I joined the lab as a Master’s student in September 2024 to work on the snowshoe hare project. Previously, I studied reproductive investment in gray treefrogs during my BSc at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, where I developed a strong interest in evolutionary ecology. I am broadly interested in how animals adapt to a changing world and how shifts in phenotypic traits, predator–prey dynamics, and phenology scale up to shape populations and communities. My current research uses long-term data from Kluane, Yukon, to investigate how climate warming is driving shifts in body mass in northern small mammals and how snowshoe hare coat colour moult responds plastically to changing environmental conditions.