MARIA R. SERVEDIO Curriculum Vitae October 19, 2016

MARIA R. SERVEDIO Curriculum Vitae October 19, 2016 PERSONAL INFORMATION, EDUCATION, AND POSITIONS: Personal Information: Title: Professor Address: D...
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MARIA R. SERVEDIO Curriculum Vitae October 19, 2016

PERSONAL INFORMATION, EDUCATION, AND POSITIONS: Personal Information: Title: Professor Address: Department of Biology CB# 3280, Coker Hall The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, NC 27599 Phone: (919) 843-2692 Fax: (919) 962-1625 Email: [email protected] Citizenship: Dual (U.S. and Canada) Education: The University of Texas at Austin, Ph.D. in Zoology. 1993-1998. Supervising professor: Mark Kirkpatrick Dissertation: Preferences, signals and evolution: theoretical studies of mate choice copying, reinforcement, and aposematic coloration. Harvard College, A.B. in Biology (Magna Cum Laude), 1989-1993. Professional Experience: 2014-present: Professor, Department of Biology University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Core faculty, Bioinformatics and Computational Biology Program Faculty, Ecology Curriculum 2008-2014: Associate Professor, Department of Biology University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Spring 2012: Sabbatical in the Department of Mathematics, University of Vienna, and at IST Austria 2002-2008: Assistant Professor University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Fall 2006: National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent), Triangle Sabbatical Scholar 2001-2002: Postdoctoral Fellow, University of California, Davis and Visiting Scholar, University of California, San Diego Sponsor: Russell Lande 1999-2001: Center for Population Biology Postdoctoral Fellow, University of California, Davis, Sponsors: Michael Turelli, Sergey Nuzhdin. 1998-1999: Cornell University, teaching and performing independent postdoctoral research in Alexey Kondrashov’s lab. HONORS: 2010: 2000: 1992:

Kenan Competitive Research Leave (taken in 2012, University of Vienna and IST Austria). Young Investigators Award, American Society of Naturalists John Harvard Scholarship and Elizabeth Cary Agassiz Scholarship (highest academic achievement), Harvard College

Maria R. Servedio 1990 & 1991:

2 Elizabeth Cary Agassiz Certificate of Merit (high academic achievement), Harvard College

PUBLICATIONS: Citation Metrics: (as of 6/2/16) ISI Web of Science: Total citations: 2472, h-index: 28 Google Scholar: Total citations: 3221, h-index: 29 Refereed Articles: (see pg. 6 for key to symbols)

*Fitzpatrick, C.L. and M.R. Servedio. Male mate choice, male quality, and the potential for sexual selection on female traits under polygyny. Evolution: in Press. Rettelbach, A., M.R. Servedio, and J. Hermisson. 2016. Speciation in peripheral populations: effects of drift load and mating systems. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 29:1073-1090. Servedio, M.R. 2016. Geography, assortative mating, and the effects of sexual selection on speciation with gene flow. Evolutionary Applications 9:91-102. ** Invited paper for a special issue on "Women's contribution to basic and applied evolutionary biology" Servedio, M.R. and R. Bürger. 2015. The effects of sexual selection on trait divergence in a peripheral population with gene flow. Evolution 69:2648-2661. *Yeh, D.J. and M.R. Servedio. 2015. Reproductive isolation with a learned trait in a structured population. Evolution 69:1938-1947. Barton, N.H. and M.R. Servedio. 2015. The interpretation of selection coefficients. Evolution 69:1101-1112. Servedio, M.R., Y. Brandvain, *S. Dhole, *C.L. Fitzpatrick, E.E. Goldberg, *C.A. Stern, *J. Van Cleve, and *D.J. Yeh. 2014. Not just a theory - the utility of mathematical models in evolutionary biology (Essay). PLoS Biology 12:e1002017. ** Very Good - Faculty of 1000. 12 December 2014. Begins: “In an essay that should be required reading by graduate students in biology…” ** media coverage by: Phys.org “The utility of mathematical models in evolutionary biology” The Unz review “Math Kills the Analogies, a Good Thing” *Dhole, S. and M.R. Servedio. 2014. Sperm competition and the evolution of seminal fluid composition. Evolution 68:3008-3019. Servedio, M.R. and R. Bürger. 2014. The counterintuitive role of sexual selection in species maintenance and speciation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, USA 111:8113-8118.

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Pfennig, D.W. and M.R. Servedio. 2013. The role of transgenerational epigenetic inheritance in diversification and speciation. Non-Genetic Inheritance 1:17-26. ** Invited review Servedio, M.R. and R. Dukas. 2013. Effects on population divergence of withingenerational learning about prospective mates. Evolution 67:2363-2375. Servedio, M.R., T. Price, and R. Lande. 2013. Evolution of displays within the pair bond. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B 280:20123020. ** media coverage by: LiveScience “Public displays of affection may have evolutionary benefits” Science Life “Shaking a Tail Feather for the Good of the Brood” Servedio, M.R., J. Hermisson, and G.S. van Doorn. 2013. Hybridization may rarely promote speciation (Comment). Journal of Evolutionary Biology 26:282-285. †*South,

S.H., Arnqvuist, G., and †M.R. Servedio. 2012. Female preference for male courtship effort can drive the evolution of male mate choice. Evolution 66:37223735.

