoring how species can adapt and differentiate rapidly when new ecological opportunities arise. 4/n
awallberg.bsky.social
Our multidisciplinary analyses and results suggest there are several genetically distinct subpopulations of piscivorous herring north & south of Stockholm, and around the Baltic Sea. 3/n
awallberg.bsky.social
We reveal the recent evolution of a genetically distinct, large piscivorous form of Atlantic herring in the Baltic Sea—an otherwise plankton-feeding species adapted to this young, brackish ecosystem. 🌊🧬 2/n
awallberg.bsky.social
How does a plankton-eating fish evolve into a fast-growing, fish-eating predator? 🐟🤔 We are excited to share our new study in Nature Communications and answer this question! 1/n
awallberg.bsky.social
Optimist: The cup is half full.
Pessimist: The cup is half empty.
Genomicist: N50 is when all drops needed to fill half of the cup have been added, sorted by length.
gcbias.bsky.social
Optimist: The cup is half full.
Pessimist: The cup is half empty.
Population geneticist: The cup is either a quarter full or overflowing and I can never remember whether there's a factor of two for haploids or diploids.

bsky.app/profile/hutc...
hutchinsondave.bsky.social
Optimist: The cup is half full.
Pessimist: The cup is half empty.
Yorkshireman: A cup? Luxury!