Geoff Parker

Last updated

Geoff Parker
FRS
Geoff A Parker 2018.jpg
Parker in 2018
Born
Geoffrey Alan Parker

(1944-05-24) 24 May 1944 (age 81)
CitizenshipBritish
Alma mater University of Bristol (BSc, PhD}
Known for Sperm competition
Evolutionary game theory
Awards
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions University of Liverpool
Thesis The reproductive behaviour and the nature of sexual selection in Scathophaga stercoraria L. (the yellow dung fly)  (1969)
Doctoral advisor H.E. Hinton
Website [1]

Professor Geoffrey Alan Parker FRS (born 24 May 1944) is an English evolutionary biologist, emeritus professor of biology at the University of Liverpool [1] . Parker has been called "the professional's professional" [2] .

Contents

Education

Parker attended Lymm Grammar School in Lymm, Cheshire, and gained his BSc from the University of Bristol in 1965, from where he also gained a doctorate in 1969 under H.E. Hinton, FRS (1912–1977). His PhD was on The reproductive behaviour and the nature of sexual selection in Scathophaga stercoraria L. (the yellow dung fly) , and provided a detailed quantitative test of Darwin's theory of sexual selection [3] [4] , and an early application of optimality theory in biology.

Career and research

Parker moved to the University of Liverpool in 1968, where he became a lecturer in zoology. In 1978-79, he spent a year as a senior research fellow in the Research Centre [5] at King's College, Cambridge. After returning to Liverpool he became a professor in 1989 following his election to the Royal Society. In 1996 he became the Derby Chair of Zoology at the University of Liverpool, retiring in 2009, but remaining as emeritus professor.

His main research interests have been in behavioural ecology and evolutionary biology. He is noted for introducing the concept of sperm competition and its evolutionary consequences in 1970 in a review on insect mating systems [6] . This work pioneered the development of the field of postcopulatory sexual selection, the study of sexually selected adaptations arising from competition between the ejaculates of different mates [7] [8] .

Much of his work from the 1970s onwards has related to the application of game theory to various biological problems, using the evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS) approach pioneered by John Maynard Smith and George Price [9] .

With R.R. Baker and V.G.F. Smith in 1972, he developed a theory for the evolution of anisogamy (the evolution of gametes of different sizes) and the two sexes [10] , which is now widely accepted [11] .

In 1974 he proposed that the outcome of animal fighting behaviour is determined by the relative values of the contested resource to each contestant and their assessments of relative resource holding potentials (related to relative fighting abilities) [12] [13] . This led to the introduction of asymmetries between contestants in early evolutionary game theory [14] [15] . Parker also made the first theoretical analysis of sexual conflict in evolution in 1979 [16] .

Up to the early 1970s, most ethologists and ecologists had interpreted adaptations in terms of "survival value to the species" (group selection) [17] . However, the paradigm shift of the gene-centric view of evolution (popularised by Richard Dawkins in The Selfish Gene ) shortly afterwards overturned this idea: mainstream views in behavioural ecology and sociobiology saw natural selection restored to Darwinian principles in terms of survival value to the individual (and its kin). Parker's work has played a part in this shift, especially in the development of behavioural ecology [18] .

