Graduate Positions in Behavioral Ecology in the Tinghitella lab at the 
University of Denver. 

The Tinghitella lab at the University of Denver 
(https://tinghitellalab.weebly.com) is recruiting 
motivated new graduate students to begin in the fall of 2018. Work in the lab 
centers on the 
roles of ecology and behavior in (rapid) evolutionary change. We mix field and 
laboratory work to 
understand the forces that shape diversity in animal communication and mating 
systems. 
Recently we’ve been thinking a lot about how human impacts alter the mating 
environment and 
the evolutionary implications of those perturbations. Graduate students will be 
supported 
through teaching assistantships (2 years MS and 5 years PhD). I am specifically 
recruiting 
students interested in working on Pacific field crickets. Students will be 
expected to develop 
their own projects within the scope of the lab, but topics are open. Recent 
work in the field 
cricket system has addressed rapid evolution of sexual signals, plasticity in 
mate choice, and 
effects of anthropogenic noise on acoustically communicating invertebrates, for 
instance. 

Please contact Robin Tinghitella, [email protected], for more 
information. Additional 
information about our graduate program and our vibrant group of Organismal 
Biologists can be 
found at 
https://www.du.edu/nsm/departments/biologicalsciences/degreeprograms/phd.html 
and https://sites.google.com/site/duecoevo/home. Deadline for applications for 
the graduate 
program in Biological Sciences is January 1, 2018.

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