Dear listers, 

A doctoral position is available to work on the phylogenetics and 
phylogeography of petrels at the University of La Rochelle, France. Work will 
take place in the CEBC (http://www.cebc.cnrs.fr/GB_index.htm) and LIENSS 
(http://lienss.univ-larochelle.fr/?lang=en) laboratories. For detailed 
information, please visit: https://epante.wordpress.com/opportunities/

Best regards, 
Eric Pante
University of La Rochelle


Context:

The phylogeography of many seabird species remains poorly known. They are 
highly mobile organisms supposedly free from geographical barriers to 
dispersal, which should theoretically prevent population differentiation 
through isolation. However, population differentiation within a species can be 
significant despite high mobility (Friesen et al. 2007). Many species of 
seabirds are highly philopatric, partially or completely removing the effects 
of dispersion. Petrels (family Procellariidae) are among those species. Despite 
a large number ecological studies on petrels, little is known of their 
phylogenetic relationships and their phylogeography, and many taxonomic issues 
are yet to be resolved.

The overall objective of the proposed project is to study the phylogenetic and 
phylogeographic characteristics of the Procellariidae to better describe their 
current distribution, and attempt to characterize the population 
differentiation processes that took place among species in this family. From a 
large collection of field and museum samples (genetic samples of nearly 4,000 
individuals from 44 different species; morphological data from 12,000 museum 
specimens already available) and behavioral data (vocalization data for most 
species), the aim of this PhD project will be to improve our understanding of 
procellariid evolution and biogeography by selecting a few emblematic case 
studies (eg. Speciation radiation in the genus Pterodroma; species complex or 
super species in either Pterodromaor Puffinus) and by expanding already 
available data sets. For instance, whether retained ancestral genetic variation 
is masking contemporary barriers to gene flow, and how past population 
bottleneck contribute to contemporary genetic structure, could be evaluated 
using coalescent-based methods. This work will be strongly anchored in 
conservation biology, since half of the petrel species are currently threatened.

The successful applicant with work with Vincent Bretagnolle at the “Centre 
d’Etudes Biologiques de Chizé” (CEBC) and Eric Pante at the “Littoral, 
Environnement et Sociétés” laboratory (LIENSs). The CEBC is a dynamic research 
environment focusing on the ecology of wild animals in their natural habitat; 
LIENSs is a one-of-a-kind multi-disciplinary lab which researchers (biologists, 
chemists, geologists, historians…) interact to better understand the littoral 
environment. Both are research units of the University of La Rochelle and the 
CNRS. 

Applicants should have:

- a masters degree in a relevant field
- experience with molecular laboratory techniques
- molecular work on museum samples will be a must
- experience with phylogenetics and phylogeography, and excellent background 
knowledge in evolutionary biology below, at, and above the species level
We are looking for a highly motivated individual eager to work in a group 
setting, but capable of autonomous work. The envisioned project will make use 
of a unique collection of rare Petrel tissue samples, and we are therefore 
looking for someone skilled in the lab, tenacious, and able to trouble-shoot 
problems with museum samples.

How to apply:

Please send, as requested by the Graduate School at the University of La 
Rochelle:
- a filled and signed Graduate School Application 
form,http://www.univ-larochelle.fr/IMG/pdf/candidaturefinancementeds.pdf 
- a one-page cover letter specifying your professional goals,
- a CV with your publication record, a list of skills relevant to the project, 
and contact information for two academic references,
- a description of the training you obtained while a masters student, 
particularly in research (include key results; one page max),
- a copy of your masters thesis and peer-reviewed publication(s) if you have 
any.
One or two letters of recommendation (one of which from your masters advisor) 
may be sent directly to us. Please send your application before May 25, 2015 to 
Eric Pante (pante[dot]eric-at-gmail[dot]com) or Vincent Bretagnolle 
(breta-at-cebc[dot]cnrs[dot]fr). Please contact us shall you have any question 
about the project.

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