We are searching for a graduate student to take on a multi-faceted project 
studying invertebrate 
communities responding to different fuels-management techniques in the Tahoe 
basin of the 
Sierra Nevada.  The student would be a part of the Ecology, Evolution and 
Conservation Biology 
graduate program at the University of Nevada, Reno, and would be advised by 
Matt Forister 
(Biology Dept.), also working closely with Pat Manley (USFS, Sierra Nevada 
Research Center) and 
Dennis Murphy (Biology Dept.).

Specific questions to be addressed by the student would include the following: 
(1) How do ant 
communities respond to different forest-management techniques? and (2) What are 
the relative 
responses of ants and butterflies to the experimental treatments?  Other 
questions to be pursued 
could be crafted by the student in collaboration with advisors.  These 
questions will be answered 
with a combination of previously collected data and data to be collected by the 
student. 

Funding is available in the form of research-assistant stipends for 2 years.  
After 2 years, TAships 
are available, and we expect opportunities to apply for additional funding.  
The student would start 
the graduate program in the Fall of 2010.  However, it is essential that field 
work start this coming 
summer.  The timing and extent of that field work (for the 2010 season) is 
flexible, and could be a 
few weeks or a few months, depending on the availability of the candidate.

The ideal candidate will have the following qualities:

1) Experience with multivariate, community analyses.
2) An ability and a desire to work independently both in the field and in the 
lab.
3) Either experience with invertebrates (particularly ants) or the ability to 
learn species-level 
identification of insect taxa.
4) Good data management skills. 

Please send a cover letter and CV, as well contact information (names, 
affiliations, and email 
addresses) for three professional references by email to Matt Forister 
([email protected]).  In the 
cover letter, please comment on the qualities mentioned above for the ideal 
candidate.  Also state 
availability for field work this coming summer.

For more details on the study system see: Sanford et al. (2008) Effects of 
Urban Development on 
Ant Communities: Implications for Ecosystem Services and Management. 
Conservation Biology 
23:131-141; and Heckmann et al. (2008) Ecological integrity of remnant montane 
forests along an 
urban gradient in the Sierra Nevada. Forest Ecology & Management 255:2453-2466.

For more details on the graduate group, 
see http://www.mojave.unr.edu/eecb/new/index.php. 
 Also see my lab 
website: http://web.me.com/mforister/GreatBasinBugLab/Home.html.

Sincerely,
Matt Forister

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