Verzijden, M.N., C. ten Cate, M.R. Servedio, G. Kozak, J.W. Boughman, and E. Svensson. 2012. Learning, sexual selection and speciation. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 27:511-519. *Frame, A.M. and M.R. Servedio. 2012. The evolution of preference strength under sensory bias: a role for indirect selection. Ecology and Evolution 2:1572-1583. 

Bergen, E.L., *J.T. Rowell, F. Gould, and M.R. Servedio. 2012. Stochasticity in sexual selection enables divergence: implications for moth pheromone evolution. Evolutionary Biology 39:271-281. ** Invited paper for a special issue

*Rowell, J.T. and M.R. Servedio. 2012. Vocal communications and the maintenance of population specific songs in a contact zone. PLoS One 7:e35257. Servedio, M.R. and M. Kopp. 2012. Sexual selection and magic traits in speciation with gene flow. Current Zoology 58:510-516. ** part of special column on Sexual Selection and Speciation, Opinion †Servedio,

M.R., †G.S. van Doorn, †M. Kopp, *A.M. Frame and P. Nosil. 2011. Magic traits in speciation: ‘magic’ but not rare? Trends in Ecology and Evolution 26: 389-397.

*†Olofsson, H., *†A.M. Frame and M.R. Servedio. 2011. Can reinforcement occur with a learned trait? Evolution 65:1992-2003.

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Servedio, M.R. 2011. Limits to the evolution of assortative mating by female choice under restricted gene flow. Proceeding of the Royal Society of London Series B 278:179-187. Proulx, S. and M.R. Servedio. 2009. Dissecting selection on female mating preferences during secondary contact. Evolution 63:2031-2046. Servedio, M.R., S.A. Sæther and G.-P. Sætre. 2009. Reinforcement and learning. Evolutionary Ecology 23:109-123. ** Invited paper for a symposium edition Servedio, M.R. 2009. The role of linkage disequilibrium in the evolution of premating isolation. Heredity 102:51-56. ** Invited paper for special issue. *Rowell, J.T. and M.R. Servedio. 2009. Gentlemen prefer blondes: the evolution of mate preference among strategically allocated males. The American Naturalist 173:12-25. Otto, S.P., M.R. Servedio, and S. Nuismer. 2008. Frequency-dependent selection and the evolution of assortative mating. Genetics 179:2091-2112. 

Tramm, N.A. and M.R. Servedio. 2008. Evolution of mate-choice imprinting: competing strategies. Evolution 62:1991-2003.

*Olofsson, H. and M.R. Servedio. 2008. Sympatry affects the evolution of genetic versus cultural determination of song. Behavioral Ecology 19:594-604. Servedio, M.R. 2007. Male versus female mate choice: sexual selection and the evolution of species recognition via reinforcement. Evolution 61:2772-2789. ** Top 20 most downloaded papers from Evolution in 12 month span. *Chunco, A.J., J.S. McKinnon and M.R. Servedio. 2007. Microhabitat variation and sexual selection can maintain male color polymorphisms. Evolution 61:25042515. Sæther, S.A., G.-P. Sætre, T. Borge, C. Wiley, N. Svedin, G. Andersson, T. Veen, J. Haavie, M.R. Servedio, S. Bureš, M. Král, M.B. Hjernquist, L. Gustafsson, J. Träff and A. Qvarnström. 2007. Sex chromosome-linked species recognition and evolution of reproductive isolation in flycatchers. Science 318:95-97. ** Covered in a Perspective: Ritchie, M.G. 2007. Feathers, females, and fathers. Science 318:54-55, ** Must Read - Faculty of 1000. 6 November 2007. †*Lorch,

P.D. and †M.R. Servedio. 2007. The evolution of conspecific gamete precedence and its effect on reinforcement. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 20:937-949.

M.R. and †M.E. Hauber. 2006. To eject or abandon? Life history traits of hosts and parasites interact to influence the fitness payoffs of alternative antiparasite strategies. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 19:1585-1594.

