Publications
- Blachford, A., M. Doebeli 2009. On luck and sex. Evolution 63(1): 40-47
- Blachford, A., A. F. Agrawal 2006. Assortative mating for fitness and the evolution of recombination. Evolution 60(7): 1337-1343

Alistair Blachford
Computing Manager
Email:
Office phone: 604-822-2645
Web page: mine
History: BSc(Hon.) Queen's in Biology, lots of computer science, MSc UBC in Zoology, PhD UBC in Zoology
The geek
Manager of the Zoology Computing Unit, responsible for the research and teaching computing infrastructure of Zoology and the Biodiversity Research Centre.The nerd
Thinking about spatial heterogeneity, migration load and sexual reproduction led me into assortative mating for a while. And then the narrow specificity of patterns in environmental change which favour sex led me to consider sex with respect to "no pattern" ... noise (individual luck). More recently I have been working on the puzzle of lemming cycles, in particular why cyclic small mammals reduce reproduction at the craziest time -- when numbers are dropping fast and/or are very low. Turns out that's actually adaptive if one assumes that reproduction means additional risk of dying. And I noticed an effective way that animals might cue their plasticity in reproductive output without monitoring the actual mortality agents.I am also very interested in philosophy of science, in particular the foundations of evolutionary theory. Among other things.
The regular guy
Talk to me about sea kayaking on Canada's left coast, southern Alaska, and the arctic.Awards
2011
Faculty of Science Achievement Award
For Service
For exceptional service contributions as staff. Read more »
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