The Pinsky Lab at Rutgers University (http://pinsky.marine.rutgers.edu)
expects to hire two postdoctoral scholars in fall 2014 and is seeking
outstanding candidates to study the responses of marine species and
fisheries to climate change using long-term ecological, social, and
environmental datasets. The research aims to quantify species distribution
change across North American continental shelves, determine the impacts of
climate change and variability on these patterns, and understand how these
changes interact with fisheries and fisheries management.

The first position is designed to help understand the dynamics of marine
social-ecological fisheries systems as they adapt to climate change and
variability. The position will focus in particular on analyzing the
cumulative impacts of climate and fishing on marine populations over the
past half century as part of an interdisciplinary team of natural and
social scientists. The second position will aim to understand the impacts
of climate change and variability on fish and other marine species in the
southeast U.S. while also communicating and collaborating with regional
fisheries stakeholders and managers to develop effective long-term
conservation and management strategies.

**Qualifications**
The ideal candidates will have a Ph.D. in ecology or related field, a
strong background in statistics using R, excellent written and oral
communication abilities, a promising record of publication, and evidence of
creativity and enthusiasm. Experience with Bayesian analysis and MCMC
processes is a strength for the cumulative impacts position. Experience in
the southeast U.S. and experience with the fisheries management process is
a strength for candidates interested in the southeast U.S. position.

**Application process**
The positions are open until filled. Interested candidates should send an
email describing their research interests and qualifications along with a
CV and two representative publications to Malin Pinsky (
[email protected]). The positions are expected to begin in October
2014.

**Rutgers University**
Situated in New Jersey, a crossroads of American enterprise, commerce, and
culture, Rutgers has a vibrancy that derives from its location and a
history entwined with that of the nation. Chartered in 1766, the university
is the only one in the United States that is, at once, a colonial college,
a land-grant institution, and a state university. Located within an easy
drive of New York City, there are nonetheless an exceptionally wide array
of marine, freshwater, and terrestrial ecosystems nearby. Within a single
day, one can visit and study habitats of the continental shelf, estuaries,
barrier islands, coastal plains, the piedmont, Precambrian highlands, and
ridge and valley geological provinces.

Ecology at Rutgers has a long and distinguished history, and the graduate
program consists of approximately 70 faculty and 95 graduate students. The
program offers graduate education and training in microbial, plant, animal,
and human ecology under the direction of an outstanding faculty, including
at two marine stations. Members of the faculty actively pursue research in
conservation biology, ecosystem ecology, evolutionary biology, marine
biology, microbial ecology, population and community ecology, population
genetics, and restoration ecology.

The Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences serves as the hub for research
programs in marine and coastal sciences and provides a focus for the
education of marine scientists. The Institute is housed in a state-of
the-art research building that includes seawater, morphometrics, molecular
biology, remote sensing, ocean modeling and cartography laboratories. The
Marine Field Station in Tuckerton operates year-round and is uniquely
situated across from the Little Egg Inlet in the Mullica River-Great Bay
estuary, one of the most pristine estuaries on the east coast.

Malin Pinsky
Assistant Professor
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources
Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences
Rutgers University
New Brunswick, NJ 08901
USA

http://pinsky.marine.rutgers.edu
[email protected]

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