Dr Amanda H Korstjens
BSc, MPhil, PhD

Senior Lecturer in Biological Anthropology

The School of Conservation Sciences

Dr Amanda H Korstjens

Professional Details

 Degrees:
   BSc, Biology, 1990, Utrecht University (Netherlands)
  MPhil, Biology, 1995, Utrecht University
  PhD, Biology: Behavioural Ecology, 2001, Utrecht University
  PGCert in Academic Practice, 2008, Bournemouth University
 
 Membership of Professional Organisations/External Bodies:
   Elected Council Member, Primatological Society of Great Britain
  Fellow of the Higher Education Academy
  Member, Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour
  Member, Flora and Fauna International
  Member, Conservation International
  Member, International Primatological Society
 

Area(s) of Interest

 Research Centre:
  Centre for Forensic and Biological Sciences (FBS)
 
 Area(s) of Interest:
  Biological Anthropology, Behavioural Ecology, Primatology
 
 Academic Group(s):
  Forensic and Bioarchaeological Sciences, Archaeology, Anthropology and Heritage
 
 Units Led:
  

Human Anatomy and Physiology 1st year
Evolutionary Anthropology 3rd year
Biological Anthropology 1st year
Behavioural Ecology MSc

 
 Relevant Posts Within Industry/Academia:
  Regular peer reviewer for international journals e.g. Behav Ecol Sociobiol, Int J Primatol, Am J Primatol
Occasionally review international grant proposals and book chapters
 

Profile

My main interest is the complexity of behavioural strategies in humans and other animals. I study how these strategies are determined by the social and ecological environment that an individual lives in. Most of my research focuses on primates (incl. humans).
My main research topics are:
I. The constraints and the evolution of sociality
II. The evolution of mating strategies and female sexual signals
III The evolutionary origins of infant abuse in primates and humans

Ongoing research projects include:
1. I investigate mating strategies of Ugandan colobine monkeys. This project focuses on the link between hormones and behaviour and the evolution of mating strategies. Collaboraters: Dr Michael Heistermann, German Primate Centre (DPZ); Prof. Redouan Bshary, University of Neuchatel (Switzerland); and Prof. Colin Chapman, McGill University (Canada).
2. In collaboration with Dr Filippo Aureli and Dr Norberto Asensio from Liverpool John Moores’ University I study the behavioural ecology of Costa-Rican spider monkeys.
3. As an associate of the British Academy project ‘From lucy to language’, I work on developing mathematical models to help us understand early human social systems and primate distribution patterns in relation to climate. This work is done together with Prof. Robin Dunbar, University of Oxford, and Dr Julia Lehmann, Roehampton University.

 

Related Links

 

Contact Details
Tel: +44 (0)1202 965167
Fax: +44 (0)1202 965530
Email: akorstjens@bournemouth.ac.uk
Building: Christchurch House

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