Beatriz Taboada

Beatriz Taboada MSc

PhD Candidate

Bezoekadres

Droevendaalsesteeg 10
6708 PB Wageningen

+31 (0) 317 47 34 00

The Netherlands

Over

My interests in biology include reproduction and sexual selection. I worked with multiple animal models (insects, fish and most recently birds).
I'm doing my PhD on reproductive microbiomes in house sparrows and how they might affect their fitness.

Biografie

Onderzoeksgroepen

Onderzoeksexpertise

Reproductive microbiomes

CV

Employment

  • 2024–Present
    PhD candidate
  • 2024
    Research Assistant

Education

  • 2022–2024
    Master's Degree (University of Gothenburg)
  • 2017–2021
    Bachelor's Degree (University of Porto)

Publicaties

Belangrijkste publicaties

Evolution
2024

Sexual selection buffers the negative consequences of population fragmentation on adaptive plastic responses to increasing tempe

M. Iglesias-Carrasco, B. Taboada, M. Lozano, P. Carazo, R. Garcia-Roa, E. Rodriguez-Exposito, F. Garcia-Gonzalez
Whether sexual selection facilitates or hampers the ability to plastically respond to novel environments might depend on population structure, via its effects on sexual interactions and associated fitness payoffs. Using experimentally evolved lines of the seed beetle Callosobruchus maculatus, we tested whether individuals evolving under different sexual selection (monogamy vs. polygamy) and population spatial structure (metapopulation vs. undivided populations) treatments differed in their response across developmental thermal conditions (control, hot, or stressful) in a range of fitness and fitness-associated traits. We found that individuals from subdivided populations had lower lifetime reproductive success at hot temperatures, but only in lines evolving under relaxed sexual selection, revealing a complex interaction between sexual selection, population structure, and thermal environmental stress on fitness. We also found an effect of population structure on several traits, including fertility and adult emergence success, under exposure to high thermal conditions. Finally, we found a strong negative effect of hot and stressful temperatures on fitness and associated traits. Our results show that population structure can exacerbate the impact of a warming climate, potentially leading to declines in population viability, but that sexual selection can buffer the negative influence of population subdivision on adaptation to warm temperatures.