Dr Ian Hartley
Senior LecturerResearch Interests
Behavioural ecology - the study of how an animal's ecology and behaviour influence its ability to pass on its genes, either through its own offspring or via close relatives. More specifically I am interested in family interactions in birds with particular emphasis on mate choice and parental care. Birds provide excellent systems for studying these interactions because individuals are relatively easy to observe and the different components of the costs and benefits can be quantified. My earlier work focused mostly on sexual conflict between parents by trying to understand how parentage and parental care interact in polygynous and polyandrous matings. More recently, I have become interested in other within-family interactions, such as parent-offspring conflict and sibling competition.
NERC (External organisation)
Membership of committee
Bird Study (Journal)
Editorial activity
NERC (External organisation)
Membership of committee
British Trust for Ornithology (External organisation)
Membership of committee
British Ornithologists' Union (External organisation)
Membership of committee
British Ornithologists' Union (External organisation)
Membership of committee
British Trust for Ornithology (External organisation)
Membership of committee
NERC (External organisation)
Membership of committee
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology (Journal)
Editorial activity
British Ornithologists' Union (External organisation)
Membership of committee
Ibis (Journal)
Editorial activity
Animal Behaviour (Journal)
Editorial activity
Bird Study (Journal)
Editorial activity
Ringing and Migration (Journal)
Editorial activity
Marsh Award for Ornithology
Prize (including medals and awards)
- Ecology and Conservation