I completed my M.Sc. in Wildlife Science studying landscape genetics of African ungulates with Clint, and stayed on to manage his wildlife genetics laboratory. I assist graduate students in collecting genetic data for their theses, and facilitate genetic work contracted by outside agencies and partners. Over the years we have worked on a variety of species including aardvarks, bighorn sheep, beavers, eland, Maasai giraffe, impala, moose, blacktailed and mule deer, and Camas pocket gophers, almost entirely from noninvasively-collected samples.
Links
Pages
- Epps Lab – Mammalian Ecology and Population Genetics
- Lab Members
- Christina Aiello, Postdoctoral Scholar
- Clinton W. Epps, Associate Professor
- Daniella Dekelaita, Ph.D. student
- Jennifer Nelson, M.S. student
- Matt Weldy, Faculty Research Assistant I
- Paige Larson, Faculty Research Assistant I
- Rachel Crowhurst, Population Genetics Laboratory Manager/Senior Faculty Research Assistant
- Robert Spaan, Ph.D. student
- Lab News
- Links and Media Coverage
- Population and Conservation Genetics Laboratory
- Prospective Students & Postdocs
- Publications
- Research
- Blacktailed deer population estimation from fecal samples
- Evaluation of mark-recapture trapping methodology
- Landscape genetics and climate change vulnerability of the American pika
- Landscape genetics of camas pocket gophers
- Landscape genetics of the American beaver along the Oregon coast
- Phylogeography and population genetics of the aardvark
- Population genetics and genomics of moose in the Copper River Delta, Alaska
- Survival and recruitment of Humboldt’s flying squirrels and Townsend’s chipmunks
Categories:
- Uncategorized (1)
- Lab News (1)
Monthly:
- June 2018 (1)
Theme: Connections by www.vanillamist.com. Hosted by blogs.oregonstate.edu