New preprint from the lab!
Posts by Evolutionary Ecology Group, Cambridge
A new face for ‘Little Foot’, the most complete Australopithecus skeleton to date @ameliebeaudet.bsky.social theconversation.com/a-new-face-f...
Many living people carry fragments of Neanderthal DNA, remnants of ancient interbreeding events, with uneven distribution across chromosomes. New work by @sarahtishkoff.bsky.social lab suggests patterns are most consistent with Neanderthal contribution to human populations being highly male biased.🧪
🚨CALL FOR PAPERS!🚨 @lucytimbrell96.bsky.social and I are running a session (S17) at PanAf2026 in Mozambique, titled: Pan-African Homo sapiens evolution: linking processes with data. More info: panaf2026moz.com/panaf-sessio... & submit an abstract: panaf2026moz.com/paper-submis... deadline March 15th
🚨EVENT & CALL for ECR speakers
🌍🧬 HAAM Radio Webinar - Reconstructing past demography, interactions, and social organisation in Africa
📅 28 Jan 2026
⏰ Short-talk call extended to 14 Jan
🔗 shorturl.at/YzqMS
New paper alert! 🚨 🐌
We studied historic Antarctic fossils from the Zinsmeister Collection to assess whether the K-Pg extinction, as recorded on Seymour Island, was sudden or gradual. We found that benthic life thrived in the 4 million years before the K-Pg.
doi.org/10.1016/j.pa...
EMBO Population Genomics course: Are you a postgrad student or a postdoc starting a population genomics project? This course aims to give you the tools to answer questions for your project. Registration deadline: 10 February 2026 meetings.embo.org/event/26-pop... #EMBOpopgen
Esta semana, en "Sausage of Science" de @humbioassociation.bsky.social, hablo sobre mi, y sobre cómo el proyecto que hicimos en @eegcam.bsky.social cambia nuestra visión sobre el origen de nuestra especie en África 🤗open.spotify.com/episode/1aQzqEBgILUm2DQU...
Huge congratulations to Zhe and everyone involved! 😊
This has been a wonderful effort by many lab members, and the credits for the fantastic leopard picture go to Ondra Pelanek 📷
Lastly, we saw that Europe also followed this pattern: during warm interglacial periods it was occupied by leopards but population sizes dropped during glacial periods, suggesting that the effect of climate could have been strong enough to catalyse their extinction.
We also found that climate stability over glacial cycles can explain the different levels of differentiation on continents. Africa remained stable over time, whilst Asian demography fluctuated more through glacial cycles, hence creating the isolation for needed for differentiation.
This simulated demography provided explanations to many patterns we observe. For example, African leopards show strong isolation from almost all Asian ones, and we found it is due to the shallow corridor between North Africa, the Levant and the Arabian Peninsula after the initial expansion.
We found that a simple Out of Africa model can capture the genetic diversity of leopards in Asia and Africa. Among all the demographic parameters, the ones associated with climate showed strongest signal, indicating climate was largely responsible for contemporary leopard demography.
Why is there only one subspecies in Africa whilst in Asia there are 8? And why did leopards disappear in Europe? In our study, we combine genetics, climate and archaeological data to build a Climate Informed Spatial Genetic Model and try to answer these questions.
#newpreprint: "Climate Shaped the Global Population Structure of Leopards and their Extinction in Europe": www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...! Leopards are charming big cats but there are many mysteries around them. Thread 🧵
#newpaper out in @natecoevo.nature.com on Learned use of an innate sound-meaning association in birds, co-led by @jameskennerley.bsky.social when he was a PhD student at @eegcam.bsky.social . Nice summary on the @uk.theconversation.com theconversation.com/birds-all-ov...
youtube.com/watch?v=MA1c...
The phylogenetic position of the Yunxian cranium elucidates the origin of Homo longi and the Denisovans | Science www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
I couldn’t be more excited about being given the chance to present some of the work we do at @eegcam.bsky.social this November & to listen to the talks by such an incredible line up of speakers! 🤩
The distribution of early human settlements in Sub-Saharan Africa might have been influenced by avoidance of mosquitoes that spread malaria
A new #prelight of Alejandra Leffer's group talks about the preprint by @margheritac17.bsky.social , and the team.
Thank you @prelights.bsky.social & Alejandra Leffer's group for choosing our preprint on @biorxiv-evobio.bsky.social and for this chance to talk about human- #malaria coevolution!🦟
@eegcam.bsky.social @elliescerri.bsky.social @MPI_GEA
3 exciting job opportunities at the new "HUMAN ORIGINS" Cluster of Excellence at Tübingen, for which I am an external PI. We are looking for early career researchers ready to launch their independent group and ask some exciting questions!
Check the package website for more information, example workflows, benchmarking and ideas on how to use tidygenclust: github.com/EvolEcolGrou...
🚨🧬New #preprint and R package from the lab out in @biorxivpreprint.bsky.social🧬🚨: 'tidygenclust' combines the functionality of ADMIXTURE, fastmixture and Clumppling into R - allowing for reproducible clustering analyses and plotting all in one place!
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Stone tools from Sulawesi at least a million years old may be even more ancient than those found on Flores, suggesting an even earlier presence of hominins on Wallacea www.nature.com/articles/s41...
What a fantastic new paper out today in @pnas.org: www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/... - and what a great resource, summarising the climatic niche of primates and tackling the hypothesis on whether primates evolved in warm tropical forests 😍
#newpaper showing how depth mediates the population dynamics of soft corals in Fiji, led by @nis38.bsky.social (with @huwiceandstuff.bsky.social, @rowanwhittlebas.bsky.social, and @egmitchell.bsky.social)
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
#Newpaper: the African Humid period through the lenses of pollen-based and mechanistic-based #palaeoclimate reconstructions!
Thanks @ecologypast.bsky.social, @markuslfischer.bsky.social, @paleoclimategirl.bsky.social and all coauthors!