PhD opportunity in fire and landscape ecology: Biodiversity in natural and 
managed early 
seral forests of southwestern Oregon

A PhD position is available to join the Landscape Fire and Conservation Science 
Research 
Group in the Department of Forest Ecosystems at Oregon State University. The 
PhD 
student will be supervised by Dr. Meg Krawchuk, and collaborate with the study 
team 
including Dr. Jim Rivers, Dr. Matt Betts, Dr. Mark Swanson, Dr. A.J. Kroll, and 
Dr. Jake 
Verschuyl.  The successful candidate will participate in a collaborative 
project to evaluate 
how biodiversity varies among early seral environments regenerating after stand 
replacing 
forest fire, fire and timber salvage/management, and intensive forest 
management. Field 
work for the position will take place in southwestern Oregon’s Klamath and 
Cascades 
ecoregions. Biodiversity attributes of interest include plant, bee, and bird 
communities. A 
pilot field season is planned for Summer 2018, and ideally the successful 
candidate would 
be available to participate. The graduate program will begin in Fall 2018. 

Motivated students with interests in fire ecology, landscape ecology, 
conservation science, 
and/or forest management are encouraged to apply. Preference will be given to 
candidates 
with expertise/experience in at least one of the key taxonomic groups of 
interest for the 
project: capture and identification of bees/entomology, strong skills with 
avian point 
counts, and/or field botany. The position requires a candidate with extensive 
field 
experience and leadership skills in remote settings preferably related to 
post-fire 
landscapes. As a complement to strong field skills, the position requires an 
interest and 
aptitude for contemporary statistical analysis, and a creative mind keen to do 
rigorous 
science that translates to forest management. Though the general framing of the 
study is 
established, students will have the opportunity to influence the direction of 
their 
contribution in this research.

Additional qualifications: The student must have a valid driver’s license and 
clean driving 
record, strong work ethic, be able to carry heavy gear on steep slopes, be 
comfortable 
working in a collaborative setting, and have a track record of working in a 
safe, efficient, 
and cooperative manner.

The PhD position includes three years of funding with additional years of 
support to 
complete the degree program expected from existing collaborators and funding. 
Funding 
for this project covers the field program and graduate program of the PhD 
student. The 
PhD student will be responsible for hiring, and leading a small field crew for 
three summers 
of data collection over the duration of the program. 

The successful candidate will join the Landscape Fire and Conservation Science 
Research 
Group, http://people.forestry.oregonstate.edu/meg-krawchuk/ and supervised by 
Dr. Meg 
Krawchuk in the Department of Forest Ecosystems, College of Forestry at Oregon 
State 
University, Corvallis, Oregon. Information about the graduate program can be 
found at: 
http://fes.forestry.oregonstate.edu/fes-graduate-program.

If you are interested in the project contact Dr. Meg Krawchuk: 
[email protected], with: 1) letter of application with brief summary 
of your 
educational background, relevant research and work experience including pointer 
to 
expertise/experience with any of the key taxonomic groups mentioned above, 
career goals, 
why you believe you’re a good match for this project, 2) CV, 3) your academic 
record 
including transcripts and GRE scores, and 4) contact information for three 
references. 

For full consideration, please submit your application by March 31st, 2018. We 
aim to 
identify a successful candidate in early April 2018. Review of applicants will 
continue until 
the position is filled. 

Project description: Early seral forests contribute important heterogeneity to 
landscapes in 
the Pacific Northwest. Concern that federal forest management and 
intensification of 
management on private lands have reduced the availability of complex early 
seral 
ecosystems is contributing to calls for ecological forestry approaches to help 
balance the 
aims of wood production and biodiversity conservation. The driver of early 
seral forest 
initiation is removal or alteration of the forest canopy, and in southwest 
Oregon stand 
replacing wildfire and intensive forest management are principal factors 
generating these 
conditions. Our objective in this study is to conduct a large-scale 
retrospective study of 
biodiversity (plant, pollinator and bird communities) in early seral 
Douglas-fir/white 
fir/western hemlock forest types of southwestern Oregon. We will compare 
biodiversity 
responses to natural regeneration after stand replacing fire, regeneration 
after wildfire and 
timber salvage/management, and managed regeneration of plantations; the study 
will 
sample across early, mid, and late periods of early stand development to 
characterize 
temporal variability and trajectories of response across environmental and 
design 
gradients. 

Oregon State University commits to inclusive excellence by advancing equity and 
diversity 
in all that we do. We are an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity employer, and 
particularly 
encourage applications from members of historically underrepresented 
racial/ethnic 
groups, women, individuals with disabilities, veterans, LGBTQ community 
members, and 
others who demonstrate the ability to help us achieve our vision of a diverse 
and inclusive 
community.

-- 
Meg Krawchuk
Assistant Professor
Landscape Fire and Conservation Science Research Group
Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society
College of Forestry, Oregon State University
Corvallis, Oregon U.S.A.

office: 336 Richardson Hall
phone: 541.737.1483
web: http://people.forestry.oregonstate.edu/meg-krawchuk/

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