†Servedio,

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Servedio, M.R. and R. Lande. 2006. Population genetic models of male and mutual mate choice. Evolution 60:674-685. *Verzijden M.N., *R.F. Lachlan and M.R. Servedio. 2005. Female mate choice behavior and sympatric speciation. Evolution 59:2097-2108. *Lorch, P.D. and M.R. Servedio. 2005. Postmating-prezygotic isolation is not an important source of selection within and between species in Drosophila psuedoobscura and D. persimilis. Evolution 59:1039-1045. Servedio, M.R. 2004. The what and why of research of reinforcement. PLoS Biology 2:e420 (2032-2035). ** Invited “primer” *Lachlan, R.F. and M.R. Servedio. 2004. Song learning accelerates allopatric speciation. Evolution 58:2049-2063. Servedio, M.R. 2004. The evolution of premating isolation: local adaptation and natural and sexual selection against hybrids. Evolution 58:913-924. ** Recommended - Faculty of 1000. 14 June 2004. Servedio, M.R. and M.A.F. Noor. 2003. The role of reinforcement in speciation: theory and data meet. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 34:339-364. Servedio, M.R. and G.-P. Sætre. 2003. Speciation as a positive feedback loop between post- and prezygotic barriers to gene flow. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B 270:1473-1479. Servedio, M.R. and R. Lande. 2003. Coevolution of an avian host and its parasitic cuckoo. Evolution 57:1164-1175. Servedio, M.R. 2001. Beyond reinforcement: the evolution of premating isolation by direct selection on preferences and postmating, prezygotic incompatibilities. Evolution 55:1909-1920. Servedio, M.R. 2000. The effects of predator learning, forgetting, and recognition errors on the evolution of warning coloration. Evolution 54:751-763. Servedio, M.R. 2000. Reinforcement and the genetics of nonrandom mating. Evolution. 54:21-29. Wiens, J.J. and M.R. Servedio. 2000. Species delimitation in systematics: inferring "fixed" diagnostic differences between species. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B. 267(1444):631-636. ** Editor’s Choice, Science. 28 April 2000. 288(5466):577. Rosenthal, G.G. and M.R. Servedio. 1999. Chase away sexual selection: resistance to “resistance”. Evolution (Comments) 53:296-299. Kirkpatrick, M. and M.R. Servedio. 1999. The reinforcement of mating preferences on an island. Genetics 151:865-884.

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Wiens, J.J. and M.R. Servedio. 1998. Phylogenetic analysis and intraspecific variation: performance of parsimony, likelihood and distance methods. Systematic Biology 47:228-253. Servedio, M.R. and M. Kirkpatrick. 1997. The effects of gene flow on reinforcement. Evolution 51:1764-1772. Wiens, J.J. and M.R. Servedio. 1997. Accuracy of phylogenetic analysis including and excluding polymorphic characters. Systematic Biology 46(2):332-345. Servedio, M.R. and M. Kirkpatrick. 1996. The evolution of mate choice copying by indirect selection. The American Naturalist 148:848-867. * indicates postdoc, graduate student, or visiting postdoc or graduate student in Servedio’s lab  indicates undergraduate in Servedio’s lab † authors contributed equally to this paper Other Articles: Servedio, M.R. 2015. Advances on the interplay of learning and sexual selection (Editorial). Current Zoology 61:1004-1007. Dhole, S* and M.R. Servedio. 2016. Mate choice and sexually selected traits. In Kliman, R.M. (ed.) Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Biology, vol. 2, pp. 440-445. Oxford: Academic Press. Fitzpatrick, C.L. and M.R. Servedio. 2015. The multiple components of mate choice: a comment on Edward and Dougherty and Shuker. Behavioral Ecology 26:321322. McKinnon, J.S. and M.R. Servedio. 2013. Novelty Makes the Heart Grow Fonder (News and Views). Nature 503:44-45. Verzijden, M.N., C. ten Cate, M.R. Servedio, G. Kozak, J.W. Boughman, and E.I. Svensson. 2013. The impact of learned mating traits on speciation is not yet clear. Response to Kawecki. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 28:69-70. Servedio, M.R. 2012. The relationship between sexual selection and speciation (Editorial). Current Zoology 58:413-415. Servedio, M.R., G.S. van Doorn, M. Kopp, *A.M. Frame and P. Nosil. 2012. Magic traits, pleiotropy, and effect sizes: a response to Haller et al. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 27:5-6. Servedio, M.R. 2010. Isolating mechanisms and speciation. In Breed M.D. and Moore J. (eds) Encyclopedia of Animal Behavior, volume 2, pp 230-235. Academic Press, Oxford.

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Kingsolver, J.G., D.W. Pfennig and M.R. Servedio. 2002. Migration, local adaptation and the evolution of plasticity. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 17:540-541. Book Reviews: Stevens, M.H.H., D.F. Raikow, M.R. Servedio, R.J.Collins, T.L. Schumann, A.N. Tipper, Z.T.Long and W.P. Carson. 1996. Hutchinson's chariot: A review of Species Diversity in Space and Time. M.L. Rosenzweig. 1995. Plant Science Bulletin 42:48-49. Dissertation: Servedio, M.R. 1998. Preferences, signals and evolution: theoretical studies of mate choice copying, reinforcement, and aposematic coloration. The University of Texas at Austin.

