Anole Annals is a community blog that features posts and comments from many people interested in research on Anolis lizards. Jonathan Losos of Washington University and Rich Glor of the University of Kansas are the founding editors of Anole Annals. More than 300 contributors from around the world have published posts — anyone with something to say about anoles is welcome to submit a post!


Anole Annals Hall of Fame:
Top Contributors

1280 posts
Professor of Biology and Director of the Living Earth Collaborative at Washington University in Saint Louis. I've spent my entire professional career studying anoles and have discovered that the more I learn about anoles, the more I realize I don't know.
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78 posts
I am an Assistant Professor of Biology at New York University. My first love is herpetology, but my lab works on urban evolutionary ecology in diverse organisms (but primarily anoles!).
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76 posts
Martha is a postdoctoral researcher in Sheila Patek's laboratory at Duke University. She received her Ph.D. at Harvard University, where she studyied the evolutionary ecology and thermal physiology of anoles, focusing on the cybotoid anoles from the Dominican Republic. Martha serves as Conference Editor for the Anole Annals. Website: www.marthamunoz.weebly.com
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58 posts
I'm a graduate student at Harvard University, interested in behavioural ecology and evolution.
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57 posts
I am most interested in understanding how different species of lizards live together. Specifically, I research the ecological mechanisms that facilitate coexistence and the subsequent evolutionary consequences. I am a post-doc in the Losos Lab at Washington University in St. Louis. Website: www.jamesTstroud.com
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55 posts
Thom Sanger is an Assistant Professor at Loyola University in Chicago. His lab specializes on understanding the developmental bases of Anolis lizard diversity.
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54 posts
I am interested in whether, how, and why ecology shapes evolution (and evolution shapes ecology) through time, with an emphasis on microevolutionary pattern and process, adaptation, and field experiments. I completed my Ph.D. on Anolis lizards in the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University. I am currently a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Texas, Austin studying threespine stickleback. They're not anoles, but they're cool too.
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53 posts
I am an Assistant Professor at Rutgers University-Camden. I use a variety of evolutionary genetic approaches to ask questions about gene flow, adaptation and speciation.
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48 posts
Herper and PhD student from the Commonwealth of Dominica. Researching dietary niche overlap of the native and invasive species of anole on my island, and something new for my PhD. ...And also like every other anole. Every week. #DidYouAnole?
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35 posts
Nick Herrmann is a Ph.D. candidate at Harvard advised by Jonathan Losos.
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29 posts
I am an Associate Professor at the Univeresity of St. Thomas in St. Paul, MN. My research focuses on understanding how the processes of natural and sexual selection shape physiological and morphological traits. I study anoles to understand life-history tradeoffs and how endocrine systems evolve to modulate social behavior.
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29 posts
PhD Student, Losos Lab, Washington University in St. Louis
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28 posts
Graham is an Associate Professor of Biology at the University of North Carolina Asheville. His research focuses on Caribbean herpetology- specifically anoles and boas.
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22 posts
NSF Postdoctoral Fellow at University of Rhode Island; evolutionary ecologist, herper, lizard lasso-er, cookie monster, discslinger
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20 posts
Anthony Gilbert is a PhD candidate with Donald Miles at Ohio University. He studies evolutionary physiology in desert reptiles as well as the evolution of phenotypic plasticity in response to multiple and simultaneous environmental stressors.
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19 posts
I am a postdoctoral fellow in Dan Warner's lab at Auburn University. More about me and my research interests can be found on my website: www.devoeco.weebly.com
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