*Aquatic Ecologist & Geographic Ecologist*. The Department of Biology at
the University of Oklahoma invites applications for two
tenured/tenure-track faculty positions at any rank, beginning in fall 2016,
as part of a larger cluster hire initiative in geographic ecology (ge.ou.edu).
We are searching for creative, collaborative thinkers who use integrative
approaches to address fundamental ecological questions at regional to
global scales. Our ultimate goal is to enhance our expertise in geographic
and aquatic ecology toward predicting ecological and evolutionary responses
to global change. The search is open to theoretical, lab, and field
biologists working on any taxa. In this phase of the cluster hire, we seek:

An Aquatic Ecologist who studies freshwater systems toward predicting their
future in a changing environment. Innovators in biogeochemistry, ecological
networks, ecological genomics, river-reservoir systems, and land-water
interactions are especially encouraged to apply.

 A Geographic Ecologist who studies phenomena at multiple spatial scales
toward understanding large-scale patterns and processes. Innovators in
biogeography, macroecology, bioinformatics, and global ecology are
especially encouraged to apply.

We are particularly interested in candidates who combine some or all of the
following three approaches in their work. The first is development and/or
testing of models and theory that connect phenomena at scales from local to
global. The second is an integrative use of data—from gene frequencies to
biogeochemistry, species distributions to climate past and future,
functional traits to landscapes—to advance theory and identify novel
patterns and processes. The third is a desire to apply this research to
ameliorating outstanding ecological problems, including climate change,
biodiversity loss, dwindling water supplies, and the degradation of
ecosystem services.

The University of Oklahoma is committed to building an international center
of excellence exploring the geographic ecology of our evolving biosphere.
Successful candidates will join colleagues across campus, including cluster
hires in the EPSCoR initiative *Adapting socio-ecological systems to
increased climate variability*. Our shared goal is to build theoretical and
empirical bridges across the sciences, to predict the interplay between
biotic and climatic changes, and to better steward our natural resources
and services.

Join us.

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