Eva Wikberg (@evawikberg) 's Twitter Profile
Eva Wikberg

@evawikberg

Assistant Professor at UTSA with research focusing on primates, behavioral and molecular ecology, and conservation.

ID: 919913340595572738

linkhttps://evawikberg.com calendar_today16-10-2017 13:10:06

76 Tweet

225 Followers

130 Following

Eva Wikberg (@evawikberg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Congrats to Shelby Samartino for winning the Pints and Posters competition during #UTSA Research Days: graduateschoolgps.myportfolio.com/posters. Next month she will give an equally amazing proposal presentation!

Eva Wikberg (@evawikberg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Congrats to Emily Glotfelty for completing her MA proposal about variation in Colobus vellerosus behavior with increasing population size!

Eva Wikberg (@evawikberg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Congrats to Sara Lucci @KidColobus, Emily Glotfelty, and Shelby Samartino each for being awarded a #UTSA COLFA Stumberg award!

Eva Wikberg (@evawikberg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Congrats to Emily Glotfelty for finishing her MA thesis investigating changes in food availability and ranging over 20 years when the BFMS population of the #criticallyendangered #colobus (Colobus vellerosus) increased from 200 to 450 individuals

Eva Wikberg (@evawikberg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Congrats to Bright Adu Yeboah for being awarded the The Leakey Foundation Baldwin fellowship for his PhD studies in Environmental Anthropology at #UTSAanthro: leakeyfoundation.org/announcing-the…

Eva Wikberg (@evawikberg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#colobus vellerosus Marla is showing off her #personality on the #AmJournalPrimatology cover by doing a one-leg (cheating) stiff-leg (aggressive) display while her infant is nursing

#colobus vellerosus Marla is showing off her #personality on the #AmJournalPrimatology cover by doing a one-leg (cheating) stiff-leg (aggressive) display while her infant is nursing
Eva Wikberg (@evawikberg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Subordinate male capuchins who queue for reproductive opportunities are as successful in producing offspring as alpha males that aggressively takeover a group, which may explain why male capuchins cooperate despite high reproductive skew.

Subordinate male capuchins who queue for reproductive opportunities are as successful in producing offspring as alpha males that aggressively takeover a group, which may explain why male capuchins cooperate despite high reproductive skew.
Eva Wikberg (@evawikberg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Read more about capuchin male dispersal and reproductive success in our newly published BEAS paper link.springer.com/article/10.100…

Eva Wikberg (@evawikberg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Here is a free access view only link to “Should I stay or should I go now: dispersal decisions and reproductive success in male white‐faced capuchins (Cebus imitator)”: rdcu.be/cQoPO

UTSA Anthropology (@utsaanthro) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We are hiring an Assistant Professor position in Human Health! Come and join our amazing department! Deadline is Oct 24. Please spread the word. Full job description at bioanth.org/jobs/3406/ @utsa UTSACOLFA UT San Antonio Research AABA Anthropology Jobs American Anthropological Association

Eva Wikberg (@evawikberg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I am so excited to see our African colobines chapter in The Natural History of #Primates @RLPGBooks where Kelley, Sussman, and I highlight behavioral flexibility and conservation in a changing world

I am so excited to see our African colobines chapter in The Natural History of #Primates @RLPGBooks where Kelley, Sussman, and I highlight behavioral flexibility and conservation in a changing world
Julie Teichroeb (@teichroeb_lab) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We just published the first data on same-sex sexual behaviour in the African colobines, and only the second report of masturbation in this taxon, with a report on Colobus vellerosus. link.springer.com/article/10.100…

Eva Wikberg (@evawikberg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Thanks to Julie Teichroeb for spearheading the effort reporting on the “Non-reproductive sexual behavior in wild white-thighed colobus monkeys (Colobus vellerosus)”. You can read our article here: rdcu.be/c6wIu

Eva Wikberg (@evawikberg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Congrats to Sara Lucci @KidColobus for being awarded an U.S. National Science Foundation DDRIG to investigate early life adversity and gut microbiome characteristics in our study population Colobus vellerosus at BFMS

The Leakey Foundation (@theleakeyfndtn) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🐒 Meet the ursine colobus. Today's #MonkeyMonday comes from grantee @KidColobus. Sara Lucci is a PhD candidate at UTSA Anthropology who is studying early life adversity and the gut #microbiome. Read on 👇

🐒 Meet the ursine colobus. Today's #MonkeyMonday comes from grantee @KidColobus. Sara Lucci is a PhD candidate at <a href="/UTSAanthro/">UTSA Anthropology</a> who is studying early life adversity and the gut #microbiome.  Read on 👇