DNACROBATICS & BUTTERFLY EVO-DEVO
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HOW DO COLORS AND PATTERNS DIVERSIFY?

The Martin Lab at The George Washington University (Washington, DC, USA)
​takes advantage of the unique diversity of colors and shapes
displayed on the wings of butterflies and moths (10% of all species known to man)
to investigate fundamental questions in genetics, developmental biology, and evolution.
LEARN MORE
MEET THE BIONAUTES

NEWS

Tweets by evolvwing

RESEARCH CORES

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Butterfly Wings as A Developmental Biology Model System
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Indian Mealmoth as Lepidopteran Model for Precise Genome Editing
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Developing Genome Editing Laboratory classes for undergraduate students
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​Gephebase, the knowledge-base of genotype-to-phenotype variations

LAB LOCATION

The Martin Lab (Room 6480)
Direction:
​Inside the SEH building take the central elevator (there is a row of four of them right in the middle of the building) and go to the 6th floor.  When you exit the elevator, make a right, walk ten steps, and the lab shall be on your left side behind two sofas and a coffee table.
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MAILING/SHIPPING ADDRESS

Arnaud Martin

​GWU / Dpt of Bio. Sci
800 22nd St NW, SEH #6000
Washington, DC 20052


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CONTACT

Dr. Arnaud Martin
The George Washington University
Department of Biological Sciences
800 22nd St NW (SEH6000)
Washington, DC 20052
EMAIL ME
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
  • Home
  • Butterflies
    • Rearing and Handling
    • Findings
  • Moth
    • Getting Started
    • Rearing
    • Life Cycle & Sexing
    • Crossing
    • Molecular Biology
    • Resources
  • Resources
    • Protocols
    • Publications
    • GEPHEBASE
  • Bionautes
    • Join Us
  • Teaching