The goal of this project is to model the relationship between vegetation,
climate and the number and size distribution of forest fires in boreal
Canada. This is important for reasons of forest management, biological
conservation and adaptation to climate change. It is challenging because
the historical record of observed fire events is affected by size-biased
sampling and  fire management. In much of the north, until quite recent
times, many small fires were likely undetected. Many of the fires that were
detected were subject to fire suppression, the effectiveness of which
remains poorly quantified.



We seek a PhD student to apply advanced statistical analysis to explore the
true relationships between fire, vegetation and weather by accounting for
the detection and suppression processes. We offer a 3yr PhD scholarship at
C$24,000/yr. The student will be supervised by Steve Cumming, Université
Laval and David Martell, at the University of Toronto. The scholarship is
tenable at Laval, with one or more stages at Toronto and at the Pacific
Forestry Centre in Victoria, British Columbia. Funding through the Canadian
Statistical Sciences Institute will afford the student opportunities to
work with some of Canada’s most prominent statistical scientists. The
project will also include a data assembly stage, where historical
indicators of the fire management system will be assembled by the student,
with project collaborators in fire management agencies. The position will
start as soon as possible.



The qualifications are strong quantitative skills and an interest in
applied or statistical ecology independent of disciplinary background. An
interest in spatial simulation and some programming experience (e.g. in R,
Python) would be an asset, but modelling courses are available in the lab.
The language of instruction at Université Laval is French, but theses may
be written in English. Québec’s francophone cultural environment provides
non-francophone students an excellent opportunity to improve French
language skills. Québec City is also well known for its exceptional outdoor
recreational opportunities, natural beauty, historical interest and vibrant
cultural life.



Applicants should submit by email a short statement of interest, a current
CV, and the names of three references.  For further information, contact
the undersigned:



Steve Cumming
<[email protected]?subject=PhD%20position%20in%20statistical%20fire%20ecology>

Département des sciences du bois et de la forêt, Université Laval

Centre d’étude de la forêt
<http://www.cef-cfr.ca/index.php?n=Membres.StevenGCumming>



David Martell

Fire Management Systems Laboratory
<http://www.firelab.utoronto.ca/people/dlm.html>

Faculty of Forestry, University of Toronto

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