Chris Hughes

Chris Hughes is the Assistant Curator of Natural Sciences, Nature + Love and has worked at the Horniman since 2022.
As Assistant Curator of Natural Sciences and the Nature + Love redevelopment project Chris is working on researching the wide variety of collections housed within the Natural History collection. Chris studied BSc Zoology at Queen Mary, University of London and a MSc Taxonomy and Biodiversity at Imperial College, London in conjunction with the Natural History Museum. Chris has previously worked as an Assistant Curator at the Natural History Museum (NHM) where he completed major projects including a survey of the Brachiopod collection, resulting in assisting in the coordination of the European Brachiopod Association conference. He then successfully managed the redevelopment of the prehistoric Marine reptile, amphibian, and trace fossil storage project. Chris has also worked at the Grant Museum (University College, London), where he worked very closely with students and lecturers, assisting, developing, and teaching classes for undergraduate and master’s students, while also working very closely with the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology (also University College London) on many redevelopment projects and supporting classes. Chris has given talks to the Malacological Society of London, as well as participating in outreach events throughout the UK including the Lyme Regis, and Yorkshire Fossil Festivals and and numerous meet the scientist events at the Attenborough Studio at the NHM. Chris has written blogs for both internal and external publications at the NHM, Grant Museum, and the Horniman, while also appearing in different documentary style videos for the Grant Museum and the Horniman.

Research

Chris’ main research interest is in Mollusca and he is currently working to update the taxonomic names of the gastropod and bivalve collections at the Horniman. Past projects have also included looking at possible sexual dimorphism in Jurassic ammonites, and the evolution of carnivory in groups of deep-sea bivalves, while also identifying, naming, labelling, and integrating Caribbean shell collections in the main Mollusca collection of the NHM. Other research interests include working on herbarium collections at the NHM and Horniman. Chris has also been researching the history of Victorian collecting around the British Isles, specifically the creation of book bound herbarium collections and their importance in how climate change affects species distribution, specifically looking at specimens collected in the UK during the 1840s.

Publications

Williams ST, Foster PG, Hughes C, Harper EM, Taylor JD, Littlewood DTJ, Dyal P, Hopkins KP, Briscoe AG (2017) Curious bivalves: Systematic utility and unusual properties of anomalodesmatan mitochondrial genomes. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 110 : 60 - 72.