Fixed term for 24 months, available from 1 February 1 2013

This post is part of the NERC funded project ‘Niche Evolution of South American 
Trees and its 
Consequences’. The project aims to make a fundamental advance in our knowledge 
of the 
processes that have created patterns of diversity in the tropics by gaining a 
better understanding 
of the evolutionary timing and rate of biome switching in plant lineages. Such 
patterns of biome 
switching are not only of interest for studies of plant diversification, but 
also have far-reaching 
implications for understanding forest ecology and the conservation of 
evolutionary (phylogenetic) 
diversity as a result of land-use or climate change.

The project focuses on the rain forest, seasonally dry forest and savanna 
biomes of South America, 
and the postdoc will take a leading role in fieldwork, data generation, data 
analysis and paper-
writing. 

The project aims to:

•       integrate plot and community survey data from all three biomes from a 
wide variety of 
sources to create a dataset of floristic composition unparalleled in its 
ecological breadth and detail, 
spanning ~1300 sites. We will work at on all tree genera and at the species 
level in Leguminosae 
(the legume family) across all plots
•       quantify the climatic and edaphic niches of: (i) all adequately sampled 
genera; and (ii) all 
adequately sampled species of Leguminosae
•       reconstruct phylogenetic relationships of: (i) all genera found at all 
inventory sites in all 
biomes; and (ii) of species of Leguminosae found at >10 plots across all 
biomes, using existing 
and de novo sequence data

These datasets will then be used to understanding the timing, rate and nature 
of biome switching 
and niche evolution in South American trees.

You will have a completed or soon to be completed (by start of the post) PhD 
with a background in 
plant evolution, systematics, ecology, or biogeography. You will need to have 
fieldwork experience 
and good skills in quantitative scientific methods, allied to good 
communication skills. An ability to 
work in an international team will also be needed, along with some level of 
fluency in Spanish 
and/or Portuguese. 

The work will be based in the UK at Leeds (first 9 months) and Edinburgh 
(subsequent 15 months) 
although you will work closely with all partners involved in the project in 
Brazil, Peru and Bolivia. 
The first part of the post will focus mainly on fieldwork and data collection 
and the second part 
principally on data analysis and writing.

Further details concerning the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh can be found at 
http://www.rbge.org.uk/ and for the School of Geography, University of Leeds 
at: 
www.geog.leeds.ac.uk.

Salary £31,000- £34,000 p.a. 

Informal enquiries may be made to Prof Toby Pennington 
([email protected]; +44 (0)131 
248 2818), Dr Kyle Dexter ([email protected], +44 (0) 131 248 2964) and/or Dr 
Tim Baker 
([email protected] +44 (0)113 343 8352).

A job description and person specification can be downloaded from 
www.rbge.org.uk/about-
us/vacancies.

To apply, please send a covering letter explaining your suitability for the 
post and a CV as well as a 
completed equal opportunities questionnaire to the HR Team at The Royal Botanic 
Garden 
Edinburgh, 20a Inverleith Row, Edinburgh, EH3 3LR or by e-mail to at 
[email protected]. 
Applications should be received no later than Monday, 17 December 2012.

If you have not heard from us by 31 January 2013, please assume your 
application has been 
unsuccessful. No recruitment agencies please.

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