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20182025

Research activity per year

Personal profile

Research interests

I am interested in the interaction between biology and the environment across large environmental gradients; for example, macro-ecological trends in the reproductive ecology of marine invertebrates (Thorson's Paradigm) and temperature-body size relationships. I am particularly interested in the role of phenotypic plasticity in adaptation to environmental variability. During my PhD I focused on developmental plasticity in larval decapods, specifically, variations in instar number during development. Through this research I developed an interest in the arthropod moult cycle and its interaction with the processes of growth and development, especially in larval decapods.

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  • Ph.D. Ocean and Earth Science, University of Southampton (2010 - 2014) Thesis title: "Decapod crustacean larval developmental plasticity and the evolution of lecithotrophy and abbreviated development". Supervised by Dr Sven Thatje and Dr Chris Hauton.
    • M.Sc. Oceanography (Distinction), University of Southampton (2008 - 2009
    • B.Sc. (Hons) Marine Biology (2:1), Newcastle University (2004 - 2007)

Research interests

I am a zoologist specialising in arthropod growth, development and neurobiology.  I am interested in how brains develop and function to control behaviour and physiology, and how environment can influence brain development and function.  Here at Aberystwyth, I am using the amphipod model crustacean, Parhyale hawaiensis, as a tool to study crustacean brain development and function.

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I was awarded my PhD in 2014 from the University of Southampton for work on plasticity in crustacean larval development.  I then joined Aberystwyth University working with Dr David Wilcockson on a project to unravel the neuropeptide control of crustacean moulting.  In 2018, I moved to Prof. Peter Dearden’s laboratory for evolution and development, University of Otago, NZ, where I worked on early embryogenesis in insects.  Returning to the UK in 2022, I joined the group of Dr Michael Hastings (FRS) at the MRC - Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, on a project that saw me hosted in Dr David Wilcockson’s lab.  This project sought to identify the molecular and neuronal basis of tidal time keeping in crustaceans. I joined Aberystwyth University as a Lecturer in Zoology in 2026.

Expertise related to UN Sustainable Development Goals

In 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. This person’s work contributes towards the following SDG(s):

  1. SDG 14 - Life Below Water
    SDG 14 Life Below Water

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