Postdoctoral research fellow (1):
The Division of Forestry and Natural Resources at West Virginia University is 
searching for a postdoctoral research fellow to participate in a funded project 
to develop and implement acoustic, telemetry, genetic and toxicological studies 
of King and Clapper Rails in eastern Virginia. Applicants with a PhD or near to 
finishing may be considered in any of these fields of study and the selection 
process will rely on finding students with a skill set that matches well with 
other team members. A basic description of the project is below; interested 
candidates with substantial experience in at least one of these fields should 
send a cover letter, cv and the names of three references to the three 
following faculty:

Dr. James Anderson, [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Dr. Todd Katzner, [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Dr. Amy Welsh, [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Distribution, differentiation and hybridization of king and clapper rails in 
eastern Virginia. King Rails and Clapper Rails are in the Virginia Wildlife 
Action Plan and can be sympatric in areas of intermediate salinity in eastern 
Virginia. However, surveying for these species is challenging, as their calls 
are similar, they overlap in distribution, and because they can hybridize. 
Addressing conservation efforts toward the higher-priority king rail requires 
reliable information on its status, distribution, abundance and habitat use.  
This in turn requires a methodology to reliably identify the species in the 
field or through post-field analysis of the data collected.  The overarching 
goal of this project is to develop and implement a mechanism to survey for, 
identify and estimate distribution and abundance of allopatric and sympatric 
breeding populations of king, clapper and hybrid rails in Virginia.

This project will address the problem of distinguishing between king and 
clapper rails by ear by drawing on links between acoustic monitoring, genetics, 
morphology and ecology.  Rails will be captured in the field and genetic, 
morphometric and toxicology samples will be taken from all rails captured. 
Captured rails will also be used as a foundation for telemetry and acoustic 
monitoring studies. The specific goals of our project are to:

  *   Identify the distribution and abundance of king-clappers complex of 
species and hybrids.
  *   Characterize habitat associations at multiple spatial scales of each of 
these species and their hybrids.
  *   Develop acoustic and morphological mechanisms to identify king, clapper 
and hybrid rails.
  *   Evaluate genetic distinctness of each species and their hybrids.
  *   Evaluate contaminant loads (mercury and lead especially) and correlates 
of contaminant loads in rails in Virginia.

Position is open until filled.  The tentative starting date is August 2014.  
Salary is competitive and depends on experience.

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