Laura Alberici da Barbiano

                        Ph.D. Student in Aquatic Resources 

                                                  CV                                                      

          Department of BiologyTexas State University - San Marcos     

                             Laura_Alberici@txstate.edu 

                      Advisors: Dr. Caitlin Gabor  and  Dr. Chris Nice

                                                   

             

 

 

         
      Taq: my dog
 

Who Am I

I was born in Italy in 1981 and lived there until I moved to Ethiopia when I was 16. Needless to say: that was an amazing experience. I had an opportunity to travel all over East Africa, I went on Safaris and spent hours watching really cool animals doing amazing things. Not surprisingly, those 3 years in Africa triggered my already curious mind; but it was not until I saw a leopard hiding behind a bush to check its lunch's (gazelle) movements, that I realized that I wanted to become an evolutionary/behavioral biologist.

So I came to the US to study at UT - Austin....where after many parties, sleepless nights and spending innumerable hours watching zebrafish swimming back and forth, I graduated in December 2004.

I took a year and a half off (not really voluntarily) and now I am here, back in Texas,  but most importantly...doing research again.

 

LINKS:

Big Brothers Big Sisters of America

American Livebearer Association

ASIH

SWAN

 

               

The Fishes

 male P. latipinna

  female P. latipinna

 

P. formosa

 

 

Research

My main interest at the moment is to investigate the maintenance of unisexual-bisexual mating systems.

The Amazon molly, Poecilia formosa, is a gynogenetic fish species that arose from an hybridization event between a female Atlantic molly, P. mexicana, and a male sailfin molly, P. latipinna about 100,000 years ago (Hubbs & Hubbs 1932; Avise et al. 1991; Schartl et al. 1995).  

Poecilia formosa is therefore a unisexual species (consists of only females) and depends on the sperm of the parental species to start embryogenesis. As a result, it has to live in sympatry with either parental species and depends on them for its persistence.

At the same time, male P. latipinna and P. mexicana should avoid mating with gynogens because they obtain no obvious direct or indirect fitness from these matings. Although many studies have been performed it is still not clear what mechanisms may be influencing the males mate choice when both conspecific and gynogenetic heterospecific females are present in a population.

I am currently testing a few hypotheses by performing experiments in a semi-natural environment rather than in a laboratory setting to be able to assess how population dynamics may affect male mate choice.

Additionally, I am investingating the phylogeography and the phylogenetic history of P. formosa, P. latipinna and P. mexicana, to be able to dismiss or accept hypotheses that have been proposed to explain the maintenance of P. formosa as well as testing new alternative hypotheses.

 
         

male P. mexicana

 

  ABS meeting in Burlington

 

      Dinner back home

 

      Catching snakes

 

         Playing with fish

 

               Taq