We are organised under the Beaufort Marine Research Award in Fish Population Genetics, with Dr Philip McGinnity as the Principal Investigator. Our team is spread across several institutes around the island of Ireland (University College Cork, Queens University Belfast, the Marine Institute of Ireland, Newport) and we also collaborate closely with international research groups.
Our Team:
Phil McGinnity
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Email:
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Tom Cross
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Paulo Prodöhl
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Jamie Coughlan
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Tom Reed
Interests and background:
Tom Reed is currently a lecturer at the University College Cork, and was formerly employed as a Beaufort Research Fellow in quantitative genetics and evolutionary ecology. He has broad interests in a range of topics, including local adaptation, phenotypic plasticity, phenology, senescence, parasite-mediated selection, feedbacks between ecology and evolution, and the impact of human activities (in particular climate change and the release of captive-bred individuals) on the evolutionary dynamics and demography of wild populations. He has previously worked with salmon in the Pacific Northwest, songbirds in the Netherlands and seabirds in Scotland and continues to collaborate with researchers in these regions. For more on Tom Reed see: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Thomas_Reed/
Email: [email protected]
Brief CV:
2015- : Lecturer in Zoology, University College Cork, Ireland
2013-2014: Beaufort Research Fellow, University College Cork, Ireland.
2011-2013: Post-doc, Netherlands Institute of Ecology, Wageningen.
2008-2010: Post-doc , University of Washington, Seattle.
2005-2007: PhD, University of Edinburgh.
1998-2002: BSc, National University of Ireland Galway
Selected publications:
Reed, T. E., Grøtan, V., Jenouvrier, S., Sæther, B. E., & Visser, M. E. (2013). Population growth in a wild bird is buffered against phenological mismatch. Science, 340(6131), 488-491. PDF
Gienapp, P., Lof, M., Reed, T. E., McNamara, J., Verhulst, S., & Visser, M. E. (2013). Predicting demographically sustainable rates of adaptation: can great tit breeding time keep pace with climate change?. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 368(1610). PDF
Reed, T. E., Schindler, D. E., Hague, M. J., Patterson, D. A., Meir, E., Waples, R. S., & Hinch, S. G. (2011). Time to evolve? Potential evolutionary responses of Fraser River sockeye salmon to climate change and effects on persistence. PloS one, 6(6), e20380. PDF
Reed, T. E., Schindler, D. E., & Waples, R. S. (2011). Interacting effects of phenotypic plasticity and evolution on population persistence in a changing climate. Conservation Biology, 25(1), 56-63. PDF
Reed, T. E., Waples, R. S., Schindler, D. E., Hard, J. J., & Kinnison, M. T. (2010). Phenotypic plasticity and population viability: the importance of environmental predictability. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 277(1699), 3391-3400. PDF
Reed, T. E., Daunt, F., Hall, M. E., Phillips, R. A., Wanless, S., & Cunningham, E. J. A. (2008). Parasite treatment affects maternal investment in sons. Science, 321(5896), 1681-1682. PDF
Reed, T. E., Kruuk, L. E., Wanless, S., Frederiksen, M., Cunningham, E. J., & Harris, M. P. (2008). Reproductive senescence in a long‐lived seabird: rates of decline in late‐life performance are associated with varying costs of early reproduction. The American Naturalist, 171(2), E89-E101. PDF
Reed, T. E., Wanless, S., Harris, M. P., Frederiksen, M., Kruuk, L. E., & Cunningham, E. J. (2006). Responding to environmental change: plastic responses vary little in a synchronous breeder. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 273(1602), 2713-2719 PDF
Tom Reed is currently a lecturer at the University College Cork, and was formerly employed as a Beaufort Research Fellow in quantitative genetics and evolutionary ecology. He has broad interests in a range of topics, including local adaptation, phenotypic plasticity, phenology, senescence, parasite-mediated selection, feedbacks between ecology and evolution, and the impact of human activities (in particular climate change and the release of captive-bred individuals) on the evolutionary dynamics and demography of wild populations. He has previously worked with salmon in the Pacific Northwest, songbirds in the Netherlands and seabirds in Scotland and continues to collaborate with researchers in these regions. For more on Tom Reed see: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Thomas_Reed/
Email: [email protected]
Brief CV:
2015- : Lecturer in Zoology, University College Cork, Ireland
2013-2014: Beaufort Research Fellow, University College Cork, Ireland.
2011-2013: Post-doc, Netherlands Institute of Ecology, Wageningen.
2008-2010: Post-doc , University of Washington, Seattle.
2005-2007: PhD, University of Edinburgh.
1998-2002: BSc, National University of Ireland Galway
Selected publications:
Reed, T. E., Grøtan, V., Jenouvrier, S., Sæther, B. E., & Visser, M. E. (2013). Population growth in a wild bird is buffered against phenological mismatch. Science, 340(6131), 488-491. PDF
Gienapp, P., Lof, M., Reed, T. E., McNamara, J., Verhulst, S., & Visser, M. E. (2013). Predicting demographically sustainable rates of adaptation: can great tit breeding time keep pace with climate change?. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 368(1610). PDF
Reed, T. E., Schindler, D. E., Hague, M. J., Patterson, D. A., Meir, E., Waples, R. S., & Hinch, S. G. (2011). Time to evolve? Potential evolutionary responses of Fraser River sockeye salmon to climate change and effects on persistence. PloS one, 6(6), e20380. PDF
Reed, T. E., Schindler, D. E., & Waples, R. S. (2011). Interacting effects of phenotypic plasticity and evolution on population persistence in a changing climate. Conservation Biology, 25(1), 56-63. PDF
Reed, T. E., Waples, R. S., Schindler, D. E., Hard, J. J., & Kinnison, M. T. (2010). Phenotypic plasticity and population viability: the importance of environmental predictability. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 277(1699), 3391-3400. PDF
Reed, T. E., Daunt, F., Hall, M. E., Phillips, R. A., Wanless, S., & Cunningham, E. J. A. (2008). Parasite treatment affects maternal investment in sons. Science, 321(5896), 1681-1682. PDF
Reed, T. E., Kruuk, L. E., Wanless, S., Frederiksen, M., Cunningham, E. J., & Harris, M. P. (2008). Reproductive senescence in a long‐lived seabird: rates of decline in late‐life performance are associated with varying costs of early reproduction. The American Naturalist, 171(2), E89-E101. PDF
Reed, T. E., Wanless, S., Harris, M. P., Frederiksen, M., Kruuk, L. E., & Cunningham, E. J. (2006). Responding to environmental change: plastic responses vary little in a synchronous breeder. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 273(1602), 2713-2719 PDF