PH.D STUDENT OPENING IN COMMUNITY ECOLOGY 

The Ernest Lab at the University of Florida has an opening for a Ph.D
student in the area of Community Ecology to start fall 2017.  The student
will be supported as a graduate research assistant as part of an NSF-funded
project at a long-term research site (portalproject.weecology.org) in
southeastern Arizona to study regime shifts (rapid shifts in ecosystem
structure and function). This position will participate in data collection
efforts in Arizona on rodents and plants. 

The Ernest lab is interested in general questions about the processes that
structure communities, with a particular focus on understanding when and how
ecological communities change through time. Students are free to develop
their own research projects depending on their interests. Examples of
community ecology research that students have pursued as part of their
dissertation include: Does strong frequency dependence help buffer rare
species from stochastic extinctions?, Are biodiversity patterns sensitive to
changes in biotic interactions?, and Do disturbances impact species
populations and community-level properties similarly?  

The Ernest Lab is part of the Weecology research group, Weecology is a
partnership between the Ernest Lab, which tends to be more field and
community ecology oriented and the White Lab, which tends to be more
quantitatively and computationally oriented. The Weecology group supports
and encourages students interested in a variety of career paths. Former
weecologists are currently employed in the tech industry, with the National
Ecological Observatory Network, at teaching-focused colleges, and as
postdocs in major research groups. We are also committed to supporting and
training a diverse scientific workforce. Current and former group members
encompass a variety of racial and ethnic backgrounds from the U.S. and other
countries, members of the LGBT community, military veterans, and students
who are the first generation in their family to go to college. 

More information about the lab is available at: http://ernestlab.weecology.org

Interested students should contact Dr. Morgan Ernest ([email protected]) by
Oct 24th, 2016 with their CV, transcripts (unofficial are perfectly fine),
and a brief statement of research interests.

Reply via email to