Postdoctoral Fellow in Biosphere-Atmosphere Flux Ecology

An outstanding opportunity for a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in 
Biosphere-Atmosphere Flux Ecology is available to study responses of ecosystem 
CO2, CH4 and H2O fluxes to climate variability and ecological disturbance in 
forest and grassland ecosystems in Australia.

Specific research topics could address the effects of drought, warming, 
elevated CO2, disturbance or land-use change on ecosystem fluxes, and may apply 
stable isotopes to study biogeochemical cycling in the context of various 
manipulative field experiments or environmental gradients.

The successful applicant will have demonstrated research experience in 
ecosystem gas exchange, with a desirable focus on eddy covariance and stable 
isotope techniques.

Knowledge of, or willingness to learn and apply, techniques related to 
biogeochemistry of soil processes is desirable. Willingness to travel to remote 
sites for occasional measurement campaigns is desirable.

The appointee will participate in activities related to the Australian 
Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN) and Ozflux, will be supervised by 
Professor Elise Pendall, and will join the 'Soil Biology and Genomics' group at 
the Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment at Western Sydney University.

 The Institute conducts research on the impacts of environmental change on 
terrestrial biota from genes to ecosystems.

We offer comprehensive field, controlled-environment and laboratory research 
facilities and is based on the Hawkesbury campus of Western Sydney University 
in Richmond, close to the city of Sydney.

HIE manages the Cumberland Plains SuperSite and eddy covariance flux towers 
within the Australian Supersite Network and Ozflux facilities of the 
Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN).

Apply by 27 November 2015<http://j.mp/Flux-Ecology>. (opens in new 
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