Dear Colleagues:
Would you please bring the advertisement posted below to the attention of 
qualified applicants?
Thanks very much,
Kevin Gutzwiller


PhD Assistantship in Carnivore/Landscape Ecology

The Department of Biology at Baylor University seeks an outstanding PhD 
student to study the effects of climate change, roads, and land use on 
habitat quality and population connectivity for several carnivore species 
in the Northern Rocky Mountains region of the United States.

The project is a component of a long-term, multi-state, multi-agency study 
of carnivore habitat relationships, movement ecology, gene flow, and 
landscape genetics. Study species include the grizzly bear, black bear, 
wolf, wolverine, fisher, lynx, and American marten. Field methods will 
include large grids of non-invasive hair snares to collect genetic 
material from multiple species. Analytical methods will likely include 
occupancy modeling, multi-scale habitat modeling using logistic 
regression, individual-based landscape genetic analysis using distance-
based regression and causal modeling, and computer simulation of gene 
flow. The position provides up to five years of teaching assistantship 
funding at $15-21K per academic year (depending on qualifications) plus up 
to five years of summer salary at approximately $3-4K per summer. Tuition 
for 20 semester hours per year will be waived, and health insurance at a 
discounted price will be available. Housing at the field site will be 
provided during the summer field season.

Extensive experience with statistical analyses of ecological data, and 
proficiency in ArcGIS and the R statistical language, are required. The 
student must have a M.S. degree in a relevant field, and preference will 
be given to students who have published quantitative ecological research. 
Applicants with experience working in remote landscapes, and who have 
backcountry skills such as navigation with map and compass, use of a GPS, 
wilderness survival, and wilderness first aid, are preferred. To be 
competitive, applicants must have undergraduate and graduate GPAs > 3.4 
and a general GRE score > 1200. The student must have or acquire a valid 
US driver’s license. 

Applicants should create a single pdf that includes a letter of interest 
that specifically addresses the position’s qualifications and preferences, 
a resume, unofficial undergraduate and graduate transcripts, unofficial 
general GRE scores, and a list of three references and their contact 
information (institution, email address, phone number). This pdf should be 
sent to both Dr. Kevin Gutzwiller ([email protected]; 
http://bearspace.baylor.edu/Kevin_Gutzwiller/www/) and Dr. Sam Cushman 
([email protected]; 
http://www.fs.fed.us/rm/wildlife/genetics/cushman.htm) via an email with 
Carnivore–Landscape Ecology in the subject line. Screening of applicants 
will begin immediately and continue through the deadline of 8 December 
2011. Applications that do not include all of the requested information 
will not be reviewed. By mid January, Dr. Gutzwiller will invite the most 
qualified applicant to apply formally to the Ph.D. Program in Biology for 
the teaching assistantship. Admission and an offer of an assistantship are 
decided by the Baylor Graduate School and the Baylor Biology Graduate 
Committee. Information about the Department of Biology and Baylor 
University can be found at http://www.baylor.edu/biology/ and associated 
links.

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