Job Title: Ph.D. NSERC applications to work with the wild (feral) horses of 
Sable Island, Nova Scotia: focus on ecology and evolution and/or 
conservation.  



Location: University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada 



Closing: Will need to contact me by September 25, 2013 to put together an 
application for the October NSERC competition!!  I will be able to review 
applications then.



Apply: Email me a CV and pdf copies of both undergrad and graduate 
transcripts (unless interested in a post-doc, then only a CV is required).  
Email to [email protected].  Please write “Sable Island” as the 
subject line. 

 

Description: My lab is developing a long-term, individual-based program of 
research into the ecology and evolution of the feral horses living on Sable 
Island, Nova Scotia.  As part of this initiative, I am looking to recruit 
two NSERC-eligible Ph.D. students to ask fundamental questions of the 
population ecology, life history, behaviour, conservation, and evolution of 
the feral horse population.  I am particularly looking for mature M.Sc. 
students that are interested in developing a Ph.D. program that will 
contribute to and make use of the long-term data set my lab is collecting 
on the life histories of the horses on the island.  This summer was the 
sixth year of data collection, which includes summer censusing and 
identification of all individuals on the island using digital photography, 
and documentation of individual life histories with the goal of 
constructing whole-island pedigrees.  Sample sizes are large, with ~500 
horses alive on the island as at Aug 2013.  Ph.D. students with 2–3 years 
of further data collection will be in a position to ask interesting 
questions regarding individual-based dynamics, band dynamics and dispersal, 
behaviour and dominance, habitat selection, social networking, sex ratios 
and sexual selection, and questions involving traits such as body size and 
colouration patterns.  We are currently sampling for DNA (requires 
additional funding; rooted hairs are in storage for most individuals, as 
are fecal swabs) that may allow for collaborative questions on genetics and 
evolution, including paternity and pedigree construction. Trends in the 
above will likely be related to a very strong and interesting gradient in 
habitat quality along the length of Sable Island from west to east, 
associated with availability of preferred forage and access to fresh water 
(horse density drops by half from west to east). We are also very 
interested in students with a background in conservation biology. One of 
our current research themes examines the risks inherent to small 
populations like that on Sable, including inbreeding depression and 
demographic stochasticity. As the horse social system is similar to 
primates, there may be opportunities to examine the questions of effective 
population size on conservation prospects for the Sable Island horses, but 
also species like gorillas.



The important thing is that applicants will be mature enough to develop 
their own insightful questions of ecology and evolution, using the system 
we have access to on Sable Island as a model. That said, our lab is 
following several lines of research that potential students may want to 
build on.  Current students are studying or have studied spatial 
heterogeneity in horse population growth on the island, stress as it 
relates to band structure and dynamics from cortisol (from hair), 
parasites, dispersal, body size relationships, patterns in vegetation and 
successional dynamics, and spatial heterogeneity in isotopic signatures 
from vegetation samples and animal tissues to develop isoscapes from seal 
and seabird transfer of marine-derived nutrients onto the island.  
Opportunities to publish in good journals and set oneself up for a career 
in academia may be found here.  Field work will occur principally in late 
summer on Sable Island; further information on this field site can be found 
at my lab website, below, and at: http://sableislandfriends.ca/?p=594 .  
Students can expect to publish outside of one’s own thesis topic as part of 
whole-lab research questions.

 

Successful applicants will require a Canadian NSERC PGS 
scholarship/fellowship or other secured source of scholarship funding 
(e.g., if an international student).  At this time I am looking for 
eligible students (CANADIANS or permanent residents) that can apply this 
fall for an NSERC post-graduate scholarship or fellowship, to start in May 
2014.  Preference will be given to students that aspire to a career in 
academia and who have a track record that reflects this career goal.  In 
addition to obtaining scholarships, students will be expected to apply for 
and help secure research funding for their own projects.  Students and post-
docs with funding in-hand are always welcome.



Interested applicants should contact me asap by email 
([email protected]), and be prepared to submit a current CV with 
copies of transcripts (unless a post-doc, in which case only a CV is 
needed).  Website: http://mcloughlinlab.ca/lab/  

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