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Odum School Faculty

Patricia Adair Gowaty

Distinguished Research Professor
Odum School of Ecology
University of Georgia
517 Biological Sciences Bldg.
Athens, GA   30602-2602

(706) 542-3365
Fax: (706) 542-3344
e-mail: gowaty@uga.edu

Graduate Faculty

Faculty Member - Conservation Ecology Program

Education
Ph.D. - Clemson University

Honors and Awards
2004 Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science
2003 Distinguished Research Professor, UGA
2003 Excellence in Teaching Award, UGA
2001 Visiting Distinguished Professor, Institute of Advanced Study, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia July.
2000-2001 President, Animal Behavior Society
2000-2001 Vice-President, American Ornithologists' Union
1989-2001 "K-award" Independent Scientist Award, NIMH
1999 Lamar Dodd Award for Outstanding Body of Creative Research, UGA.
1998 Elected to IOC, Committee of 100 International Ornithological Congress
1997 Quest Award, Animal Behavior Society
1997 Fellow, Animal Behavior Society
1990 Fellow, American Ornithologists' Union; Elected Member (1984)

Research Interests
Evolutionary ecology
Sexual behavior
Parental behavior
Maternal effects
Developmental plasticity
Sex allocation
Genetic parentage
Ornithology

Research Projects
As an evolutionary (behavioral) ecologist, I ask questions about selective forces shaping phenotypic variation in behavior that results in patterns of social organization. I focus on natural selection and variation in mating systems (e.g., social monogamy and extra-pair paternity), sex allocation (distribution of effort by parents to sons versus daughters as in sex ratios of progeny), and sex differentiated behavior. For 30 years, I have studied populations of eastern bluebirds. My students and I are currently studying the effects of food competition with fire ants on behavior, demography, mating system, and life histories of eastern bluebirds. Recently, with collaborators, I have studied the effects of mate choice on offspring viability in Drosophila pseudoobscura, mallards, mice and several other species. I am also working on a theory of social behavior (Gowaty & Hubbell 2005) that predicts adaptively flexible sex role behavior of both females and males - even under chance variation in inducing variables.

Selected Publications
PDF format for publications where available

Anderson, W. W., Yong-Kyu Kim, and P. A. Gowaty. 2007. Experimental constraints on female and male mate preferences in Drosophila pseudoobscura decrease offspring viability and reproductive success of breeding pairs. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. In press

Gowaty, P. A. 2006. Beyond extra-pair paternity: individual constraints, fitness components, and social mating systems. In Essays on Animal Behavior: Celebrating 50 years of Animal Behaviour. Pp. 221-256. Eds: Jeff Lucas and Lee Simmons. Cambridge University.

Gowaty, P. A. and S.P. Hubbell. 2005. Chance, time allocation, and the evolution of adaptively flexible sex roles. J. Integrative and Comparative Biology. Volume 45(5), 247-260.

Bluhm, C. K. & P. A. Gowaty. 2004. Social constraints on female mate preferences in mallards Anas platyrhynchos decrease offspring viability and mother productivity. Animal Behaviour 68: 977-983.

Bluhm, C. K. and P. A. Gowaty. 2004. Reproductive compensation for offspring viability deficits by female mallards Anas platyrhynchos. Animal Behaviour 68: 985-992.

Gowaty, P.A. 2003. Sex roles, contests for the control of reproduction, and sexual selection in Sexual Selection in Primates: New and Comparative Perspectives, (Kappeler, P.M. and van Schaik, C.P., eds), pp. 163-221. Cambridge University Press

Gowaty, P. A. 2003. Power Asymmetries between the Sexes, Mate Preferences, and Components of Fitness. In: Cheryl Travis (ed.) Women, Evolution, and Power, pp 61-86. Boston: MIT Press

Gowaty, P. A. 1999. Extra-pair paternity and paternal care: Differential fitness among males via male exploitation of variation among females. In: Adams, N. & Slotow, R. (Eds), Proc. 22 Int. Ornitholog. Congr. Durban, University of Natal: 2639-2656. Johannesburg: BirdLife South Africa

Gowaty, P. A. and N. Buschhaus. 1998. Ultimate Causation of Aggressive and Forced Copulation in Birds: Female Resistance, the CODE Hypothesis and Social Monogamy. American Zoologist 38:207-225.

Gowaty, P. A. 1997. Sexual dialectics, sexual selection, and variation in mating behavior. In:  Feminism and Evolutionary Biology (ed. P. A. Gowaty). Chapman Hall: New York, pp 351-384.

Gowaty, P. A. 1996. Battles of the sexes and origins of monogamy: IN: J. L. Black Partnerships in Birds. Oxford Series in Ecology and Evolution. Oxford University Press: Oxford pages 21-52.

Gowaty, P. A. 1996. Field studies of parental care in birds: New data focus questions on variation in females. In: Advances in the Study of Behaviour. (ed. by: C. T. Snowdon and J. S. Rosenblatt). Academic Press, New York pp 476-531.

Last Updated: January 24, 2007

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Odum School of Ecology
140 E. Green St.
The University of Georgia
Athens, GA 30602-2202 USA
Phone: (706) 542-2968
Fax: (706) 542-4819

Dr. John Gittleman, Dean - ecohead@uga.edu
Dr. James Porter, Associate Dean - jporter@uga.edu
Dr. Dorset Trapnell, Assistant Dean - dorset@uga.edu
Dr. Ron Carroll, Graduate Coordinator - rcarroll@uga.edu
Dr. Jim Richardson, Undergraduate Coordinator - jamesir@uga.edu
For questions or comments about this site email: anisaj@uga.edu