Awards and distinctions

References

  1. 1 2 "Em Prof Geoff Parker BSc MA(Cantab) PhD FRS". Our people. University of Liverpool. Retrieved 15 September 2025.
  2. Ruse, M (1999). "Chapter 10: "Geoff Parker: the professional's professional."". Mystery of Mysteries: is Evolution a Social Construction?. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 194–213. ISBN   9780674005433.
  3. Parker, GA (2001). "Chapter 1: Golden flies, sunlit meadows: a tribute to the yellow dungfly". In Dugatkin, Lee Alan (ed.). Model Systems in Behavioral Ecology: Integrating Conceptual, Theoretical, and Empirical Approaches. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 3–26. ISBN   9780691006536.
  4. Simmons, LW; Parker, GA; Hosken, DJ (2020). "Evolutionary insight from a humble fly: sperm competition and the yellow dungfly". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. 375 (1813): 20200062. doi:10.1098/rstb.2020.0062. PMID   33070730 . Retrieved 15 September 2025.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: article number as page number (link)
  5. King's College Sociobiology Group, ed. (1982). Current Problems in Sociobiology. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN   0521285208.
  6. Parker, Geoff (1970). "Sperm competition and its evolutionary consequences in insects". Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. 45 (4): 525–567. doi:10.1111/j.1469-185X.1970.tb01176.x. S2CID   85156929 . Retrieved 15 September 2025.
  7. Birkhead, TR (2010). "How stupid not to have thought of that: post-copulatory sexual selection". Journal of Zoology. 281 (2): 78–93. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.2010.00701.x . Retrieved 15 September 2025.
  8. Simmons, LW; Weddell, N (2020). "Fifty years of sperm competition: the structure of a scientific revolution". Phillosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. 375 (1813): 20200060. doi:10.1098/rstb.2020.0060 . Retrieved 15 September 2025.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: article number as page number (link)
  9. Maynard Smith, John; Price, George R (1973). "The logic of animal conflict". Nature. 246 (5427): 15–18. Bibcode:1973Natur.246...15S. doi:10.1038/246015a0.
  10. Parker, GA; Baker, RR; Smith, VGF (1972). "The origin and evolution of gamete dimorphism and the male-female phenomenon". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 36 (3): 529–553. Bibcode:1972JThBi..36..529P. doi:10.1016/0022-5193(72)90007-0.
  11. Lehtonen, J (2021). "The Legacy of Parker, Baker and Smith 1972: Gamete competition, the evolution of anisogamy and model robustness". Cells. 10 (3): 573. doi: 10.3390/cells10030573 . PMC   7998237 . PMID   33807911.
  12. Parker, GA (1974). "Assessment strategy and the evolution of fighting behaviour". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 47 (1): 223–243. Bibcode:1974JThBi..47..223P. doi:10.1016/0022-5193(74)90111-8. PMID   4477626.
  13. Briffa, M; Hardy, ICW (2013). "1. Introduction to animal contests". In Briffa, M; Hardy, ICW (eds.). Animal Contests. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–4. ISBN   9780521887106.
  14. Reichert, S (2013). "Maynard Smith & Parker's (1976) rule book for animal contests". Animal Behaviour. 86: 3–9. doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2013.04.013 . Retrieved 15 September 2025.
  15. Leimar, O; McNamara, JM (2023). "Game theory in biology: 50 years and onwards". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. 378 (1876) 20210509: 2021059. doi:10.1098/rstb.2021.0509 . Retrieved 15 September 2025.
  16. Parker, GA (1979). "Sexual selection and sexual conflict". In Blum, MS; Blum, NA (eds.). Sexual Selection and Reproductive Competition in Insects. New York, NY: Academic Press. pp. 123–166. ISBN   9780121087500.
  17. Parker, GA (2005). "Behavioural ecology: natural history as science". In Lucas, JR; Simmons, LW (eds.). Essays on Animal Behavior: Celebrating 50 Years of Animal Behavior. Burlington, MA: Elsevier. pp. 23–56. ISBN   9780123694997.
  18. Birkhead, TR; Monaghan, P (2010). "1. Ingenious ideas: the history of behavioural ecology". In Westneat, DE; Fox, CW (eds.). Evolutionary Behavioral Ecology. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. pp. 3–15. ISBN   9780195331929.
  19. "Professor Geoffrey Parker FRS". Fellow Detail Page. The Royal Society. Retrieved 15 September 2025.
  20. "Distinguished Animal Behavorist Award". Grants & Awards. The Animal Behavior Society. Retrieved 15 September 2025.
  21. "Volume 18: Number 1" (PDF). ISBE Newsletter. International Society for Behavioral Ecology. Retrieved 15 September 2025.
  22. "Distinguished Zoologist Lectures" (PDF). Distinguished-Zoologist-Lectures. Benelux Congress of Zoology. Retrieved 15 September 2025.
  23. "Professor Geoffrey Parker, FRS". University of Bristol. 15 July 2011. Retrieved 16 September 2025.
  24. "Professor Geoff Parker FRS Hon FRES". About Us: People. Royal Entomological Society. Retrieved 15 September 2025.
  25. Cook, Mandy (12 September 2018). "Academic celebration: Fall convocation honorary degree recipients announced". Memorial University Gazette. Memorial University of Newfoundland. Retrieved 15 September 2025.