TEACHING AND MENTORING: Teaching Experience: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Fall 2016: Mathematical and Computational Models in Biology + lab (Biol 553/Math 553 and Biol 553L/Math 553L) – 11 students Spring 2016: Mathematics of Evolutionary Processes – 20 students Fall 2015: Mathematical and Computational Models in Biology + lab (Biol 452/Math 452 and Biol 452L/Math 452L) – ~14 students Spring 2015: Ecology and Evolution (Biol 201) – ~183 students Fall 2014: Mathematical and Computational Models in Biology (Biol 452/Math 452) – ~13 students Spring 2014: Ecology and Evolution (Biol 201) – ~211 students Spring 2014: Mathematical Approaches to Evolution and Ecology (Biol 201H) – 22 students Fall 2013: Mathematical and Computational Models in Biology (Biol 452/Math 452) – ~20 students Spring 2013: Ecology and Evolution (Biol 201) – ~200 students Spring 2013: Mathematical Approaches to Evolution and Ecology (Biol 201H) – 22 students Fall 2012: Scientific Writing Seminar (Biol 659) – 11 students Fall 2011: Ecology and Evolution (Bio 201) – ~190 students Spring 2011: Ecology and Evolution (Biol 201) – ~200 students Spring 2011: Mathematical Approaches to Evolution and Ecology (Biol 201H) – 25 students Fall 2010: Seminar in Evolution: Speciation (Biol 659) – 6 students Spring 2010: Ecology and Evolution (Biol 201) – ~202 students Spring 2010: Mathematical Approaches to Evolution and Ecology (Biol 201H) – 19 students Fall 2009: Mathematical and Computational Models in Biology (Biol 452/Math 452) – ~19 students Spring 2009: Ecology and Evolution (Biol 201) – ~192 students

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Spring 2009: Mathematical Approaches to Evolution and Ecology (Biol 201H) – 23 students Fall 2008: Seminar in Evolution: Sexual Selection (Biol 659) – 10 students Fall 2007: Mathematical and Computational Models in Biology (Biol 452/Math 452) – ~12 students Spring 2007: Ecology and Population Biology (Biol 201) – 152 students Spring 2007: Mathematical Approaches to Evolution and Ecology (Biol 201H) – 19 students Spring 2006: Ecology and Population Biology (Biol 54) - 151 students Spring 2006: Mathematical Approaches to Evolution and Ecology (Biol 54H) – 15 students Spring 2005: Ecology and Population Biology (Biol 54) – 186 students Spring 2005: Mathematical Approaches to Evolution and Ecology (Biol 54H) – 19 students Fall 2004: Mathematical and Computational Models in Biology (Biol 170/Math 107) – 8 students Spring 2004: Ecology and Population Biology (Biol 54) – 194 students Fall 2003: Seminar in Evolution: Speciation (Biol 258) – 13 students Spring 2003: Ecology and Population Biology (Biol 54) – 138 students Cornell University: 1999: Course Administrator and Lecturer: Evolutionary Biology 1998: Lecturer: Writing in the majors: Evolutionary Biology University of Pittsburgh: 1998: Part-time Instructor: Ecology of Amphibians and Reptiles The University of Texas at Austin: 1995: Teaching Assistant: Molecules to Organisms 1994: Teaching Assistant: Evolution Harvard College/Radcliffe College: 1993: Teaching Assistant for the Radcliffe Summer Program in Science Graduate Student and Postdoctoral Trainees: Olivier Cotto (postdoc: 2014-2016) Nan Lyu (visiting postdoc from the Chinese Academy of Sciences: 2016-present) Courtney Fitzpatrick (visiting postdoc from NESCent: 2013-present) Jeremy van Cleve (visiting postdoc from NESCent: 2013-2014): now at University of Kentucky (Assistant professor) Caitlin Stern (postdoc: 2012-2014): now at the Santa Fe Institute (postdoc) Jonathan Rowell (postdoc: 2007-2010); now at UNC Greensboro (Assistant professor) Machteld Verzijden (postdoc: 2008); now at Lund University (postdoc) Helen Olofsson (postdoc: 2006-2008) Patrick Lorch (postdoc: 2003-2005) Robert Lachlan (postdoc: 2002-2004): now at Queen Mary University, London (Assistant professor equivalent) Justin Yeh (graduate student – 2012-present) Joel Adamson (graduate student: 2008-2015)

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Sumit Dhole (graduate student: 2007-2014. Thesis “The evolution of reproductive traits under pre-and post-mating sexual selection”). Now a postdoc at the North Carolina State University (with Fred Gould). Alicia Frame (graduate student: 2007-2012. Thesis “The evolutionary origins and consequences of variation in female mate choice preferences”). Now a Bioinformatician and Dow AgroSciences Amanda Chunco (graduate student: 2004-2009. Thesis “Causes and consequences of hybridization”). Now at Elon University (Assistant Professor) Xin He (rotation student: Fall 2004) Visiting graduate student (3 months, 2004): Machteld Verzidjen, Leiden University Graduate Committees (excluding students in my lab): UNC: Gina Calabrese, UNC Department of Biology Lisa Bono, UNC Department of Biology Thiago Lima, UNC Department of Biology Thomas Clarke, UNC Department of Biology David Kikuchi, UNC Department of Biology Sarah Diamond, UNC Department of Biology George Harper, UNC Department of Biology Martin Ferris, UNC Department of Biology Amber Rice, UNC Department of Biology Jennifer Knies, UNC Department of Biology Christy Royer, UNC Department of Biology Tatiana Vasquez, UNC Department of Biology (Master’s committee) Maureen McClung, UNC Department of Biology (Master’s committee) Laura Sligar, UNC Department of Biology (Master's committee) National and international: David Garfield, Duke Department of Biology Laurel Symes, Dartmouth College (External Examiner, Orals) Leithen M’Gonigle, University of British Columbia (External Examiner) Claudia Bank, Veterinary Medical University, Vienna, Austria (External Examiner) Felipe Borrero, Swedish University of Agricultural Science, Alnarp, Sweden (External Examiner) Alexandre Blanckaert, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria (External Examiner) Undergraduates Supervised (while at UNC): Maya Gouw: Harish Pudukodu: David Liu: John Powers: Viktoriya Zhuravleva: Natan Holtzman: Grace Blair: Molly Laux:

