Kerry Fanson
Deakin University, VIC, Australia
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
Kerry Fanson is a behavioural endocrinologist whose interests lie at the interface between basic and applied research. She is particularly interested in the evolutionary implications of individual and species-level variation in endocrine physiology. She did her PhD at Purdue University studying how stress and reproductive physiology impact conservation efforts such as species reintroductions. She then moved to Australia, where she continued to study a range of topics related to stress and reproduction at Macquarie University and Taronga Conservation Society Australia. She is currently a post-doc at Deakin University studying the role of insulin-like proteins in shaping individual differences in growth rate, metabolism, and behaviour in Australian yabbies.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
Comparative evolutionary endocrinology: merits, potential and pitfalls (#266)
3:45 PM
Kerry V Fanson
CONCURRENT SESSION: Traits and hormones: When is a trait hormone-dependent and when is it not – is there a general picture? (Symposium)
Extra-pair paternity in birds: selection on genetic compatibility in a global context (#288)
11:30 AM
Simon C Griffith
CONCURRENT SESSION: Mating / Polyandry ‘beyond the individual’ (Symposium)