Our lab's research seeks to understand the diversity of systems that animals use to communicate with one another, both at the level of proximate mechanisms and in an evolutionary sense, and to understand the role communication plays in shaping basic ecological and evolutionary processes. Our primary focus is on visual and chemical communication in teleost fishes, although students have worked on a wide variety of topics. Integrative research is necessarily collaborative, and much of our research involves work with other labs with complementary areas of specialization. Current research focuses on mate choice and evolutionary genetics in hybrid zones, gene expression across hybrid gradients, mechanisms of chemical signaling, and visual ecology of reef fishes. Much of our work involves playback of synthetic computer animations.
Our new lab at TAMU includes extensive indoor space for experimentation and animal housing and an array of outdoor stock ponds. Our CICHAZ research station, within a long day's drive in Calnali, Hidalgo, is a home base for field trips and experimental research in the eastern Sierra Madre of Mexico.
TAMU offers excellent intellectual and physical resources in both the Biology Department and the broader program in Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior. Bryan/College Station is within easy reach of Houston, Austin, and an array of ecologically distinct natural areas, and offers a bucolic country lifestyle in a surprisingly cosmopolitan setting.
Prospective graduate students should familiarize themselves with Rosenthal lab publications, then contact Gil Rosenthal directly before submitting an application to TAMU's Department of Biology.
Click here to see a special video message from Dr. Rosenthal.
NEW! CICHAZ now has a cell phone!
From the US: 011 52 (771) 180-8150
From México: 045 (771) 180-8150
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