Postdoctoral Fellowship in Eco-Physiology and Molecular Ecology, Department of 
Biology, U Copenhagen



A two-year postdoctoral fellowship on the evolution and eco-physiology of 
fungus-farming ants is available from June 1, 2018 in the Section for Ecology 
and Evolution within the Department of Biology at the University of Copenhagen 
in Denmark.



The fellowship will be part of a 5-year research project financed by an ERC 
Starting Grant. Led by Assistant Professor Jonathan Shik 
(www.jonathanshik.com<http://www.jonathanshik.com>), the project will be based 
in the thriving research environment of the Centre for Social Evolution 
(http://socialevolution.ku.dk/home/), and will involve fieldwork in the 
Panamanian tropical rainforests at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute 
(http://www.stri.si.edu/).  The successful applicant will have experience and 
interest in ecology, evolution, physiology, microbial ecology, and molecular 
techniques.



Project Overview

The project will focus on the remarkable lineage of leafcutter ants (genus 
Atta) that harvest fresh vegetation and use it as compost to produce 
domesticated fungal crops in huge underground nests that feed massive super 
organismal colonies with millions of workers. We will explore how leafcutter 
ants have managed to grow a single cultivar lineage from Texas to Argentina, 
thriving across extreme contemporary rainfall and temperature gradients and 
across diverse climates over millions of years. Projects will combine field 
experiments in Panamanian rainforests and integrative laboratory studies of 
cultivar gene expression to resolve the mechanisms governing the resilience of 
industrial-scale fungus farming in ants within diverse tropical insect 
communities.

The deadline for applications is February 15, 2018 at 11:59 PM CET. For further 
details and information about how to apply, visit: 
http://employment.ku.dk/faculty/?show=146492

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