How Molecular Ecologists Work: Tatiana Giraud is all about the paper (agendas/lists)

Welcome to “How Molecular Ecologists Work”, the interview series that asks scientists how they get stuff done.
This week’s interview is from Dr. Tatiana Giraud. Tatiana and her group focus on the wide world of fungi, asking questions about their evolution, speciation, and relationship with humans.


Location: Orsay, France
Current Position: CNRS (National Center for Scientific Research) scientist
Current mobile device(s): LG G3
Current computer(s): Dell Optiplex 755 and HP EliteBook 820
What kind of research do you?
I am studying diverse aspects of ecology and evolution using fungi as models: diversification (domestication of cheese and salami fungi and speciation of host-specialized pathogens), mating-systems and mating-type chromosomes, biological invasions, cooperation and competition, and the genomics of adaptation.
Can you use one word to describe the way you work?
Happily
What specific strategies do you recommend for running (or establishing) a lab?
Work on what you love and love what you’re working on; work with people who make you enjoy working; prioritize the tasks on which other people depend on (especially students and post-docs); start preparing grants, papers, reviews, courses etc long before deadlines to have enough time to do the best you can; don’t listen to people who say you can’t do it; say no to all meetings or tasks that are not really important for at least one colleague you care about; identify strengths in people and make them have their best use of them.

What apps/software/language/tools can’t you work without (Python, Dropbox, Geneious, etc.)?
Thunderbird and JMP
Where do you work with data (personal computer, lab computers, cluster, etc.)?
Personal computer
Besides your phone and computer, what gadget can’t you live without and why?
Paper agenda and paper to-do lists
What part of your job do you spend the most time on in a week?
Answering emails and writing

What part do you wish you had more time for?
Reading papers
What is your best time-saving shortcut/lifehack?
Paper agenda and paper to-do lists
How do you stay organized (to-do lists, digital reminders, etc.)?
Paper agenda and paper to-do lists (several of them, sorted by order of urgency/importance and regularly updated)
What do you listen to while you’re working (music, kids yelling, the hum of a supercomputer)?
As little noise as possible

What do you do to recharge outside of science?
Family time, swimming, binge series watching with my husband
What are you currently reading?
Paper agenda and paper to-do lists
What is your sleep routine like?
22pm-6am
Fill in the blank: I’d like to see _______ answer these questions.
My students
What’s the best career advice you’ve received?
You’re not good enough to work on animals, work on fungi instead
Thanks Tatiana! Next week: Dr. Craig Primmer from the University of Helsinki!

This entry was posted in career, interview and tagged . Bookmark the permalink.