Dear all

[sorry for cross posting, nearest deadline of the differnt options is 
11/June for a thesis fellowship competition on "Responding to environmental 
change by leaving its ancestral niche: a recruitment problem?", see below]

This is to inform you about the opportunity to develop research with me and 
my collaborators at Rennes, using existing extensive data sets, well 
studied field settings and my support to put together a proposal for one of 
the multiple French/European/outside funding opportunities. I will below 
present (i) some of the data or field settings exploitable; (ii) a very 
incomplete list of possible research questions to be developed and for 
which databases or field setting would be available; (iii) the research 
environment at Rennes and Rennes per se; (iv) a list of different funding 
opportunities from the Rennes/French/European side - but you may have many 
others from your own locality/country/continent; (v) a list of my recent 
publications showing (hopefully) the competences in the field. 

Please do not hesitate to transmit or contact me if interested.

Best regards
Andreas Prinzing


(i) DATA and FIELD SETTINGS potentially available (data are in part 
assembled from freely available sources and any publication project will of 
course need to acknowledge these sources, many other data are available 
via/due to internal or external collaboration and any publication project 
will of course need to find the agreement of, and involve, these 
collaborators)
- descriptions of tens of thousands of local plant species communities
- niche requirements of most plant species from field measurements for an 
entire region (Netherlands)
- dated phylogeny of all Angiosperm plant species of an entire regional 
species pool resolved to at least genus level (Netherlands; > 500 genera)
- dozens of functional traits of many to all plant species of an entire 
regional pool (Central Eruope)
- composition of arthropod communities (oribatid mites, heteroptera, 
coleoptera, galls, lepidoptera, miners, parasitoid groups) of canopy trees, 
linked to measurements of soil biota (mycorrhiza and their activity, 
invertebrates, microbial biomass) and of biotic and abiotic environmental 
factors on the same trees, as well as the composition of the ambient forest 
canopy, notably the phylogenetic distance of the neighbours. 
- the trees from which many of the above data stem
- descendents of plants whose ancestors grew in different community 
neighbourhoods, and morphological and biochemical characterizations
- community compositions of plants, their ant mutualists, their services 
and the role of cheaters along environmental disturbance gradients 


(ii) Possible QUESTIONS to be developed with the data or field settings 
already available in my group. For some of them, projects are already 
written and can serve as a basis for proposal writing. Of course many other 
questions would be equally interesting and possible to develop, and again 
partly even with available data.***: 

- Microevolution on macroevolutionary islands: accelerated evolution of 
colonizers on phylogenetically isolated host trees?
- Leaving its ancestral niche to respond to environmental change: a problem 
of recruitment limitation?
- Does phylogenetic heritage of different vegetation types control 
decomposer assembly and decomposition?
- Does phylogenetic heritage of different vegetation types control 
productivity? 
- Is niche conservatism a blessing under environmental change due increased 
evolution of hybrids? Is it a blessing due to improved nutrient cycling in 
communities composed of closely related species?
- How does plant neighbourhood influence plant traits? 
- What are the steps involved in the expression of local adaptation? 
- How does patch age and patch isolation control community assembly in the 
canopy? 
- What is the role of phenotypic integration for the response to 
environmental change? 



(iii) The host lab here is the UNITE MIXTE DE RECHERCHE (UMR) ECOBIO - 
ECOSYSTEMES , BIODIVERSITE , EVOLUTION, co-funded by  University of Rennes 
1 and Centre National de la Recherche  Scientifique, is a large institution 
with several dozen CNRS-researchers, docents and professors, plus technical 
staff. See http://ecobio.univ-rennes1.fr/.  Ecobio was ranked A in the 
national evaluation of research institutions. Ecobio has particular 
expertise in Integrative Ecology, such as: mechanisms of speciation, life 
history evolution, and adaptation, expertise at the interface between 
macroevolution and macroecology, expertise in ecophysiology, landscape 
ecology and behavioral ecology, environmental genomics (very strong), 
community assembly and plant/herbivore interactions. Among others, Ecobio 
has given itself a Research Axis on "Species communities: assembly rules, 
evolutionary diversification, ecosystem functioning" (animated by A. 
Prinzing). Several further research institutions in ecology and 
evolutionary biology exist at Rennes. 

Note that we are well equipped with analytical labs, servers etc. and to 
some degree technical personnel and have space and do not charge for this 
(except, inevitably, for consumables such as chemicals). 

RENNES has approximately 200 000 inhabitants and is the capitol of the 
Bretagne region with exceptional coastal and mainland landscapes, and a 
french-celtic heritage 
(http://www.bretagne.fr/internet/jcms/TF071112_5061/tourisme). It is 
situated some 2 hours by train from Paris. English is spoken everywhere in 
Academia, but not necessarily outside, and French should be learned. Like 
in any French city, child care is excellent (almost for free, no waiting 
list, nearby). Several bilingual French-English schools are available at 
all levels of education, as well as one French-German grammar school.

