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Glenn Crossin

PROFESSOR
Coordinator and Advisor Honours
BA - University of Maine
BSc - University of New Hampshire
MSc - University of British Columbia
PhD - University of British Columbia
NSERC PDF - Simon Fraser University, and Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (UK)
NSERC Visiting Fellow - DFO West Vancouver Laboratory

  • Teaching & Research
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  • Teaching & Research
    behavioural ecology, evolutionary physiology, animal physiology, freshwater and marine fish, birds, telemetry, physiological sampling techniques

    y lab has interests in all aspects of animal physiology, behaviour, and ecology. Research efforts are focussed primarily, though not exclusively, on freshwater and marine fish species, and on birds. Telemetry and physiological sampling techniques are major tools in our research.

    Sampling macaroni penguins at a large breeding colony at Bird Island, South Georgia

    Specific interests include the physiological and evolutionary responses of animals to natural and anthropogenic stressors. By coupling telemetry and physiological sampling techniques, I examine how individual variation in physiological condition affects migratory performance and future reproductive investment and organismal fitness.

    Whenever possible, I also seek to apply these findings to issues concerning the conservation of aquatic and avian resources, with the aim of understanding, and hopefully predicting, the response of populations to environmental change.

    Classes in which Glenn currently teaches: Biology Undergraduate Honours


    Courting Grey-headed albatrosses,
    newly reunited after winter migration

    Ìý

    Undergraduate Honours Positions:

    I anticipate having one or two positions available each year for Undergraduate Honours Thesis students (e.g. BIOL 4900). Ideally, thesis projects would involve some field work and data collection, but may more typically involve laboratory and/or data analyses. Ultimately, most projects will have a focus on the physiological underpinning of life-history variation, in either fish or birds, and will usually involve telemetry and behavioural data. Honours projects are a great introduction to research, to what life would be like in graduate school, and to what science is like as a career.


    Selected Publications

    Crossin GT, Trathan PN, and Crawford RJM. 2012. The Macaroni Penguin (Eudyptes chrysolophus) and the Royal Penguin (E. schlegeli). In:ÌýPenguins: Natural History and ConservationÌý(P Garcia-Borboroglu and PD Boersma, Eds.). University of Washington Press, Seattle. In press.

    Cooke SJ, Crossin GT, and Hinch SG. 2011.ÌýPacific Salmon Migration- Completing the Cycle. Invited contribution to: The Encyclopedia of Fish Physiology: From Genome to Environment (AP Farrell, Ed.), vol. 3, pp. 1945-1952, Academic Press, San Diego.ÌýÌý

    Crossin GT, Poisbleau M, Demongin L, Chastel O, Williams TD, Eens M, and Quillfeldt P. 2012.ÌýMigratory constraints on yolk precursor production limit egg androgen deposition and underlies a brood reduction strategy in rockhopper penguins. Biology Letters 00:000-000.Ìý

    Numbered female macaroni penguins in a study of breeding physiology and egg production

    Cooke SJ, Hinch SG, Donaldson MR, Clark TD, Eliason EJ, Crossin GT, Raby GD, Jeffries KM, Lapointe MJ, Miller K, Patterson DA, Farrell AP.Ìý2012.ÌýConservation physiology in practice: How physiological knowledge has improved our ability to sustainably manage Pacific salmon during up-river migration.Ìý Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London BÌý367:1757-1769.ÌýÌý

    Crossin GT, Trathan PN, Phillips RA, Gorman KB, Dawson A., Sakamoto KQ, and Williams TD. 2012.ÌýCorticosterone predicts foraging behaviour and parental care in macaroni penguins.ÌýThe American NaturalistÌý180:E31-41 (E-article).ÌýÌý

    Crossin GT, Phillips RA, Trathan PN, Fox DS, Dawson A, Wynne-Edwards KE, and Williams TD. 2012.ÌýMigratory carryover effects and endocrinological correlates of reproductive decisions and reproductive success in female albatrosses.ÌýGeneral & Comparative EndocrinologyÌý176:151-157.ÌýÌý

    Crossin GT, Dawson A, Phillips RA, Trathan PN, Gorman KB, Adlard S, and Williams TD. 2012.ÌýSeasonal patterns of prolactin and corticosterone secretion in an Antarctic seabird that moults during reproduction.ÌýGeneral & Comparative EndocrinologyÌý175:74-81.ÌýÌý

    Crossin GT, Trathan PN, and Williams TD. 2012.ÌýPotential mode of clutch size determination and follicle development in Eudyptes penguins.ÌýÌýPolar BiologyÌý35:313-317.Ìý

    Crossin GT, Trathan PN, Phillips RA, Dawson A, Le Bouard F, and Williams TD. 2010.ÌýA carry-over effect of migration underlies individual variation in reproductive readiness and extreme egg size dimorphism in macaroni penguins (Eudyptes chrysolophus).ÌýThe American NaturalistÌý176:357-366.ÌýÌý

    Edwards EWJ, Forcada J, and Crossin GT. 2009.ÌýFirst documentation of leopard seal predation on South Georgia pintail duck.ÌýPolar BiologyÌý33:403-405.ÌýÌý

    Crossin GT, Hinch SG, Cooke SJ, Cooperman MS, Patterson DA, Welch DW, Hanson KC, Olsson I, English KK, and Farrell AP. 2009.ÌýMechanisms influencing the timing and success of reproductive migration in a capital-breeding, semelparous fish species: the sockeye salmon.ÌýPhysiological & Biochemical ZoologyÌý82:635-652.ÌýÌý

    Hinch SG, Farrell AP, Cooke SJ, Patterson DA, Lapointe MF, Welch DW, English KK, Crossin GT, Miller K, Thomson RE, Van Der Kraak G, Olssen I, Shrimpton JM, and Cooperman MS. 2009.ÌýÌýUsing physiological telemetry and intervention experiments to examine the maladaptive shift in Fraser River's Late-Run Sockeye Salmon spawning migration.American Fisheries Society SymposiumÌý69:891-894.

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