Internship: Remote sensing of tropical forest change

Project Description:
Neotropical forests are changing in biomass, productivity, and community 
composition, in part due 
to human disturbance. The changes are of global consequence, as neotropical 
forests account for 
the largest terrestrial share of carbon uptake from the atmosphere. Lianas 
(woody vines) influence 
tropical forest dynamics by reducing tree growth and reproduction, and 
increasing tree mortality. 
Recently, tropical liana abundance and biomass has increased in tropical forest 
surveys, while trees 
have increased relatively less or declined. This research project aims to 
develop a method to detect 
liana canopy cover at the landscape scale, quantify its extent, and verify 
whether it has increased 
over recent decades. The project utilizes a combination of satellite- and 
aircraft-based remote 
sensing imagery linked to a ground-based forest census to quantify liana 
abundance in a young 
tropical forest in Panama.

Internship Description:
Interns will have the opportunity to work closely with a PhD student to carry 
out a major research 
project. The work will involve setting up a network of small forest census 
plots. The intern will learn 
to survey and mark forest census plot boundaries, identify lianas, measure 
liana and tree size, 
estimate liana canopy cover, and other data collection. The intern will also 
learn to use survey-grade 
GPS instrumentation, and will learn remote sensing field verification 
techniques. The study is being 
conducted in forests in central Panama managed by the Smithsonian Tropical 
Research Institute 
(STRI). Interns will have a chance to interact/network with graduate students, 
postdoctoral 
researchers, and staff scientists from STRI on a weekly basis. Interns will 
also have the opportunity to 
attend weekly research seminars at STRI. Apply to be a part of the world’s 
leading tropical research 
community today!

Qualifications:
Ability to work long days in the field under tropical conditions (intense heat, 
humidity, rain, sun, 
biting/stinging insects). Background in biology or ecology and Spanish language 
experience are 
preferred but not required. This position is intended for current or recent 
undergraduate students 
looking to gain tropical field research skills, therefore stipend will be 
commensurate with previous 
experience and background. Internship starts early July and will run through 
the end of August. 

Please send cover letter (including earliest start date) and resume (with 
references) to Dave Marvin, 
[email protected]. See also: http://www-personal.umich.edu/~marvs/index.html.

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