Brown Lab @ Concordia University

Aquatic chemical and behavioural ecology

Grant E. Brown, PhD

Professor

Department of Biology

Concordia University

Email: grant.brown@concordia.ca

Phone: +1.514.848.2424, ext 4020


Associate Editor
Current Zoology

journal link


Editor

Animal Behaviour

journal link 


Review Editor

Frontiers in Ethology

journal link


Mailing address:

Department of Biology

7141 Sherbrooke St. West

Montreal, QC, H4B 1R6

CANADA


I am recruiting graduate students for the Fall 2024 and Winter 2025 terms. I am looking for potential students with strong backgrounds in behavioural ecology, cognition, chemical ecology, and/or evolutionary ecology.  If interested, please contact me, including:

1) A CURRENT CV,

2)  LIST OF RELEVANT COURSES COMPLETED 

3) A BRIEF SUMMARY OF YOUR RESEARCH INTERESTS AND RELEVANT TRAINING. 

My research group deals with chemical and behavioural ecology within freshwater ecosystems.  Using a combination of field experiments and controlled laboratory studies, we address questions relating to 'how prey assess and respond to variable predation threats'.  Within aquatic systems, chemical cues are a major source of risk assessment information.  In addition, the same publicly available cues are available to predators. Thus, we also ask questions relating to 'how predators compete for food based on variable information'.

Much of the work done by my research group is field based.  A common (and valid) criticism of vertebrate chemical ecology is that it is heavily biased towards laboratory studies.  Lab conditions often lack important ecological relevance, and as a result, we integrate field projects when ever possible.