Kaitlyn Gaynor

Kaitlyn Gaynor

Kaitlyn Gaynor

Assistant Professor in the Departments of Zoology and Botany, UBC

Contact Details

Lab website: https://gaynorlab.weebly.com/

Google Scholar: 
https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=L_vGm14AAAAJ

Email:
kaitlyn.gaynor [at] ubc [dot] ca

Bio

Kaitlyn Gaynor is appointed in Zoology and Botany, not at IRES, and instead is a Faculty Associate of our unit. Gaynor may supervise students in our graduate program.

Dr. Kaitlyn Gaynor is an Assistant Professor in the departments of Zoology and Botany, based in the Biodiversity Research Centre and affiliated with the Interdisciplinary Biodiversity Solutions Collaboratory. Research in the Gaynor Lab examines the effects of human activity on global biodiversity, with emphases on (1) the behavioural responses of animals to human presence, (2) the effects of anthropogenic disturbance on predator-prey and other species interactions, and (3) the socio-ecological dynamics of conservation and coexistence. This work involves large-scale data synthesis and meta-analyses, and local field studies in North America and Africa. 

If you are interested in a graduate position in the Gaynor Lab, please visit the “Join Us” page on the lab website for more information on whether the lab is accepting new students, and information on how to reach out about opportunities.

hagwil hayetsk (Charles Menzies)

hagwil hayetsk (Charles Menzies)

Professor in the Department of Anthropology, UBC

Contact Details

Website www.charlesmenzies.ca

Email charles.menzies[at]ubc.ca

Twitter https://twitter.com/charlesmenzies

Bio

hagwil hayetsk (Charles Menzies) is a member of Gitxaała Nation and an enrolled member of the Tlingit and Haida Tribes of Alaska. He is currently a Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, BC. He is not appointed at IRES and instead is a Faculty Associate of our unit. Please contact the Department of Anthropology to reach him.

B.A.(Simon Fraser University), M.A. (York University), M.Phil., Ph.D. (Anthropology Program, the Graduate School and University Center of the City University of New York).

Professor hagwil hayetsk (Menzies) served as an elected member of the UBC Board of Governors, 2017-2020. Menzies is currently an elected joint-faculties senator on the UBC-V Senate, 2020-2026. Commentary and news can be found on his personal blog [click here].

Research Interests

Professor hagwil haeyetsk (Menzies)’ primary research interests are the production of anthropological films, natural resource management (primarily fisheries related), political economy, contemporary First Nations’ issues, maritime anthropology and the archaeology of north coast BC. He has conducted field research in, and has produced films concerning, north coastal BC, Canada (including archaeological research); Brittany, France; and Donegal, Ireland.

His current research project, Laxyuup Gitxaaɫa, combines archaeological and socio-cultural anthropology to document the traditional territory of Gitxaaɫa Nation. Other projects include founding and directing the Ethnographic Film Unit at UBC, establishing an online journal, New Proposals, and acting as the coordinator of an ecological anthropology research group at UBC, Forests and Oceans for the Future

Graduate Supervision

Graduate student mentorship and supervision is a key focus of my scholarly practice. Typically master’s students work with projects that I have underway or that are closely associated thematically. Doctoral students, while focusing on projects with affinities to my research, pursue more independent projects. I’ve had the privilege of working with a great number of outstanding students. Many of their projects are focused on natural resource management (fisheries and forestry), others explore the dynamics of municipal politics, local development projects at UBC, climate change artists, and food security. Today these scholars are working in NGO’s, government agencies, universities and colleges. Listed below are dissertations and theses completed by this outstanding and excellent group.

Doctoral Dissertations

Master’s Theses

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Forget herbicides. Sandblasting will whack those weeds

Nose for trouble: B.C. scientists brace for a deadly bat fungus

Opinion: We must eliminate persistent, bio-accumulative and toxic plastics before it’s too late

El Niño is on our doorstep, but not all are created equal. So what does it mean for Canada?

Metro Vancouver mulls Biorock for shore and habitat protection

Bats in Vancouver: The secret city nightlife