Ecological restoration is vital for repairing human impacts on native biota and 
ecosystem processes. Networks of trophic interactions (food webs) determine the 
structure and function of communities; yet we know little about food web 
restoration and almost nothing about how soil food webs reassemble during 
long-term restoration despite their high biodiversity and importance for many 
key ecosystem processes. 

Using more than 80 forest restoration sites spanning the complete latitudinal 
range of New Zealand’s main islands, this fully funded project will apply 
recently developed methods for linking food web structure with ecosystem 
functioning across an unprecedented age-range of restored urban forests to 
answer the following key questions: 1) Does soil food web complexity increase 
over restoration time and how does reassembly of soil communities vary at 
different spatial scales and across environmental gradients? 2) Does forest 
succession drive shifting energetic structure of soil food webs toward 
fungal-based energy channels and increased top-down effects on primary 
consumers? 3) Is there a shift in the distribution and strength of trophic 
interactions and what affect does this have on food web stability?

The PhD student will conduct field sampling of soil biota (from microbes to 
macro-fauna) in forest restoration sites throughout nine cities in New Zealand. 
Lab work will consist of identifying and measuring functional traits of soil 
invertebrates, measuring microbial respiration and identifying microbial 
functional groups in order to construct soil food webs and quantify energy flux 
in regenerating forest ecosystems. 

To fill this position, we are seeking an independent and highly motivated 
applicant with:
•       An Honours or MSc degree in ecology
•       Experience in ecological field work and/or lab and field experiments 
•       Strong skills in analysing ecological data (preferably in R)
•       Experience in soil community ecology (would be highly advantageous) 
•       Excellent communication skills in English (spoken and written)
•       A general willingness to work in a team

We are offering this exciting position for a PhD candidate to be based at the 
University of Waikato in Hamilton, New Zealand under the supervision of Dr 
Andrew Barnes (www.waikato.ac.nz/staff-profiles/people/barnesa), Dr Chris Lusk, 
and Dr Kiri Joy Wallace. The successful candidate will also work closely with 
the Experimental Interaction Ecology lab at the German Centre for Integrative 
Biodiversity Research (iDiv) in Leipzig, Germany, and in alignment with the 
People, Cities & Nature project. The position is fully funded for a fixed term 
of three years (including a stipend, full tuition fees and research costs) and 
is to begin as soon as possible. Candidates should send electronic applications 
as a single PDF document comprising a letter of motivation, curriculum vitae, 
scientific publications (if applicable), and contact details for two academic 
references to Dr Barnes ([email protected]). Review of applications 
will begin on the 18th of December 2018 and will continue until the position is 
filled.

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