Queen's University, Belfast
Current Position | Lecturer in Computational Biology |
Previous Position | Research Fellow at Queen’s University Belfast |
K.SiuTing@qub.ac.uk | |
Departments | School of Biological Sciences |
ECR | Yes |
Quadrat Core Themes | Biodiversity |
Methods I Use | eDNA, Field Monitoring Techniques, Omics and Informatics |
Profiles |
Key Research Interests
- Bioinformatics
- Phylogenomics and Evolution
- Comparative Transcriptomics/Genomics
- Tropical/Andean Biodiversity (in particular related to amphibians and reptiles)
- Host-gut microbiome interactions
- eDNA for surveillance (i.e. agricultural parasites) / metabarcoding (primarily applied to amphibian/reptile diet)
Recent Key Papers
Pidcock, S.E., Skvortsov, T., Santos, F.G., Courtney, S.J., Siu-Ting, K., Creevey, C.J., Huws, S.A., 2021. Phylogenetic systematics of Butyrivibrio and Pseudobutyrivibriogenomes illustrate vast taxonomic diversity, open genomes and an abundance of carbohydrate-active enzyme family isoforms. Microb. Genom. 7. doi:10.1099/mgen.0.000638
Siu-Ting, K., Torres-Sánchez, M., San Mauro, D., Wilcockson, D., Wilkinson, M., Pisani, D., O’Connell, M.J., Creevey, C.J., 2019. Inadvertent paralog inclusion drives artifactual topologies and timetree estimates in phylogenomics. Mol. Biol. Evol. 36, 1344–1356. doi:10.1093/molbev/msz067
Walker, C.H., Siu-Ting, K., Taylor, A., O’Connell, M.J., Bennett, T., 2019. Strigolactone synthesis is ancestral in land plants, but canonical strigolactone signalling is a flowering plant innovation. BMC Biol. 17, 70. doi:10.1186/s12915-019-0689-6