Janay Fox

Janay Fox
  • Bsc
  • PhD Candidate at McGill University

About

7
Publications
8,471
Reads
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145
Citations
Introduction
I am a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Biology and the Redpath Museum at McGill University working under the supervision of Dr. Rowan Barrett. I am interested in epigenomics, transcriptomics, evolution, phenotypic plasticity, and behavioral ecology. I am skilled in data analysis, bioinformatics, R, python, HPC environments, molecular lab work, and field work.
Current institution
McGill University
Current position
  • PhD Candidate
Additional affiliations
September 2018 - present
McGill University
Position
  • Teaching Assistant for Biol 111 (Introduction to Organismal Biology)
Description
  • Instructor for one section of the laboratory portion of the class.
September 2017 - August 2018
University of Alberta
Position
  • Independent Research Project as an Undergraduate
Description
  • Investigating the association between polymorphisms in DRD4 and SERT genes and boldness in grey seals.
September 2016 - April 2017
University of Alberta
Position
  • Independent Research Project as an Undergraduate
Description
  • Predicting susceptibility to chronic wasting disease in Albertan bighorn sheep through sequencing of the PRNP gene.
Education
September 2018 - September 2019
McGill University
Field of study
  • Evolutionary Genetics
September 2013 - April 2018
University of Alberta
Field of study
  • Genetics

Publications

Publications (7)
Article
Full-text available
The epigenome is the suite of interacting chemical marks and molecules that helps to shape patterns of development, phenotypic plasticity and gene regulation, in part due to its responsiveness to environmental stimuli. There is increasing interest in understanding the functional and evolutionary importance of this sensitivity under ecologically rea...
Article
Full-text available
The role of phenotypic plasticity during colonization remains unclear due to the shifting importance of plasticity across timescales. In the early stages of colonization, plasticity can facilitate persistence in a novel environment; but over evolutionary time, processes such as genetic assimilation may reduce variation in plastic traits such that s...
Article
Full-text available
Behavioural plasticity allows organisms to respond to environmental challenges on short time scales. But what are the ecological and evolutionary processes that underlie behavioural plasticity? The answer to this question is complex and requires experimental dissection of the physiological, neural and molecular mechanisms contributing to behavioura...
Preprint
The role of phenotypic plasticity during colonization remains unclear due to the shifting importance of plasticity across timescales. Over time, genetic responses can reduce plasticity such that species in a novel environment show higher levels of plasticity than those with a longer evolutionary timescale in the environment. Therefore, comparing sp...
Article
Full-text available
The semi-anadromous sea catfish species Cathorops tuyra (Ariidae, Besudo sea catfish) from the Tropical Eastern Pacific has been found reproductively active in the freshwater rivers and lakes of the Panama Canal. Despite growing concerns for biodiversity, reports on natural history are lacking for many Neotropical sea catfishes. We aimed to provide...
Article
Individual variation in quantitative traits clearly influence many ecological and evolutionary processes. Moderate to high heritability estimates of personality and life-history traits suggest some level of genetic control over these traits. Yet, we know very little of the underlying genetic architecture of phenotypic variation in the wild. In this...

Questions

Questions (5)
Question
There is no reference genome for a species I want to work with and I was just wondering how much it would cost so I can know if it would be crazy to suggest sequencing it
Question
Hello,
Our embedder is consistently overheating the wax to around 70C and we are unsure if this will damage the tissue for later IHC or make the block unsectionable.
If you could provide any papers that investigate this that would be great!
Question
I am looking for training to help me better be able to examine digital images of sectioned and stained tissues of APC min mice intestinal tissues and identify adenomas and microadenomas
Question
We are working with C57BL/6J Apc min mice but even a reference just for C57BL/6J mice would be great!

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