We are looking for a graduate student to join our research group beginning
in fall semester 2018. The student would develop an independent research
focus in line with ongoing lab projects. We are exploring how plant traits
relate to community structure and function of plant-associated microbes and
termites using culturing and next generation sequencing techniques and the
consequences of these interactions for the forest carbon cycle in the USA,
France and Australia as climate changes. Additionally, we are looking at the
evolution, ecology and physiology of plants across environmental gradients
in various locations around the globe. The student would join an interactive
lab group (http://www.phylodiversity.net/azanne/) that broadly focuses on
plant, microbe and termite structure and function (anatomy and physiological
ecology), community ecology, and evolutionary ecology, both in the temperate
and tropical systems. The graduate work will be completed at George
Washington University. Washington, DC is a dynamic city with a wealth of
ecologists and evolutionary biologists. We have strong links to area
institutions, including the Smithsonian. George Washington University is
located in the heart of DC, with easy access to numerous science,
conservation, and policy based institutions. If you are interested in
working with us, please send an email to me (Amy Zanne: [email protected])
with brief details about your GPA, GRE, research interests, experience, and
why you want to go to graduate school. For information about applying to the
program, go to the George Washington University, Department of Biological
Sciences website (https://biology.columbian.gwu.edu/apply-now). The
application deadline is 1 December 2017. I am also happy to answer any
further questions you might have.

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