Note that the university has personnel to technically and administratively 
facilitate the settling of a foreign researcher.


(iv) Incomplete list of FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES from Rennes/France/Europe - I 
can help in putting together proposals
- competition for funding of PhD projects at Rennes doctoral school, see 
http://www.vas.univ-rennes1.fr/fr/Concours_annuel/Profils/Ecologie/, 
project 98: "Responding to environmental change by leaving its ancestral 
niche: a recruitment problem?", deadline June 11 (http://www.vas.univ-
rennes1.fr/en/home/competitive-admission-process/Calendar/) 
- invited PhD student positions at Rennes (calls in spring and autumn)
- invited docent positions at Rennes (calls in autumn)
- chairs of excellence funded by different French funding bodies, with 
calls in autumn (preparation should start now) or winter
- fellowships for students from emerging and/or French speaking countries 
e.g. http://www.egide.asso.fr/jahia/Jahia/accueil/appels/eiffel  (call in 
winter)
- exchange fellowships covering travels and mostly quite restricted stays 
see http://www.egide.asso.fr/jahia/Jahia/accueil/appels/phc
- exchange programs with stays of longer durations e.g. with Argentina, 
Brasil, S/SE/E-Asia (call in June), China: 
http://www.egide.asso.fr/jahia/Jahia/accueil/appels/houssay , 
http://www.egide.asso.fr/jahia/Jahia/accueil/appels/cofecub , 
http://www.egide.asso.fr/jahia/Jahia/site/egide/lang/fr/caiyuanpei, 
http://www.diplomatie.gouv.fr/fr/enjeux-internationaux/echanges-
scientifiques-recherche/partenariats-scientifiques-20601/partenariats-
scientifiques-20152/article/technologies-de-l-information-et, Number 3795 
at http://en.univ-toulouse.fr/research/phd-programs
- fellowships from the European Union, both for postdocs residing in 
Europe, Europeans residing outside of Europe, and (quite advanced) non-
Europeans residing outside of Europe (deadline in August, preparation 
should start now). see http://ec.europa.eu/research/mariecurieactions/ 




(v) recent PUBLICATIONS
+  macroecology / macroevolution
* population ecology / microevolution
° community ecology / functional aspects of biodiversity ^ applied ecology 
(note that implications to conservation biology are also discussed in most 
other papers)

+   ^ Ozinga, W., Colles, A., Hennion, F., Poschlod, P., Bartish, I., 
Hermant, M. & Prinzing, A. Specialists leave less descendants within a 
region than generalists. In press in Global Ecology and Biogeography, 
[Impact factor (2010) 5.3; Impact factor rank: 10/129 in “Ecology”].

+     Hermant M., Hennion F., Bartish I.V. &  Prinzing A. Disparate 
relatives: life histories vary more in genera occupying intermediate 
environments. In press in Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and 
Systematics [4.5; 13/188 in “Plant Sciences”].

+° ^  Mouquet, N., Devictor, V., Meynard, C.N., Munoz, M., Bersier, L.-F., 
Chave, J. Couteron, P., Dalecky, A., Fontaine, C., Gravel, D., Hardy, O.J., 
Jabot, F. Lavergne, S. Leibold, M., Mouillot, D., Münkemüller, T. Pavoine, 
S., Prinzing, A., Rodrigues, A.S.L., Rohr, R.P., Thébault, E., & Thuiller, 
W. (in press) Ecophylogenetics: advances and perspectives. Biological 
Reviews. [6.5; 2/86 in “Biology”]

+*    Hennion F., Bouchereau A., Gauthier C., Brumbt C., Hermant M. & 
Prinzing A. 2012. Variation in amine composition in plant species: how it 
integrates macroevolutionary and environmental signals. American Journal of 
Botany, 99(1): 36–45 [3.1; 27/188 in “Plant Sciences”]

  ° Yan, B., Zhang, J., Liu, Y., Li, Z. Huang, X. Yang, W. & Prinzing, A. 
(in press) Trait assembly of woody plants in communities across subalpine 
gradients: Identifying the role of limiting similarity within a guild. 
Journal of Vegetation Science. [2.5; 39/188 in “Plant Sciences”]

*° Yguel, B., Bailey, R.; Everhart, D.; Vialatte, A., Vasseur, C., Vitrac, 
X. & Prinzing, A. (2011). Phytophagy on phylogenetically isolated trees: 
why hosts should escape their relatives. Ecology Letters, 14, 1117–1124 
[15.3; 1/129 in “Ecology”]

+ ° Kattge, J. and 133 others (in press) TRY – a global database of plant 
traits. Global Change Biology [6.3; 6/129 in “Ecology”]