Bio 395 Sponsor, Spring 2016 Bio 395 Sponsor, Fall 2015, Spring 2016 Bio 395 Sponsor, Fall 2015, Spring 2016 Bio 395 Advisor, Spring 2015 Bio 395 Sponsor, Fall 2014, Spring 2015, Biol 495 Sponsor Fall 2015, Biol 692 Sponsor Sprin 2016 Bio 395 Advisor, Spring 2014 Bio 395 Sponsor, Spring 2014 Bio 395 Sponsor, Fall 2013

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Alexa Waters: Justin Huang: Alejandro Antonia: Michael Schriver: Nicholas Panchy:

Bio 395 Sponsor, Fall 2011 Bio 395 Sponsor, Fall 2011 Bio 395 Sponsor, Spring 2011, Fall 2011 Bio 395 Sponsor, Spring 2011 Bio 395 Sponsor, Spring 2010, Summer 2010 (REU), Fall 2010, Spring 2011 Elizabeth Bergen: Bio 395 Sponsor, Spring 2010, Summer 2010 (REU), Fall 2010 Nora Tramm: Bio 98 Advisor, Fall 2005, Spring 2006, additional research Fall 2006, Summer 2007, Fall 2007, Spring 2008 Neema Kapadia: Bio 98 Sponsor, Spring 2007 Meredith Johnson: Bio 98 Sponsor, Fall 2006, Spring 2007 Jessica Oliver: Bio 98 Sponsor, Spring 2006, Fall 2006 Nirav Patel: Bio 98 Sponsor, Spring 2004 Maria Demireiva: Work study (research) Spring 2004 Swapanilkumar Patel: Work study (research) 2003-2004 Veneta Georgiev: Work study (research) 2003-2004 GRANTS: 9/2013-8/2017: NSF Grant: The evolution of stable intermediate levels of reproductive isolation. PI: Maria Servedio. $297,303. 8/2009-7/2014: NSF Grant: Models of male and mutual mate choice. PI: Maria Servedio. $401,188. REU supplement $6,995 (2010) 9/2006-8/2010: NSF Grant: Theoretical studies of the adaptive evolution of premating isolation: conspecific gamete precedence and cultural inheritance. PI: Maria Servedio. $310,996. 2005: Junior Faculty Development Award, UNC Chapel Hill, $5000 2005: Mebane M. Pritchett Course Development Award, UNC Chapel Hill, $3000 9/2001-8/2005: NSF Grant: Theoretical framework of the adaptive evolution of premating isolation. PI: Maria Servedio. $191,902. 1999: NIH Individual National Research Service Award (Postdoctoral) (declined) 1993-1998: National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, UT Austin 1996: Bruton Fellowship, UT Austin 1993: University Fellowship, UT Austin

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE AND UNC COMMITTEES: Elected Positions: Vice-President Elect, American Society of Naturalists: 2017 (to serve as Vice President: 2018) Council member for the Society for the Study of Evolution. Term: 2010-2012.

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Editorships and Reviews: Handling Editor for Evolution, 2015-present. Editor (1 of 7 Editors, with 27 AEs) for Current Zoology, Term 2013-2017 Member of the Editorial Board of Academic Editors for PeerJ 2013-present Member of the Editorial Board for Behavioral Ecology, Term 2013-2014. Associate Editor for the Quarterly Review of Biology. 10/2008-2014 (2 2/3 Terms). Associate Editor for The American Naturalist. Term: 2010-2011, 2013. Associate Editor for Evolution. Term: 2006-2008. Guest Editor of a Special Column on Learning and Sexual Selection for Current Zoology, published December 2015. Guest Editor of a Special Column on Sexual Selection and Speciation for Current Zoology, published June 2012. Reviews for (alphabetical): The American Naturalist, Annals of the New York Academy of Science, Behavioral Ecology, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, Biochemical Genetics, Biological Journal of the Linnaean Society, Biology Letters, Current Zoology, Evolution, Evolutionary Ecology, Evolutionary Theory, Genetics, Heredity, Herpetologica, Journal of Theoretical Biology, Nature, The Open Zoology Journal, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, PLoS Biology, PLoS Computational Biology, PLoS One, Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B, Quarterly Review of Biology, Science, Theoretical Population Biology, Trends in Ecology and Evolution. Grant Agencies reviewed for: National Science Foundation (Population Biology, Animal Behavior, and Applied Mathematics Panels) European Research Council Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research Queens College CUNY, internal grants Center for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis at the University of Oslo, internal grants. Reviewed Abstracts for the meeting of the International Society for Behavioral Ecology, 2008 Panelist: NSF Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant Panel NSF Grant Panel NIH Genetic Variation and Evolution Study Section – Temporary Member Committees and advisory roles: Sewall Wright Award Committee Member, American Society of Naturalists. Term 2013-2016 (3 years), Chair 2015-2016 (1 year) Evolution 2014 meeting organizing and program committees: 2014. External expert advisor for search in Theoretical Ecology and Evolution – Uppsala University, 2012-2013

