Dr. Jonathan Kidner
Contact
Jonathan Kidner
room 6.10
Hoher Weg 8
06120 Halle (Saale)
Research topics
Viral evolution in social organisms
Currently a topic of interest is the study of viral pathogens in the social Hymenoptera. In particular the study of recombination within and between viral strains (the Deformed Wing Viruses A and B, DWV-A, DWV-B), in the proceeding year or two I intend to investigate recombination through both bioinformatic analyses and modelling. With the intention of trying to elucidate the impact of recombination on the prevalence of diversity both within and between hosts. In the social insects this can be expanded to include both individual- and colony-level effects on the evolution of viral strains (as greater opportunities for transmission occur within a colony).Evolutionary models
Publication list
- Kidner J. and Moritz R.F.A. 2016. Conditions for the invasion of male-haploidy in diploid populations. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 29
- Kidner J. and Moritz R.F.A. 2015. Host-parasite evolution in male-haploid hosts: an individual based network model. Evolutionary Ecology 29(1):93--105
- Sadd B., Barribeau S., Bloch G.B., Graaf D.D., Dearden P., Elsik C., Christine G., Gadau J., Grimelikhuijzen C., Hasselmann M., Lozier J. et al. 2015. The genomes of two bumblebee species with primitive eusocial organization. Genome biology 16(1):1
- Kidner J. and Moritz R.F.A. 2013. The red queen process does not select for high recombination rates in haplodiploid hosts. Evolutionary Biology 40(3):377--384
- Stolle E., Kidner J. and Moritz R.F.A. 2013. Patterns of evolutionary conservation of microsatellites (ssrs) suggest a faster rate of genome evolution in hymenoptera than in diptera. Genome Biology and Evolution 5