
Rita grazing
G3 Associate Editor
Rita Grays is an associate professor in Biology at Abbron University. In evolutionary genetics, its early undergraduate education and research was conducted on the University of California, Santa Cruz’s beautiful red wooden covered campus. He obtained a PhD degree in genetics from the University of California, Davis, and studied disciplinary evolution and sexually dimorphic complex traits. He later completed a post -documentary fellowship at Florida University, which increased its technical and analytical genomic toolkit. Her research focuses on the evolutionary and active genomics of sexual dimorphism Druzofla. She uses Druzofla As a model and hires transgender and genomic experimental perspectives, connecting data and bio -information analyzes. She is dedicated to the community of scientists working on biological sex in both the model and developing model system, and has been involved in organizing workshops and sessions in the area for many years, focusing on providing opportunities to junior scientists. She also contributes to numerous programs that provide educational experiences, training and research opportunities to students of graduate, undergraduate and K -12, emphasizing computational biology, evolution and genetics, which expands science to a broader community.

Eric Hag
G3 Associate Editor
Eric Hag is a biology professor at the evolutionary development biology and the University of Maryland, College Park (UMD). He received his PhD from Oberlen College Biology (and another in music), and from Indiana University, Bloomington. His graduate work with Evo Devo Panier Rudolph Raaf identified changes in the expression of genes associated with the evolution of direct development in the Helcedaris Marine Archeon. As Jean Cofin Childs Post Post Post with Judith Blanket at Medicine University of Wisconsin, he recently examined another produced reproductive strategy. C Elugins And others cenorhabditis Nematodes. This work is the focus of its lab in the UMD, and has worked in several species with sexual growth and the genetic analysis of the sexual development and the genetic analysis of the population as well as the genetics and comparative genomics of the population. Administratively, he served as Director of the Biological Sciences Graduate Program of UMD from 2020. At the end of 2024 he published a book on the deep evolutionary history of sexual production for curious people, The second big bang (Columbia University Press)

Arun Sethorman
G3 Senior Editor
Arun Setroman is a genetic expert in the theoretical and used population that develops new data, software and pipeline to evaluate evolutionary history from large population genomic data. His lab at San Diego State University is particularly interested in structural population genomics, which, in the presence of genomic data, has the progress of the ongoing procedure to estimate the population structure, the introduction of the associated natural selection vs. Inclasses, the introduction of archeology, and the archeology.
His lab recently developed includes PPP, speaking, demographics, inlets, IMA 2P, Coal Manner, and Methyl Mapper. Its lab is also currently working on numerous applied genomics projects for the study of domestic evolutionary history in hips (Humols Loopolis L), which is the genocide and agricultural pesticides of the attack on the introduced beneficial pests (such as cocaineed burning) and agricultural pests. Poly Plyde with continuity. His lab has been supported by NSF (Carrier-2021, ABI-2016, Reu-2016), USDA-NIFA (Reeu-2017, HSI-2022), US-DOE (2025), and NIH (R15-2022).

Varina Gentsh
Jenetics Senior Editor
Varina Janets-Palinger studied biochemistry at Vienna University. He served as his diploma and PhD at Washington’s Carnegie Institution under Andrew Fire supervision, and obtained a PhD degree in 1993 at Vienna University. He was awarded the famous Professor of Berta Carlack at Vienna University in Vienna in 2012 and at Vienna University and is currently a professor of Ukrait Genetics at Vienna University.
He has long been interested in understanding the cell division and chromosome separation method. With its fellow workers, this is aimed at understanding the processes that contribute to the correct chromosome separation during the mutic cell division program, excellent forward and reverse genetics, simple cytological observation of all mutual stages, and animal transparency made semiatoids. Canorbditis Eligans An excellent model system to study.
N-Rokandra Karunis from Pittsburgh and ETH Zuric University, UMASS China Medical School, Versester
Welcome Serious Institute, and Leopold Parts of Hancston
Michael Brent from Washington University in St. Louis will join the Associate Editors of this year’s end (and next).