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NESCent Operations Committee Member: 2012-2015. Outreach: Working on Women in Science (WOWS) Scholar, UNC: 2015-2017 Guest lesson (~ 3 hrs) on Animal Adaptations, Perry Harrison Elementary School, 4th grade class (2016) Taught a workshop on evolution at FEMMES (Females Excelling More in Math, Engineering, and Science) Day Camp for 4th-6th grade girls (2012, 2013, 2015) Participated as a judge at University Research Day (UNC, 2009) Developed and ran a demonstration of evolution by natural selection for the Morehead Planetarium’s (UNC) Family Science Day “It’s Only Human!” (2008) Appeared in an interview in a student documentary (UNC) about creationism and evolution (2008) Symposium for ~300 high school students (2006) Invited Participant: 2013-2014:

NESCent Working Group: Toward a unified evolutionary theory of decision-making in animals Organizers: Tamra Mendelson, Mark Hauber, Rebecca Safran

2013:

NESCent Catalysis Meeting: Sexual selection studies Organizer: Joan Roughgarden

2010:

Royal Society of London International Scientific Workshop on sexual selection in structured populations Organizer: Jane Reid Invitation declined.

2010:

NESCent Catalysis Meeting: Evolution of Insect Sociality: An Integrative Modeling Approach Organizer: James Hunt

2009-2011:

NESCent Working Group: An Integrative Evolutionary Approach to Examine Sexual Selection as a Mechanism of Speciation (informal coorganizer) Organizers: Rebecca Safran and Albert Uy

2009:

Invited lecturer in a workshop of Theory of Speciation University of Groningen, the Netherlands Organizer: Franz Weissing Invitation declined

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2008-2009:

Fellowship at the Wissenschaftskolleg Berlin – sympatric speciation group Invitation declined

2001:

Invited instructor for a mini-course on Speciation Uppsala University

Working Groups Organized: 2006:

NESCent working group award: Proposal to develop a novel journal concept for evolutionary meta-analyses. Mohamed Noor and Maria Servedio.

Current Membership in Professional Organizations: The Society for the Study of Evolution The American Society of Naturalists SCIENTIFIC PRESENTATIONS: Invited Seminars: 2016: Patterns of migration, assortative mating, and the effects of sexual selection on speciation and divergence. Indiana University. 2016: The role of sexual selection in speciation and species maintenance. Swedish Agricultural University, Alnarp, Sweden. 2016: Models and Mechanisms of Male Mate Choice. NIMBioS. 2015: Models and Mechanisms of Male Mate Choice. Cornell. 2015: Patterns of migration, assortative mating, and the effects of sexual selection on speciation and divergence. Duke University, Ecology Seminar Series. 2015: Patterns of migration, assortative mating, and the effects of sexual selection on speciation and divergence. University of Groningen, The Netherlands. 2015: The role of sexual selection in speciation and species maintenance. North Carolina State University, Program in Genetics. **Graduate Student invited speaker 2014: The counterintuitive role of sexual selection in species maintenance and speciation. University of Vienna, Austria 2014: The role of sexual selection in speciation and species maintenance. Yale 2014: The role of sexual selection in speciation and species maintenance. Michigan State University 2014: Models of male mate choice. Michigan State University 2013: The role of sexual selection in speciation and species maintenance. McGill University, Canada 2013: Sexual selection and speciation: the evolution of stable intermediate levels of reproductive isolation. Uppsala University, Sweden 2013: Sexual selection and speciation: the evolution of stable intermediate levels of reproductive isolation. University of Minnesota 2012: Models of male mate choice. Duke University, Ecology Seminar Series 2012: Models of male and mutual mate choice. Lund University, Sweden 2011: The roles of sexual selection in speciation. Florida State University 2011: Models of male and mutual mate choice. Florida State University

