Luke Holman
luke holman

Dr Luke Holman

Associate Professor

Biography

I am an Associate Professor based at Edinburgh Napier University. My research covers a wide range of topics, including evolution, sexual selection, animal communication, ‘gene drives’ (genes that bias the mechanisms of inheritance to favour their own transmission), the representation of women in STEM careers, and ‘meta-science’ (i.e. research about the process of science itself). I combine empirical work on insects such as fruitflies and social insects (bees/ants/wasps) with theoretical models, modern genetics methods (e.g. GWAS, methylome sequencing, transcriptome sequencing), meta-analysis, and computational text mining of large datasets.

Following my BSc and PhD at the University of Sheffield, I moved to Copenhagen University and won a Marie Curie Fellowship, where I primarily researched queen pheromones in the social insects (including the discoveries of the first queen pheromones that regulate worker sterility in ants, wasps, and bumblebees). I then moved to Australian National University in Canberra, initially as post-doc and then later as an independent researcher funded by a 3-year Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DECRA) fellowship. My research in Canberra focused on sexual selection and diverse topics in evolutionary biology. In 2016, I was appointed to a permanent Senior Lecturer position at the University of Melbourne, where I conducted evolutionary biology research and led undergraduate modules on evolution and statistics. At Melbourne my research group focused on empirical research on fruit flies and honeybees, as well as computational topics.

I moved to Edinburgh Napier University in January 2021. Thus far I have primarily focused on evolutionary genomics analysis of large datasets from humans, fruit flies, and honeybees, as well as developing our teaching in the subject areas of animal behaviour, research methods, and statistics. I have lead three modules, namely Research Methods (which comprises a dissertation and also statistics and R coding), the version of Research Methods that is delivered at SPECTRUM in Sri Lanka, and Animal Behaviour (which comprises lectures, tutorials, coursework and an essay assignment). I also lecture in Advances in Animal Behaviour (on specialised topics in behavioural ecology), Scientific Enquiry (on statistics), and Genes & Inheritance (on population genetics), supervise 4th year Research Project students, and co-teach the Portugal field course for Terrestrial Field Biology.

I am also the Commissioning Editor of the Journal of Evolutionary Biology, a busy role that involves commissioning special features for the journal. I am also active in the scientific society associated with this journal, the European Society for Evolutionary Biology (e.g. I chair a scheme called the Progress Meetings in Evolutionary Biology, which competitively funds research synthesis meetings).

Please see my personal webpage, www.lukeholman.org, for more information.

Date


66 results

Genetic constraints on dishonesty and caste dimorphism in an ant

Journal Article
Holman, L., Linksvayer, T. A., & d’Ettorre, P. (2013)
Genetic constraints on dishonesty and caste dimorphism in an ant. American Naturalist, 181(2), 161-170. https://doi.org/10.1086/668828
The ultimate causes of honest signaling remain a subject of debate, with questions remaining over the relative importance of costs and constraints. Signal costs may make disho...

Cuticular chemistry of males and females in the ant Formica fusca

Journal Article
Chernenko, A., Holman, L., Helanterä, H., & Sundström, L. (2012)
Cuticular chemistry of males and females in the ant Formica fusca. Journal of Chemical Ecology, 38, 1474-1482. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10886-012-0217-4
Communication between organisms involves visual, auditory, and olfactory pathways. In solitary insects, chemical recognition cues are influenced mainly by selection regimes re...

Are queen ants inhibited by their own pheromone? Regulation of productivity via negative feedback

Journal Article
Holman, L., Leroy, C., Jørgensen, C., Nielsen, J., & d’Ettorre, P. (2013)
Are queen ants inhibited by their own pheromone? Regulation of productivity via negative feedback. Behavioral Ecology, 24(2), 380-385. https://doi.org/10.1093/beheco/ars174
Social organisms have evolved diverse and complex regulatory mechanisms that allow them to coordinate group-level functions. Signals and cues produced by other group members f...

Costs and constraints conspire to produce honest signaling: insights from an ant queen pheromone

Journal Article
Holman, L. (2012)
Costs and constraints conspire to produce honest signaling: insights from an ant queen pheromone. Evolution, 66(7), 2094-2105. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1558-5646.2012.01603.x
Signal costs and evolutionary constraints have both been proposed as ultimate explanations for the ubiquity of honest signaling, but the interface between these two factors is...

Random sperm use and genetic effects on worker caste fate in Atta colombica leaf‐cutting ants

Journal Article
Holman, L., Stürup, M., Trontti, K., & Boomsma, J. J. (2011)
Random sperm use and genetic effects on worker caste fate in Atta colombica leaf‐cutting ants. Molecular Ecology, 20(23), 5092-5102. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-294x.2011.05338.x
Sperm competition can produce fascinating adaptations with far‐reaching evolutionary consequences. Social taxa make particularly interesting models, because the outcome of sex...

Terminal investment in multiple sexual signals: immune-challenged males produce more attractive pheromones

Journal Article
Nielsen, M. L., & Holman, L. (2012)
Terminal investment in multiple sexual signals: immune-challenged males produce more attractive pheromones. Functional Ecology, 26(1), 20-28. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2435.2011.01914.x
Trade‐offs between current and future resource allocation can select for elevated reproductive effort in individuals facing mortality. Males are predicted to benefit from incr...

Wax on, wax off: nest soil facilitates indirect transfer of recognition cues between ant nestmates

Journal Article
Bos, N., Grinsted, L., & Holman, L. (2011)
Wax on, wax off: nest soil facilitates indirect transfer of recognition cues between ant nestmates. PLOS ONE, 6(4), https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0019435
Social animals use recognition cues to discriminate between group members and non-members. These recognition cues may be conceptualized as a label, which is compared to a neur...

Only full-sibling families evolved eusociality

Journal Article
Boomsma, J. J., Beekman, M., Cornwallis, C. K., Griffin, A. S., Holman, L., Hughes, W. O., …Ratnieks, F. L. (2011)
Only full-sibling families evolved eusociality. Nature, 471, E4-E5. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature09832
Arising from M. A. Nowak, C. E. Tarnita & E. O. Wilson Nature 466, 1057–1062 (2010)10.1038/nature09205; Nowak et al. reply The paper by Nowak et al.1 has the evolution of eus...

Queen pheromones: The chemical crown governing insect social life

Journal Article
Holman, L. (2010)
Queen pheromones: The chemical crown governing insect social life. Communicative and Integrative Biology, 3(6), 558-560. https://doi.org/10.4161/cib.3.6.12976
Group-living species produce signals that alter the behavior and even the physiology of their social partners. Social insects possess especially sophisticated chemical communi...

Identification of an ant queen pheromone regulating worker sterility

Journal Article
Holman, L., Jørgensen, C. G., Nielsen, J., & d'Ettorre, P. (2010)
Identification of an ant queen pheromone regulating worker sterility. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 277(1701), 3793-3800. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2010.0984
The selective forces that shape and maintain eusocial societies are an enduring puzzle in evolutionary biology. Ordinarily sterile workers can usually reproduce given the righ...

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