Dr. Outomuro earned his PhD from Universidad de Oviedo (Spain) in 2011. He completed two postdoctoral appointments at Uppsala University (Sweden) and University of Cincinnati (Ohio, USA), and worked as a Visiting Professor at Universidad de los Andes (Colombia).
I am a behavioral ecologist, interested in the micro- and macroevolutionary processes that promote diversity. My research has explored questions on the evolution of color signals, color vision, and flight morphology. I am particularly interested in understanding the evolution of color signals, how they are perceived by intended and unintended receivers and the role of these audiences in driving population and species divergence. I also study the evolution of flight morphology because wings are large conspicuous body surfaces that can be also used as motion signal vehicles for intra- and interspecific communication. I use an integrative, multidisciplinary approach, combining physiological, ecological and behavioral studies in the field and in the lab, with modeling and state-of-the-art statistical analyses. My main study animals are dragonflies, damselflies, butterflies and spiders.