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2011: The roles of sexual selection in speciation. University of British Columbia, Canada. **Evolution lecture: invited by the UBC graduate students 2010: Models of male and mutual mate choice. University of Oklahoma. 2009: Reinforcement and the evolution of premating isolation. Dartmouth. 2007: Male mate choice during polygyny. University of Tennessee. 2005: Invitation from the University of Oslo, Norway. Invitation declined. 2005: Brood parasitism: coevolution and fitness consequences of host defense strategies. Eastern Carolina University 2005: Invitation from the University of Groningen, the Netherlands. Invitation declined. 2005: Reinforcement and the evolution of premating isolation. University of Toronto, Canada 2005: Reinforcement and the evolution of premating isolation. University of Guelph, Canada 2004: The evolution of premating isolation: forces beyond reinforcement. Duke University, Ecology Seminar Series. 2003: Reinforcement and local adaptation: North Carolina State University (informal) 2003: Speciation by reinforcement. The University of Wisconsin, Madison 2003: The evolution of premating isolation: mechanisms of reinforcement and local adaptation. The University of Oregon 2002: Reinforcement and local adaptation: Duke University, Population Biology Seminar Series 2001: Reinforcement and the adaptive evolution of premating isolation. Uppsala University, Sweden 2000, 2001: The adaptive evolution of premating isolation. The University of Tennessee, Georgia Institute of Technology, The University of California at Irvine, The University of North Carolina, The University of Rochester, Boston University (recruitment seminars) 2000: Models of reinforcement: gene flow and the genetics of nonrandom mating. UCSD. 1998: Models of reinforcement: gene flow and the genetics of nonrandom mating. University of Chicago. 1996: The effects of gene flow on reinforcement. University of Pittsburgh 1996: The evolution of mate choice copying by indirect selection. University of Pittsburgh. Invited Presentations at Symposia and International Meetings: 2015: Servedio, M.R. Patterns of migration, assortative mating, and the effects of sexual selection on speciation and divergence. Mathematical Models in Ecology and Evolution (MMEE) conference. Invited Keynote speaker. 2014: Servedio, M.R. and R. Bürger. The contrasting roles of sexual selection during speciation with gene flow. SSE/ASN/SSB In the SSE Symposium: The role of sexual selection in speciation: an integration of theoretical and empirical perspectives. Organizers: Rebecca Safran and Maria Servedio. 2014: Servedio, M.R. What can theoretical studies of microevolutionary speciation processes tell us about macroevolutionary patterns? SSE/ASN/SSB In the ASN Solicited Symposium: Beyond reproductive isolation: microevolutionary controls on macroevolutionary speciation dynamics. Organizers: Dan Rabosky and Daniel Matute.

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2013: Servedio, M.R. and R. Bürger. The role of sexual selection in speciation and species maintenance. In A Discussion on the Origin of Species, American Genetics Association Annual Symposium. Organizer, Kerry Shaw. 2013: Invitation to speak in a symposium on Learning and Speciation at Behavior 2013, the International Ethological conference of the Association for the Study of Animal Behavior. Organizer: Jenny Boughman and Genevieve Kozak. Invitation declined. 2013: Invitation to speak in a symposium on Behavior and Speciation, FroSpects symposium, University of Olso. Organizer: Glenn-Peter Sætre. Unable to attend due to family illness. 2011: Invitation to speak in a symposium at the 8th European Conference on Mathematical and Theoretical Biology and the Annual Meeting of the Society of Mathematical Biology, Kraków, Poland. Organizer: Tadeas Priklopil. Invitation declined. 2011: Invitation to speak in a symposium at the VI European Congress of Mammalogy in Paris, France. Organizer: Guila Ganem. Invitation declined. 2011: Servedio, M.R., van Doorn, G.S., Kopp, M., Frame, A., and Nosil, P. Divergent selection, sexual selection, and magic traits. Congress of the European Society of Evolutionary Biology (ESEB). Symposium on Speciation by Natural versus Sexual Selection. Organizers: Allan deBelle and Claudius Kerth. (note: unable to attend at last minute due to family illness, presentation given by M. Kopp) 2010: Servedio, M.R. Limits to the power of sexual selection driving speciation with gene flow. Speciation 2010: First European Conference of Speciation Research. FroSpects, IIASA, Austria. Organizers: Åke Brännström and Ulf Dieckmann. 2008: Invitation to speak at symposiums on Evolution of sex and recombination: in theory and in practice. Organizer: John Logsdon & committee. Invitation declined. 2006: Servedio, M.R. Preference inheritance and speciation. American Genetics Association: Genetics of Speciation Symposium. Organizer: Loren Reiseberg. 2006: Invitation to speak in the symposium Speciation: from diversification to reproductive isolation. University of Lund, Sweden. Organizers: Jörgen Ripa, Roger Härdling, Åsa Lankinen, Erik Svensson. Invitation declined. 2001: Servedio, M.R. Reinforcement and beyond: forces in the adaptive evolution of premating isolation. SSE Speciation by reinforcement symposium. Organizer: Mohamed Noor 2000: Servedio, M.R. Factors affecting reinforcement and the evolution of premating isolation. SSE/ASN/SSB ASN Young Investigators Symposium. Symposia Organized: 2014: Symposium: The role of sexual selection in speciation: an integration of theoretical and empirical perspectives. Sponsored by the Society for the Study of Evolution. Co-organizer: Rebecca Safran Presentations at Scientific Meetings: (presenter listed first) 2016: Servedio, M.R. and Fitzpatrick, C.L. You can’t get there from here: female trait evolution under polygyny when the quality of their mate varies.

