Erin Wall, PhD
Postdoctoral Fellow
Dr. Erin Wall is a postdoctoral fellow with Raincoast’s Cetacean Research Program. Erin holds a PhD in Neuroscience from McGill University where she studied the impact of social bonding on auditory perception, acoustic communication, and neural plasticity in female songbirds. She received her Bachelor of Arts with Honors in Psychology and Editing, Writing, and Media from Florida State University.
She has always been fascinated by communication and expression, from music and language in humans to communication signals and behavior in non-human animals. In her current research, Erin is working with Raincoast, the North Coast Cetacean Society, and the University of Windsor to uncover the factors that shape humpback song learning in the northern Pacific feeding grounds.

Recent articles
Intra-hair stable isotope analysis implies seasonal shift to salmon in gray wolf diet
Darimont, C.T., and T.E. Reimchen. 2002. Intra-hair stable isotope analysis…
Wolf Project Journal, August 2002
In our last dispatch we had not yet learned of…
Journal of the Wolf Project – June 2002
After a long winter analyzing last year’s samples and data,…
Yeo Island Wolf Home Site Recommendations
A proposed solution to the potential conflict between the home…
Field Journal, August 2001
Bella Bella, 2001 We all wore waders, we split up…
The Gray Wolves (Canis lupus) of British Columbia’s Coastal Rainforests
Herein, we present the most comprehensive scientific report to date…



