Selene Fernandez-Valverde joins the Milner Centre as Royal Society Research Fellow
Published on 18 April 2018Selene Fernandez-Valverde has received a Royal Society Fellowship to work with the Milner Centre for Evolution for three years.
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Selene Fernandez-Valverde has received a Royal Society Fellowship to work with the Milner Centre for Evolution for three years.
More than 60 local children came to the Milner Centre for Evolution at the University of Bath to meet creepy crawlies and learn how to use a microscope.
Human activities could change the pace of evolution, leaving modern birds as their only descendants.
Sequencing the DNA of the MRSA superbug can accurately identify patients most at risk of death and could help medics develop new treatments.
Extinction risk for some species could be drastically underestimated because most demographic models of animal populations dismiss male data as ‘noise’.
Research from the Milner Centre for Evolution demonstrates a simple cost-free way to improve students’ understanding of evolution at secondary level.
One of the last dinosaurs living in Africa before their extinction 66 million years ago has been discovered in a phosphate mine in northern Morocco.
Promiscuity mixes up the gene pool and dilutes genetic differences between populations, slowing down the evolution of new species, says new research.
Geneticists from the Universities of Bath and Manchester are celebrating the discovery of the elusive ‘greenbeard gene’ that helps.
Study of stomach bacterium finds that foreign strains replaced local strains after the arrival of Europeans and African slaves across the Americas.