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Welcome

We study animal sensory systems and communication, with a focus on insect bioacoustics. Our research addresses three main questions: 1) How do insects sense, and generate sounds and vibrations?  2) What are the functions of acoustic communication? 3) How do ears and communication signals evolve?

 

In our neuroethology lab we use a variety of methods and techniques such as sound recording and analysis, laser vibrometry, neurophysiology, high-speed video, phylogenetics, microscopy, and behavioural genetics to form an integrated view of animal behaviour and communication. We work primarily with the insect orders Lepidoptera (moths, butterflies, caterpillars) and Coleoptera (mostly bark beetles), but have ongoing projects with earthworms, birds, and bats as well.

Professor Jayne E. Yack

Department of Biology
Nesbitt Biology Building, Room 250
Carleton University

1125 Colonel By Drive
Ottawa, Ontario, CANADA
K1S 5B6


Office: 613 520-2600 ext.3887
Lab: 613 520-2600 ext.1513 or 1912 
Fax: 613 520-3539
email: jayneyack@cunet.carleton.ca

Lab news

April 30, 2018

Jayne wins a Graduate Mentor Award

Thank you to my awesome students for nominating me for this award. It is an honour to work with all of you!

May 1, 2018

Congratulations

Congratulations to Melanie for winning an NSERC scholarship for her PhD work.

May 1, 2018

Congratulations

Melanie won a prize for her talk at OCIB. Great job Melanie!

May 1, 2018

Congratulations

Congratulations to Chanchal for winning an OGS Scholarship for her PhD work!

September 9, 2017

New Publication

Andras Dobai and co-authors have had their paper "Acoustic communication in the pine engraver bark beetle: Do signals vary between behavioural contexts?" accepted to the journal Physiological Entomology.

Insect Sensory Systems
Butterfly Hearing

Research Interests

Bark Beetle Acoustics
Caterpillar Acoustics
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