Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Risk modelling of the dispersal and spread of alien conifers in New 
Zealand

The Bio-Protection Research Centre, a New Zealand Centre of Research 
Excellence hosted by Lincoln University, finds innovative, natural and 
sustainable solutions to protect New Zealand's plant-based, productive 
ecosystems from pests, diseases and weeds. We are now embarking of an 
ambitious 5-years multidisciplinary research programme examining the 
ecology, impacts and management of invasive alien conifer species in New 
Zealand. The research involves researchers at Lincoln University, 
Canterbury University, Scion and Landcare Research drawing on a wide 
range of expertise from plant and soil ecology, spatial and economic 
modelling as well as different management approaches. 

As part of the larger multi-disciplinary project on invasive alien 
conifers, within the Bio-Protection Research Centre, we are seeking to 
appoint a Postdoctoral Research Fellow to develop risk models of the 
dispersal and spread of alien conifers in New Zealand. The candidate 
will be join of one of the most productive plant invasion research 
groups in New Zealand under the leadership of Professor Philip Hulme. 
The Postdoctoral Fellow will quantify intraspecific and interspecific 
variation in alien conifer seed dispersal to establish which species in 
New Zealand have greatest dispersal potential and whether certain 
provenances are more risky than others.  

Research will identify trade-offs in dispersal risk and magnitude of 
variation across species and provenances. They will then integrate 
dispersal parameters with existing dispersal models to derive a 
quantitative consolidated risk index. Subsequently they will analyse 
spatiotemporal population structure of existing conifer invasions. This 
step will identify the role of landscape, land-use history, and 
propagule pressure on geographic variation in wilding population growth; 
as such, this activity is a space for time-independent evaluation of 
both dispersal and establishment risk. By integrate the consolidated 
risk index and retrospective spread assessment, they will assesses the 
relative roles of species and environmental parameters in spread risk. 
These streams of information will be used to generate spatially explicit 
predictions of dispersal and establishment risk. Results will be 
integral to the wider project and will feed in to economic and decision 
support models being developed by other teams.

The position is funded for a period of 4 years, starting in 2017.

Applicants will be required to have:
•       A PhD in ecology or a related field
•       Research experience in the area of plant invasion ecology. 
•       Strong skills in quantitative data analysis.
•       Knowledge of spatial ecology and GIS
•       A record of peer reviewed publications
As travel between field sites may be a feature of this position, a 
current driver’s licence is also required.

Further information is available on the Bio-Protection Research Centre 
website 

https://bioprotection.org.nz/vacancies/postdoctoral-research-fellowship-
risk-modelling-dispersal-and-spread-alien-conifers-new


Application should be through the Lincoln University website:

https://jobs.jobvite.com/lincolnuniversity/job/o5xA5fw1 

Applications should consist of: a) a cover letter expressing interest in 
position, your suitability for the post and date of availability, b) a 
CV including publication list, c) a statement of research interests, and 
d) contact details for three referees. 

Closing date for applications is 15th August 2017.

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