Screen Shot 2013-05-17 at 1.27.18 PMAcademic conferences are important venues for researchers to learn what is new and exciting in science and to present our more recent work. The annual meetings for the Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology (SICB) is one major conference drawing over 2,000 scientists from around the world. This conference is always held in January and usually features an embarrassment of anoles. The 2012 SICB conference in Charleston, South Carolina featured many interesting talks on anoles, ranging from discussions on new eve-devo resources in this emerging model system to studies of behavioral ecology and thermal physiology (1, 2). SICB 2013 was recently held in San Francisco, and those of us following research in Anolis lizards had plenty to see and learn as there were 18 talks and posters featuring anoles. I attended many of these and summarized the findings as best I could in several AA posts this past January (1, 2, 3, 4).

As it turns out, SICB is not the only conference where anole biologists congregate in large numbers. Another major venue for learning what’s new in Anolis research is the joint meeting of the Society for Systematic Biology (SSB), Society for the Study of Evolution (SSE), and the American Society of Naturalists (ASN). This meeting is generally referred to as the Evolution conference, for short.

This year the Evolution conference will be held in Snowbird, Utah in the last week of June. Two days ago the organizers released the online program for the conference. A quick search using “Anolis” or “anole” as keywords revealed seven talks about these lizards. I’ll be attending this conference (and speaking!), and I’ll be getting updates on each of these studies onto the Anole Annals as much as I can, so stay tuned for more! In the meanwhile, here are titles for all the talks I found about Anolis. If there are more out there that I missed, please let me know!

(1) Title: Natural selection, developmental trajectories, and quantitative genetics underlying intraspecific variation in sexual dimorphism in an island lizard.
Authors: Cox, Robert; Daugherty, Christopher; Price, Jennifer; McGlothlin, Joel.

(2) Title: Extreme sex differences in the development of body size and sexual signals are mediated by hormonal pleiotropy in a dimorphic lizard.
Authors: Cox, Christian L.; Hanninen , Amanda F; Cox, Robert M.

(3) Title: Genomics of local adaptation and colorful pigmentation in Anolis lizards.
Authors: Crawford, Nicholas; McGreevy, Jr., Thomas; Mullen, Sean; Schneider, Christopher.

(4) Title: Identification of sex specific molecular markers from reduced-representation genome sequencing.
Authors: Gamble, Tony; Zarkower, David.

(5) Title: Natural selection on the thermal performance curve of Anolis sagrei.
Authors: Logan, Michael L; Cox, Robert M; Calsbeek, Ryan G.

(6) Title: Testing for simultaneous divergence and gene flow in sister-pairs of physiologically divergent Anolis lizards from Puerto Rico.
Author: McElroy, Matthew.

(7) Title: Divergence in coloration and the evolution of reproductive isolation in the Anolis marmoratus species complex.
Authors: Muñoz, Martha; Crawford, Nicholas; McGreevy, Jr., Thomas; Schneider, Christopher.

Martha Muñoz