Dear Marmammers,

High-resolution monitoring of marine vertebrates in changing polar oceans with 
eDNA, NERC GW4+ DTP PhD studentship for 2023 Entry, PhD in Biosciences. Ref: 
4589

Join a dynamic group of bioscientists, geneticists and cetacean biologists at 
Exeter in the southwest of the UK. We are seeking a highly motivated PhD 
candidate for an exciting collaboration between the University of Exeter (Dr 
Adam Monier and Dr Kirsten Thompson), British Antarctic Survey (Dr Jennifer 
Jackson) and Greenpeace Research Laboratories (Exeter; Dr Kirsten Thompson).

Full information on the project and how to apply: 
https://www.exeter.ac.uk/study/funding/award/?id=4589

Project Background:

Climate change is particularly pronounced in the polar regions, precipitating 
widespread range shifts, invasions of new species and losses of others. These 
changes present significant challenges for conservation of marine vertebrates; 
thus a suite of biomonitoring strategies is required to help manage marine 
resources and monitor biodiversity. Furthermore, polar regions provide extreme 
and expensive field conditions for researchers with many understudied species 
and a dearth of knowledge on ecosystem functioning.

Monitoring methods such as visual survey, bioacoustics, and biologging are 
spatially limited and expensive, often requiring extensive ship time and expert 
knowledge. In many cases, they also do not provide high-resolution taxonomic 
classification and are not effective in evaluating taxonomically cryptic, 
elusive or undescribed species. Environmental DNA (eDNA) monitoring is one 
strategy that could provide a rapid, non-invasive tool to characterise polar 
vertebrate biodiversity. Routinely used in, for example, freshwater ecology, 
eDNA is currently an underdeveloped method for monitoring marine animals. 
Current eDNA-based methods focus on cataloguing taxa, but rarely generate 
information on intraspecific community diversity or resilience, nor are they 
developed for systematic monitoring.

Recent expeditions by Greenpeace, in collaboration with SPYGEN 
(www.spygen.com<http://www.spygen.com>) and the University of Montpellier 
(France), collected 100+ samples from polar regions generating mitochondrial 
12S sequence datasets for mammals, teleosts and elasmobranchs. The student will 
analyse these samples and generate bioinformatic pipelines and protocols that 
will help to provide the next step in eDNA monitoring  for marine ecosystem 
characterisation and conservation.

Project Aims and Methods:

The student will use bioinformatic procedures based on sequence-level 
classification to maximise the utility of eDNA datasets for biomonitoring to 
inform the future implementation of eDNA biomonitoring in relation to marine 
biodiversity management. The PhD student will:

  *   Further develop a bioinformatics pipeline to classify eDNA sequence 
datasets to examine polar communities at the population level (instead of basic 
cataloguing at the species, genus and family levels) and use the recovered 
phylogenetic signal to measure intra- and intercommunity diversity as captured 
by eDNA sampling.
  *   Take advantage of available molecular sequence databases, e.g. Genbank 
(www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank<http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank>) and 
generated by Tara Ocean Expeditions 
(www.oceans.taraexpeditions.org<http://www.oceans.taraexpeditions.org>) to 
investigate trophic links between vertebrates and phyto- and zooplankton 
community diversity.
  *   Feedforward results to web-based platforms to visually represent the 
geographical and temporal distribution of such diversity for better interfacing 
with end-user management needs.
  *   Use existing portable DNA sequencing equipment to trial field protocols 
that integrate real-time eDNA sequencing and bioinformatic web-based frameworks.

Candidate requirements

We seek a highly motivated and independent candidate with a background in 
molecular ecology, phylogenetics and bioinformatics and an interest in further 
developing these with support. Skills and knowledge of GIS, web design and 
statistics are also preferred. Experience in molecular laboratory and field 
work are desirable but not essential.

For informal inquiries contact: Adam Monier, 
a.mon...@exeter.ac.uk<mailto:a.mon...@exeter.ac.uk> and Kirsten Thompson, 
k.f.thomp...@exeter.ac.uk<mailto:k.f.thomp...@exeter.ac.uk> Send us your CV, we 
would love to hear from you if you think you might be interested in this 
research.

Kind regards,

Kirsten



Dr Kirsten Thompson
Pronouns<http://www.exeter.ac.uk/media/universityofexeter/communicationservices/documents/UoE_Pronoun_Guidance.pdf>:
 she/her
Lecturer in Ecology
University of Exeter
Mob: +44 (0)7841695569
Staff profile: 
Biosciences<https://biosciences.exeter.ac.uk/staff/profile/index.php?web_id=Kirsten_Thompson>
Hatherly Laboratories, Prince of Wales Rd, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4PS
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