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SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2016: Yeh, D.J., Boughman, J., Saetre, G-P., and Servedio, M.R. The evolution of imprinting through reinforcement. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2016: Cotto, O. and Servedio, M.R. The evolution of incomplete reproductive isolation: from allopatry to sympatry. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2014: Dhole, S. and Servedio, M.R. Effects of plasticity on the evolution of seminal fluid composition. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2014: Stern, C.A. and Servedio, M.R. Evolution of a mating preference for a trait used in intrasexual competition in genetically monogamous populations. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2014: Yeh, D.J. and Servedio, M.R. Paternal learning of a phenotype-matching trait promotes speciation at secondary contact, but not the spread of a new local adaptation. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2013: Servedio, M.R. and R. Dukas. Learning from experience, divergence, and the evolution of assortative mating. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2013: *Dhole, S. Stern, C., Servedio, M.R. Direct detection of male quality and the evolution of indicators of good genes. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2012: *Dhole, S. and Servedio, M.R. Sperm competition and the evolution of seminal fluid composition. SSE/ASN/SSB/CSEE/ESEB joint congress. Talk. 2011: Servedio, M.R., *Olofsson, H., and *Frame, A.M. Can reinforcement occur with a learned trait? SSE/ASN/SSB. Poster. 2010: Kopp, M., *Frame, A.M., Nosil, P., Servedio, M.R., Symes, L., and van Doorn, G.S. Magic traits: magic, but not rare? Symposium: Evolution of reproductive isolation: models and empirical evidence, IST, Austria. Talk. 2010: Servedio, M.R. Limits to the evolution of assortative mating by female choice under restricted gene flow. Syposium in honor of Richard Harrison, Cornell. Poster. And SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2009: Otto, S.P. Servedio, M.R. and S.D. Nuismer. The evolution of assortative mating in sympatry: From random mating to reproductive isolation. Canadian Society for Ecology and Evolution, SSE/ASN/SSB, and European Society for Evolutionary Biology. Poster. 2008: Servedio, M.R. Male vs. female mate choice in sexual selection and reinforcement. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2007: *Olofsson, H. and M.R. Servedio. Sympatry affects the evolution of genetic versus cultural determination of song. Southeastern Population Genetics and Evolution Conference. Talk. 2007: *Olofsson, H. and M.R. Servedio. Evolution of imprinting vs. genetic determination of song. British Ecological Society Annual Symposium, Speciation and Ecology. Poster. 2006: Servedio, M.R. and R. Lande. Models of male and mutual mate choice. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2006: Tramm, N.A. and M.R. Servedio. Evolution of mate-choice imprinting: competing strategies. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2005: *Chunco, A.J., McKinnon, J. and M.R. Servedio. Microhabitat variation and the maintenance of a male color polymorphism. Southeastern Population Genetics and Evolution Conference. Poster. 2005: *Verzijden, M.N., *Lachlan, R.F., and M.R. Servedio. Mate choice preference, sympatric speciation, and two sympatric Lake Victoria cichlids. European Society of Evolutionary Biology. Talk. 2005: *Lorch, P.D. and M.R. Servedio. Interactions between conspecific gamete precedence and reinforcement. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk.

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2005: Hauber, M.E. and M.R. Servedio. Egg size evolution in hosts of generalists brood parasites. Australian Society for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Talk. 2005: Hauber, M.E. and M.R. Servedio. Adaptations and coevolution in brood parasitic cowbirds and their many hosts. International Society for Behavioral Ecology. Talk. 2004: Servedio, M.R. The evolution of premating isolation: local adaptation and selection against hybrids. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2004: *Lorch, P.D. and M.R. Servedio. Comparing the strength of premating, postmating but prezygotic, and postzygotic isolation. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2004: *Lorch, P.D. and M.R. Servedio. Comparing the strength of premating, postmating but prezygotic, and postzygotic isolation within and between species in Drosophila pseudoobscura and D. persimilis. Southeastern Population Genetics and Evolution Conference. Talk. 2003: Servedio, M.R. What weak selection approximations can and can’t tell us about reinforcement. Southeastern Population Genetics and Evolution Conference. Talk. 2003: Servedio, M.R. and G.-P. Sætre. 2003. Speciation as a positive feedback loop between post- and prezygotic barriers to gene flow. SSE/ASN/SSB. Poster. 2003: Servedio, M.R. and R. Lande. Coevolution of an avian host and its brood parasite. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 2003: Servedio, M.R. and R. Lande. Coevolution of an avian host and its brood parasite. Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology. Talk. 2002: Servedio, M.R. Reinforcement: divergent selection vs. selection against hybrids. Southeastern Population Genetics and Evolution Conference. Talk. 1999: Servedio, M.R. Reinforcement and the genetics of nonrandom mating. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 1998: Servedio, M.R. Insights into the evolution of aposematic coloration from models of predator learning. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 1997: Servedio, M.R. and M. Kirkpatrick. A model of the effects of gene flow on reinforcement. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. 1995: Servedio, M.R. and M. Kirkpatrick. A model for the evolution of mate choice copying. SSE/ASN/SSB. Talk. * indicates postdoc, graduate student, or visiting graduate student in Servedio’s lab  indicates undergraduate in Servedio’s lab Note: SSE/ASN/SSB is the joint meeting of the Society for the Study of Evolution, the American Society of Naturalists, and the Society for Systematic Biology