PhD Position in Stress Ecology and Fear-Fire Interactions
Department of Ecosystem Science and Management
Pennsylvania State University
Supervisor: Dr. Michael Sheriff

I am searching for a PhD student to work in the field of stress ecology or the 
ecology of fear. The project is open ended and would explore the interactive 
effects of predation risk and fire on the behavior and physiology of 
free-living mammals, potentially eastern cotton-tail rabbits or cotton rats as 
a focal species. The position is fully funded, including tuition and summer 
salaries. The starting date is flexible but preference will be for a starting 
date this coming summer or September 2016. Application review will begin 
immediately.

This project is part of a long term investigation into the ecological role of 
meso-mammalian predators in a longleaf pine ecosystem 
(http://www.jonesctr.org/research/wildlife/).  Longleaf pine ecosystems are 
characterized by globally significant levels of biodiversity that is maintained 
by frequent low-intensity fire.  Fire influences the distribution and abundance 
of food and cover resources for wildlife and this project aims to investigate 
the effects of that spatio-temporal process on predator-prey interactions. With 
climate-induced changes in fire ecology, it is critical to understand how 
predator-prey dynamics will respond to the drastic and immediate changes to 
their environment induced by fire.

The research focus of my lab (michaeljsheriff.weebly.com) addresses one of the 
fundamental questions in biology: what limits and regulates animals in their 
natural world?  Our approach is to bridge physiology, behavior, and ecology to 
understand how animals interact with the world around them. As such, we are 
broadly interested in the underlying physiological mechanisms by which 
ecological interactions (predation, competition, climate, etc…) alter behavior 
and cause changes in reproduction, survival, and ultimately population 
demography and community structure. Projects in my research group are centered 
on two major themes: 

1) How ecological stressors drive changes in free-living animals’ physiology 
and behavior, how this impacts reproduction and survival and how this drives 
changes in population dynamics and ultimately community structure.

2) How maternal stress may impact offspring physiology, behavior and fitness.

I place a premium on analytical skills, writing ability, research experience, 
hard work, and enthusiasm. If and when you decide to contact me, please take 
some time and write a thoughtful letter (because this is more likely to 
generate a thoughtful response). Please send me your CV, GRE test scores 
(foreign students (to the US) don’t need to send this if they do not have it), 
and transcripts. Tell me a bit about your interests, and why you’re interested 
in working with our group.

If you are interested in joining our research group please contact me via email 
at [email protected].

Cheers,
Michael 


-- 
Michael J Sheriff
Assistant Professor, Mammalogy and Ecology
Department of Ecosystem Science and Management
Penn State University
phone. 814 863-0135
http://michaeljsheriff.weebly.com

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