+   ^ Gerhold, P., Pärtel, M., Tackenberg, O., Hennekens, S.M., Bartish, 
I.V., Schaminée, J.H.J., Fergus, A.J.F. Ozinga, W.A., & Prinzing, A. 
(2011). Phylogenetically poor plant communities receive more alien species, 
which more easily coexist with natives. American Naturalist, 177, 668-680 
[4.7; 17/129 in “Ecology”]

+°   Bartish, I., Hennekens S., Aidoud A., Hennion, F. & Prinzing, A. 
(2010). Species pools along contemporary environmental gradients represent 
different levels of diversification. Journal of Biogeography, 37, 2317-2331 
[4.3; 24/129 in “Ecology”]

°* Vialatte, A., Bailey, R., Vasseur, C., Matocq, A., Goßner, M., Everhart, 
D., Vitrac, X., Belhadj, A., Ernoult, A.; & Prinzing, A. (2010) 
Phylogenetic isolation of host trees affects assembly of local Heteroptera 
communities. Proceedings of the Royal Society, Series B, 227, 2227-2236 
[5.1; 9/85 in “Biology”] 

+* ^ Colles, A., Liow, L.H. & Prinzing, A. (2009) Are specialists at risk 
under environmental change? – Neoecological, paleoecological and 
phylogenetic approaches. Ecology Letters, 8, 849 - 863 [15.3; 1/129 
in “Ecology”]

+° Goßner, M., Chao, A., Bailey, R. & Prinzing, A. (2009) Native fauna on 
exotic trees: Phylogenetic conservatism and geographic contingency in two 
lineages of phytophages on two lineages of trees. American Naturalist, 
173,599-614 [4.7; 17/129 in “Ecology”]

+   Ozinga, W.A., Römermann, C., Bekker, R.M., Prinzing, A., Tamis, W.L.M., 
Schaminee, J.H.J., Hennekens, S.M., Thompson, K., Poschlod, P., Kleyer M., 
Bakker, J.P. & van Groenendael, J.M.. (2009) Dispersal failure contributes 
to plant losses in NW Europe. Ecology Letters, 12, 66-74. [15.3; 1/129  
in “Ecology”]

*°  Jung, F., Böhning-Gaese, K. & Prinzing, A. (2008): Intermediate levels 
of habitat disturbance favour sexual  reproduction in the ant-dispersed 
clonal herb Ranunculus ficaria. Ecography, 6, 776 – 786 [4.4; 22/129 
in “Ecology”].

+ °^ Gerhold, P., Pärtel, M, Liira, J, Zobel, K. & Prinzing, A.  (2008): 
Species pool size and phylogenetic structure in ecological communities. 
Journal of Ecology, 96, 709-712. [5.3; 11/129 in “Ecology”].

+ °  Prinzing A., Reiffers, R., Braakhekke, W.G., Hennekens, S.M., 
Tackenberg, O., Ozinga, W.A., Schaminée, J.H.J. & van Groenendael, J.M. 
(2008): Less lineages – more trait variation: phylogenetically clustered 
plant communities are functionally more diverse. Ecology Letters, 11, 809–
819. [15.3; 1/129 in “Ecology”]. 

*°  Boedeltje, G., Ozinga, W.A.. & Prinzing, A. (2008): Diaspore pressure 
across landscapes: constrained by the trade-off between vegetative and 
generative reproduction? Global Ecology and Biogeography, 17, 50-58. [5.3; 
10/129 in “Ecology”].

+*°^ Filser, J., Koehler, H., Ruf, A., Römbke, J., Prinzing, A. & Schaefer, 
H. (2008): Ecological theory meets terrestrial ecotoxicology:a challenge 
and a chance. Basic and Applied Ecology, 9, 346-355. [2.2; 52/129 
in “Ecology”]

*°  Prinzing, A., Dauber, J., Hammer, E., & Böhning-Gaese, K.  (2008): Does 
an ant-dispersed plant, Viola reichenbachiana, suffer from reduced seed 
dispersal under inundation disturbances? Basic and Applied Ecology, 9, 108-
116. [2.2; 52/129 in “Ecology”]


++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Andreas Prinzing, Prof.
Ecology of Diversification 

Team "Structure and Dynamics of Diversity"
Research Unit "Ecobio" :  Ecosystems - Biodiversity - Evolution Université 
Rennes 1 / Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique Campus de Beaulieu, 
Bâtiment 14 A
35042 Rennes, France
Tel : +33 2 23 23 67 12; fax: +33 2 23 23 50 26 andreas.prinzing@univ-
rennes1.fr http://ecobio.univ-rennes1.fr http://ecobio.univ-
rennes1.fr/Fiches_perso/Banque/publi1_APrinzing.doc

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