The Sustainability Program at the University of South Dakota is offering a NSF 
REU program this summer titled "Sustainable RIVER (Remediating InVasives to 
Encourage Resilience)."  Sustainable RIVER is a full-time, paid, undergraduate 
research opportunity.  In the Sustainable RIVER project, the students will 
investigate different invasive elements and cultural and natural stressors 
affecting the Missouri River.  The students will conduct an independent 
research project (see below), participate in six field trips on and along the 
Missouri River, and produce a team project.

Research projects for the summer of 2017 are:

*         Effects of invasive trees on native floodplain forest vegetation and 
breeding birds

*         Effects of modified sediment loads on Missouri River and tributary 
hydrology

*         Effects of invasive fish on Missouri River food webs

*         Construction of a Missouri River participatory geographic information 
system database

*         Terrestrial land-use changes along the Missouri National Recreational 
River

*         Understanding competing value claims of the Missouri River

*         Effects of contaminants and pathogens on amphibians along the 
Missouri River

*         Ethnohistorical relationships among American Indian tribes and the 
Missouri River

*         Reincorporating prairies into Missouri River landscapes
The Sustainable RIVER project will run from 30 May 2017 to 11 August 2017.  
Students participating in the project will receive a $5,775 stipend plus 
additional funding for food, housing, and travel.  This project is open to any 
undergraduate student, but students from community or tribal colleges and 
students studying sustainability are especially encouraged to apply.  
Applications for the project can be submitted now through 28 February 2017.

If you would like more information about the Sustainable RIVER project, please 
visit www.SustainableRIVER.org<http://www.SustainableRIVER.org>.

Thank you,

Meghann Jarchow, PhD
Assistant Professor
Sustainability Program Coordinator
Department of Biology
University of South Dakota
Churchill-Haines Labs 171E
(605)677-3115 (office)
(605)659-1889 (cell)
http://www.jarchowlab.org/

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