Martin Whiting
@lizardlab.bsky.social
330 followers
190 following
24 posts
Professor of Animal Behaviour. Posts mostly about The Lizard Lab - research group investigating behaviour, ecology, evolution of lizards (mostly). https://whitinglab.com/ for research, members, photos, blog. All other links: https://linktr.ee/lizard_lab
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Reposted by Martin Whiting
Reposted by Martin Whiting
Stephen Curry
@scurry.bsky.social
· Feb 11
Open letter to the President of the Royal Society – time to stand up for your values
If you wish to show your support for the letter below regarding apparent inaction by the Royal Society in the face of breaches of its code of conduct by Elon Musk FRS, please sign below. I invite anyo...
docs.google.com
Reposted by Martin Whiting
Reposted by Martin Whiting
Martin Whiting
@lizardlab.bsky.social
· Jan 9
Why blue tongue? A potential UV-based deimatic display in a lizard - Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
Abstract Deimatic displays are a type of anti-predator behaviour that startles the predator. They have received much recent theoretical attention, enabling the empirical study of this phenomenon withi...
link.springer.com
Martin Whiting
@lizardlab.bsky.social
· Jan 9
Martin Whiting
@lizardlab.bsky.social
· Jan 9
Martin Whiting
@lizardlab.bsky.social
· Jan 9
Martin Whiting
@lizardlab.bsky.social
· Jan 9
Martin Whiting
@lizardlab.bsky.social
· Dec 19
Enterobacteriaceae community dynamics in sleepy lizards: Richness, prevalence and co‐occurrence over time
Our study examined the co-occurrence patterns of gut bacteria in 87 sleepy lizards over their activity season, finding that bacterial richness and prevalence generally increased over time, likely due...
onlinelibrary.wiley.com
Reposted by Martin Whiting
Daniel Noble
@danielwanoble.bsky.social
· Dec 12
From eggs to adulthood: sustained effects of early developmental temperature and corticosterone exposure on physiology and body size in an Australian lizard
Highlighted Article: Incubation temperature and prenatal corticosterone exposure have independent sustained effects, but not interactive effects, on morphological and physiological traits in the delic...
doi.org