Ph.D. graduate assistantship available in population dynamics, ecology, and 
behavior of amphibians in a fire-dependent system.  The candidate will have 
access to data including dipnetting, call surveys, and fire history, as well as 
a five-year data set from a winter drift fence study of reticulated flatwoods 
salamanders (Ambystoma bishopi) on the Florida Panhandle.  This position is 
suitable only for a student who is also interested in gaining experience in 
teaching and museum collection management.  Incumbent would be responsible for 
teaching lab sections in a vertebrate identification and natural history course 
and for helping to maintain the teaching collection (preserved birds, mammals, 
fish, and herps).  Because the assistantship would require work on the Virginia 
Tech campus, and the field site is in Florida, there will be limited 
opportunity for winter field research.  However, the candidate will have be 
able to make short field visits during the drift fence season or add a 
full-time summer field component (which could focus on gopher tortoise, Florida 
bog frogs, or other species) to collect additional data as the field work is 
ongoing.  The focus would be on flatwoods salamander demography but there may 
be opportunities to work on hydrology and habitat data sets as well.  The 
assistantship covers a stipend, tuition waiver, and some health insurance 
coverage.

Qualifications: Candidates should have M.S. degree in Fisheries & Wildlife, 
Ecology, or a related field, have published in a peer-reviewed journal, have 
relevant field experience, and preferably experience with mark-recapture data 
sets and demographic analyses.  Successful applicants usually have an 
undergraduate GPA above 3.3 and GREs above 50th percentile. Experience with 
natural history museum collections a plus.   Student must be comfortable 
working as part of a team with diverse goals and responsibilities.  
Well-qualified students (published) without the MS may be considered.

Anticipated Starting Date: Position would preferably start in August 2015 but 
postponing until January 2016 is possible.

To apply: Applicants should submit a letter of interest and a c.v. (including 
undergraduate and M.S. grade point average and GRE scores and percentiles) as 
well as contact information for three references to Professor Haas. Promising 
candidates will be asked to submit an official application to the graduate 
school at Virginia Tech (http://www.grads.vt.edu/).  Applications will be 
considered as they are received, so inquiries made sooner are more likely to 
receive serious consideration.  Contact information:  Dr. Carola A. Haas, 
Department of Fisheries & Wildlife Sciences, Mail Code 0321, Virginia Tech, 
Blacksburg, VA 24061, [email protected], 1-540-231-9269.  Please put “flatwoods 
salamander grad position” in subject line of emails.

Carola A. Haas
Professor, Wildlife Ecology
Associate Editor, J. Wildlife Mgmt.
Dept. of Fish & Wildlife Conservation
112 Cheatham Hall (MC 0321)
310 West Campus Drive, Virginia Tech
Blacksburg, VA 24061
[email protected]
540-231-9269
http://www.fishwild.vt.edu/faculty/haas.htm

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