James Gilbert
- Senior Lecturer in Zoology, University of Hull
I am a senior lecturer and evolutionary biologist at the University of Hull, UK. My research focuses on insects, their reproductive strategies and life histories. My main focus at the moment is on the evolution and dynamics of parental provisioning in bees, but my collaborators and I also work on social behaviour, sexual conflict, parental care, nutrition and even proteomics. You can learn more about my research from my website.
Insects and their tiny allies are the some of most numerous and most awesome creatures on the planet. To an evolutionary biologist like me, they are like a crazy Aladdin's cave, full of interest and intrigue. Sadly, they mostly get a bad press - to this day, the question I am most often asked is "Oh, you work on insects? Well, can you tell me how to kill these pests in my garden...?" Hearing this makes me sad. To redress the balance I'm keen to write as much as possible about the amazing, crazy little world I'm lucky enough to study.
Experience- 2024–present Senior Lecturer in Zoology, University of Hull 2015–2024 Lecturer in Zoology, University of Hull 2014–2015 Postdoctoral fellow in evolutionary insect ecology, University of Sussex 2011–2013 Postdoctoral fellow in evolutionary insect ecology, University of Sydney 2009–2011 Associate Lecturer, University of Derby 2007–2009 Postdoctoral Associate in nutritional ecology, University of Maryland
- 2007 University of Cambridge, PhD/Zoology
- 2024 Resilience of pollinators in a changing world Role: PI Funding Source: Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
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