GRADUATE STUDIES IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION AT EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
 
The Department of Biology at East Carolina University (the third largest
campus in the North Carolina University System) invites inquiries and
applications from prospective graduate students for Fall 2009. We have
an active and well-supported group of faculty in Ecology and Evolution
and will guarantee accepted PhD students (to the Interdisciplinary
Doctoral Program in Biological Sciences) at least two years of support
with no teaching obligations and at least five years of support total,
at a very competitive level. We also offer two MS programs (with
TA-ships readily available) and participate in ECU's PhD program in
Coastal Resources Management.

Situated in the attractive and affordable community of Greenville, we
are in easy reach of North Carolina's Research Triangle (including the
National Evolutionary Synthesis Center) as well as the diverse natural
communities of the Coastal Plain and the Outer Banks. Thus excellent
opportunities exist for collaboration and to work in terrestrial,
aquatic, wetland and marine systems. A readily available 454 sequencer
at ECU's Brody School of Medicine facilitates genomic research. Travel
is convenient through Raleigh-Durham International Airport and our
faculty are engaged in research on every continent but Antarctica.
 
Please visit http://www.ecu.edu/biology/ to find out more about our
department, faculty and graduate programs.

Review of graduate applications generally begins in March (though the
formal deadline is later).
  
Our Ecology and Evolution faculty include:

Jason Bond: Arthropod systematics.
Mark Brinson: Wetland restoration ecology, ecosystem ecology.
David Chalcraft: Population and community ecology; ecological aspects of
biodiversity.
Robert Christian: Systems and network theory; ecology of coastal
ecosystems.
Lisa Clough: Marine benthic ecology (Arctic and Atlantic).
Carol Goodwillie: Plant mating system evolution.
Jinling Huang: Evolutionary genomics, bioinformatics; horizontal gene
transfer.
Claudia Jolls: Evolutionary ecology and breeding systems of plants.
Dave Kimmel: Plankton ecology.
Trip Lamb: Systematics and phylogeography.
Joe Luczkovich: Food web ecology and fish bioacoustics.
Jeff McKinnon: Sexual selection, speciation in fish.
Sue McRae: Behavioral ecology and social evolution in birds.
Anthony Overton: Larval fish ecology, fisheries biology.
Enrique Reyes: Landscape ecology, ecological modeling, coastal
management.
Roger Rulifson: Fisheries Biology and management.
Jean-Luc Scemama: Fish evo-devo.
Matt Schrenk: Biofilm ecology, microbiology.
Ed Stellwag: Vertebrate evo-devo and cis-regulatory network evolution.
John Stiller: Plant comparative genomics.
Kyle Summers: Evolution of color, behavior in poison frogs; evolutionary
medicine.
Heather Vance-Chalcraft: Predation and community ecology.
Terry West:  Human impacts on coastal ecosystems.
Baohong Zhang: MicroRNA evolution, comparative genomics, and molecular
genetics.

In addition to visiting the websites, please contact prospective mentors
directly for more information, or graduate studies director Terry West:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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