Dear Colleagues, 

I am searching for graduate students to start in my lab in the Fall of 
2016. Please distribute the advert below to potential candidates.

Best wishes
Robi
--
Ph. D. and M. S. positions available in Community Ecology at the 
University of Connecticut starting Fall 2016
Adviser: Robert Bagchi


The Bagchi lab in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at 
the University of Connecticut invites applications from motivated and 
independent Ph. D. and M. S. students to start in the Fall of 2016. Our 
group combines experimental and quantitative approaches to investigate 
processes that regulate diversity in ecological communities, especially 
in the context of natural and anthropogenic gradients. Much of our work 
involves tropical forests but we also work in temperate systems, which 
may be more tractable for some of our questions.

Some questions that we are interested in are: 1) Is coexistence of 
competing plant species maintained by natural enemies? 2) How do 
interactions between plants and their natural enemies vary along 
environmental (e.g. precipitation and soil fertility) and anthropogenic 
(e.g. habitat fragmentation and hunting) gradients? 3) What factors 
influence the relative abundances of host-specialist and host-generalist 
herbivores in ecological communities? 4) How does fruiting synchrony 
affect seedling survival in Southeast Asian rain forests and what 
factors increase asynchronous fruiting? 5) How do different coexistence 
mechanisms influence the relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem 
functioning? This is far from an exhaustive list and ideas for other 
questions that fit in with our overall research themes are welcome.
Applicants should have a Bachelor’s degree in Ecology or a related 
discipline and a Master’s degree will be advantageous for Ph. D. 
applications. A broad knowledge of ecology, strong written and verbal 
communication ability in English and quantitative skills are essential. 
Preference will be given to applicants with proven research aptitude 
(e.g. published papers), experience of field work, and an interest and 
knowledge of natural history (especially in the system they would like 
to work in).

*Application process*
Interested and qualified candidates should browse my web page 
(http://bagchi.eeb.uconn.edu) and then email me 
([email protected]) with a description of research interests, a 
sample of scientific writing, qualifications and brief ideas for 
research projects (5-6 sentences) along with an up-to-date CV, GPA and 
GRE scores. I will give preference to applicants who contact me by 
Friday, October 30th 2015 so that we have plenty of time to discuss 
projects and funding opportunities before the UConn Graduate School’s 
application deadline on December 15th 2015. Strong applicants will be 
contacted to schedule an informal interview via Skype. Financial support 
is available through research assistantships, teaching assistantships 
and university fellowships, but applicants are strongly encouraged to 
seek external funding. The UConn Graduate School has several funding 
opportunities for outstanding applicants and groups that are 
historically under-represented in science.

*About the University of Connecticut*
The University of Connecticut (UConn) has been one of the nation’s 
leading public institutions since its founding in 1881. Located in 
Storrs, UConn’s main campus is situated in the picturesque rolling 
forests and fields quintessential of New England, yet is only 30 minutes 
from Hartford, and has close connections to Providence, Boston and New 
York. The Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology consists of 
over 30 faculty and 60 graduate students with research spanning nearly 
all major groups of organisms. The Department maintains close ties with 
the Departments of Physiology and Neurobiology, Molecular and Cell 
Biology, Marine Sciences, and Natural Resources Management and 
Engineering, as well as the Center for Environmental Sciences and 
Engineering, which together comprise one of the largest groups of 
biologists in the Northeast.

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