Public Engagement with Science
Submitting Institution
University of DerbyUnit of Assessment
Biological SciencesSummary Impact Type
SocietalResearch Subject Area(s)
Biological Sciences: Genetics
Summary of the impact
Research conducted by the Biological Sciences Research group on sexual
selection, using bushcrickets as model organisms, has attracted a very
high level of media interest and has contributed to public engagement with
science. Evidence for this is provided by a considerable number of review
articles on the research in the media. There is also evidence of public
debate through social media such as twitter, blogs, sharing of articles
and individual comments on web articles about the research.
Underpinning research
The research that underpins the impact in this case study used crickets
and bushcrickets as model organisms to study the process of sexual
selection, specifically the evolution of testes size.
The size of testes relative to male body mass varies greatly across
species. In numerous taxa, relative testes size correlates positively with
the extent to which females of the species engage in polyandrous mating.
There are at least two hypotheses that could account for this pattern. The
sperm competition hypothesis, which has won broad acceptance, proposes
that larger testes allow males to produce larger ejaculates per mating,
thereby enabling the male to out-compete rival sperm. The male mating rate
hypothesis, on the other hand, proposes that larger testes allow males to
produce a greater number of (potentially smaller) ejaculates. The latter
hypothesis has been almost completely neglected over the last two decades
(reviewed in Vahed & Parker 2012).
Karim Vahed, D.J. Parker and J.D.J. Gilbert conducted a comparative study
of European bushcrickets to test the predictions of these competing
hypotheses (Vahed et al. 2011). The data on testes mass, ejaculate
mass, sperm number and the degree of polyandry for each species collected
from 2008 to 2009. The research was led by Dr K. Vahed, who at the time
was a Reader in Behavioural Ecology at the University of Derby (where he
had been employed since 1993). The results revealed that like virtually
all other taxa, relative testes size increased with the degree of
polyandry. Larger testes, however, were associated with smaller
ejaculates. The study therefore provided some of the first comparative
evidence to support the male mating rate hypothesis. The study also
revealed that one of the species studied, the Tuberous bushcricket, Platycleis
affinis, has the largest testes relative to male body mass so far
recorded in any animal.
References to the research
The evolution of testes size
Vahed, K. & Parker, D. J. (2012) The evolution of large testes: sperm
competition or male mating rate? Ethology, 118: 107 - 117.
Vahed, K., Parker, D. J. & Gilbert, J. D. J. (2011) Larger testes are
associated with a higher level of polyandry, but a smaller ejaculate
volume, across bushcricket species (Tettigoniidae). Biology Letters,
7 (2): 261 - 264. (Output listed in REF2).
Details of the impact
The contribution of the submitted unit to the research
The research was led by K.Vahed, who planned the study, collected the
majority of the data and wrote the majority of the manuscript. D.J.
Parker, who was at the time an undergraduate Zoology student at the
University of Derby, assisted with the dissection of the specimens, while
J.D.J. Gilbert, who at the time was an Associate lecturer at the
University of Derby (and also a research fellow at the University of
Cambridge) was involved with the statistical analysis of the data.
Critical reviews in the media.
The University of Derby produced a press release based on research on the
evolution of testes size in bushcrickets (Vahed et al. 2011,
published online in Biology Letters on 10th November
2010). This resulted in very high levels of global media coverage.
The story was reported on BBC.co.uk/news on 10th November 2010
and all over the world in both print and online media; from Canada to
Brazil, Tazmania, to India, Bulgaria to Kuwait, Ireland and the USA. This
was in a range of media, from science specific, such as National
Geographic and Science Centric, to the science pages of
national daily papers including the New York Times and Daily
India, The Arab Times, The Bancock post, The Daily Express (Borneo)
to tabloid media such as Yahoo News and MSN. The story was
reported in national daily newspapers in the UK such as The Sun, the
Daily Mail, Metro, and The Independent and The Guardian
online and The Week magazine. As the story was carried by
news wires including Press Association and AFP it was picked up by many
smaller local newspapers such as The Northern Echo and The
Stoke Sentinel.
Because the story was reported so widely, and in so many languages, the
exact number of web reports is hard to pin down — but it is safe to say
that it was in the hundreds, with reports on Chinese language, Taiwanese,
Portuguese and Spanish websites.
K.Vahed was interviewed about this research by the BBC World Service
Radio, who carried the story throughout November 10th and by
Radio West Midlands and BBC Radio Derby. Westdeutcher Rundfunk, the
biggest public radio station in Germany, also broadcast an interview with
K. Vahed relating to his research on crickets on 14th February
2013.
In February and 6th May 2013, K. Vahed was involved in the
filming of a 3-D documentary on Insects, filmed by Atlantic Produtions for
Sky and iMax cinemas, entitled "Micromonsters 3-D". This series was
released in June 2013. The documentary, which was narrated by Sir David
Attenborough, featured mating in crickets, which K. Vahed supplied. He
advised on material for inclusion in the script and helped with the
filming of the mating sequences.
Evidence of public engagement with the science and public debate:
The online press release (in The University of Derby's Connected
magazine) was visited a total of 1,116 times on 10th November
2010, by visitors from at least 40 countries including Brazil, Japan,
Spain, Australia, Hungary and the USA.
BBC World Service Radio, who carried the story throughout November 10th,
has typical listening figures of 130 million.
The story was very popular on social media — for the morning of 10th
November 2010, it was the most shared story on BBC.co.uk/news, which
indicates that it was being shared by people on their social networking
pages such as Twitter, Facebook and Bebo. According to the figures
displayed on BBC.co.uk/news, the BBC's article on this research on testes
size in bushcrickets has been shared 12,144 times.
A quick twitter search on 10th November 2010 showed that it
was a popular thread of discussion: there were over 50 tweets for "Vahed".
With "crickets" added into the search and the results were too many to
record.
The story also featured on popular websites such as "D-Listed" and the
women's online magazine "Jezebel" and numerous blogs. An animated article
about the research features on "You Tube": where it has attracted 1,446
views.
In May 2011, K. Vahed delivered an invited public lecture on mating
behaviour in crickets entitled "The sex lives of crickets" at Natural
History Museum, London. This event was part of the museum's "Live Science"
programme, based in their Attenborough studio.
Sources to corroborate the impact
National Geographic
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/11/101110-biggest-testicles-size-bushcrickets-biology-vahed-science-animals/
Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2010/nov/10/largest-testicles-species-bush-cricket
BBC
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11718029
CBC (Canada)
http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2010/11/10/big-testicles-bushcricket.html
FOX NEWS
http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2010/11/10/animal-biggest-testicles/
MS NBC
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40109803/ns/technology_and_science-science/
YAHOO NEWS
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/18/20101110/tsc-gonad-greatness-bushcricket-has-reco-718400e.html
CBS NEWS
http://www.cbsnews.com/8300-501465_162-501465.html?keyword=tuberous+bushcricket
YouTube
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ty5urm3O9qk