Joseph Haydock
Assistant Professor,
Environmental Sciences
Gonzaga University
United States of America
Biography
Associate Professor Biology Department Gonzaga University
Research Interest
I am interested in avian social behavior and I ask questions from an evolutionary perspective. I use a combination of field observations, experiments in natural populations and molecular genetic techniques in the laboratory. In the past 10 years I have had over 30 students participate in research my lab. These students have had the opportunity to study the evolution of social behavior and learn the molecular genetic techniques I use in my lab. The focus of my research is the acorn woodpecker (Melanerpes formicivorus), which has one of the most complex social systems among vertebrate societies. Social groups consist of up to 15 individuals, including up to seven cobreeding males and four joint-nesting females that compete for the opportunity to mate. Groups also contain non-breeding helpers from prior breeding attempts who delay dispersal. All group members defend engage in territorial defense, feeding of nestlings and collecting acorns that they store in granaries. I collaborate in my research with Walter Koenig at Cornell University and Eric Walters at Old Dominion University. Acorn woodpeckers have been under study at Hastings Natural History Reservation in central coastal California since 1971.
Publications
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Koenig, W.D., A.H. W.B. Monahan, J. Haydock, J.M.H Knops, W.J. Carmen. 2009 Mast-producing trees and the geographical ecology of western scrub-jays. Ecography 32: 561-570.
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Koenig, W.D. E.L. Walters and J. Haydock. 2011. Fitness consequences of within-brood dominance in the cooperatively breeding acorn woodpecker. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 65:2229-2238.