Nina Wedell
Nina Wedell is a professor of evolutionary biology at the University of Exeter in the United Kingdom. She was appointed as the Australian Research Council Laureate Fellow in 2019. She will investigate the evolutionary dynamics of sexual conflict and insecticide resistance genes at the University of Melbourne. Professor Wedell has pioneered the field of sexual selection, and is best known for her research on female multiple mating, polyandry. Her work has encompassed many insect systems including butterflies, moths, and flies.
Education and career
Wedell has a BSc, an MSc, a PhD, and D.Sc. from Stockholm University. Following her PhD, she was a postdoc at the University of Liverpool from 1993 until 1996. Subsequently, she held research positions at Stockholm University and the University of Leeds. She took a position at the University of Exeter in 2004 as the Royal Society University Research Fellow. She was promoted to professor in 2009. Since 2018, she has also been the Associate Dean for Research.Research
Wedell's research focuses on the evolutionary role of sexual conflict. Her research has demonstrated the role of selfish genetic elements in reproductive biology using interdisciplinary approaches from evolutionary, behavioral and molecular sciences.Selected publications
- Lindholm, A. K., Dyer, K. A., Firman, R. C., Fishman, L., Forstmeier, W., Holman, L.,... & Price, T. A.. The ecology and evolutionary dynamics of meiotic drive. Trends in ecology & evolution, 31, 315–326.