WANT A PROFILE LIKE THIS?
Create my FREE Plan Or learn about other options
Tristram Wyatt
PeerJ Author & Reviewer
70 Points

Contributions by role

Preprint Author 35
Reviewer 35

Contributions by subject area

Animal Behavior
Neuroscience
Biochemistry
Conservation Biology
Ecology
Zoology

Tristram D Wyatt

PeerJ Author & Reviewer

Summary

Dr. Wyatt did his PhD in animal behaviour at the University of Cambridge. Before going to Oxford’s Department for Continuing Education as a university lecturer (Associate Professor) in 1989, he was a university lecturer at the University of Leeds and held research fellowships at the University of California, Berkeley and the University of Wales, Cardiff. The second edition of his book “Pheromones and Animal Behavior” won the Royal Society of Biology’s prize for the Best Postgraduate Textbook in 2014. He is a member of the Animal Behaviour Research Group and is a senior research fellow at the Department of Zoology, University of Oxford and an emeritus fellow of Kellogg College, Oxford. He is a visiting lecturer in the Division of Biosciences at University College London.

Animal Behavior Neuroscience

Past or current institution affiliations

University College London
University of Oxford

Work details

Senior Research Fellow

University of Oxford
August 1989
Department of Zoology

Visiting Lecturer

University College London, University of London
August 2017
Centre for Biodersity and Environmental Conservation

Websites

  • Google Scholar

PeerJ Contributions

  • Preprints 1
  • Reviewed 1
August 19, 2019 - Version: 1
Reproducible research into human semiochemical cues and pheromones: learning from psychology’s renaissance
Tristram D Wyatt
https://doi.org/10.7287/peerj.preprints.27908v1

Signed reviews submitted for articles published in PeerJ Note that some articles may not have the review itself made public unless authors have made them open as well.

September 18, 2019
Chemical characterisation of potential pheromones from the shoulder gland of the Northern yellow-shouldered-bat, Sturnira parvidens (Phyllostomidae: Stenodermatinae)
Chris G. Faulkes, J. Stephen Elmore, David A. Baines, Brock Fenton, Nancy B. Simmons, Elizabeth L. Clare
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7734 PubMed 31579609