Two-Year Post Doctoral Fellowship in Forest Ecological Forecasting, Data 
Assimilation

***Informal Announcement – a formal announcement (with link) is 
forthcoming***

A post-doctoral fellowship is available in the Laboratory of Tree-Ring 
Research (University of Arizona) to work on an NSF Macrosystems Biology-
funded project assimilating together tree-ring and forest inventory data to 
analyze patterns and drivers of forest productivity across the interior 
western U. S. The aim of the project is to generate ecological forecasts of 
future forest ecosystem functioning, especially carbon sequestration, in 
the face of rising temperatures and evaporative demand. The approach is to 
leverage an existing, continental-scale ecological observatory network (the 
permanent sample plot network of the U. S. Forest Service’s Forest 
Inventory and Analysis Program [FIA]) and assimilate into it a new data 
stream: annual-resolution time series of individual tree growth from ~6,000 
increment cores collected in the same plot network. The post-doc will be 
able to participate in all aspects of the project, with an emphasis on 
manipulating Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) census data, tree-ring 
data, and climate data, and scaling up an existing data assimilation 
workflow, with the opportunity to develop lines of research related to the 
themes of the lab based on their interests. The project will be co-
supervised by Margaret Evans (Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, University 
of Arizona), Justin DeRose and John Shaw (Interior West-FIA, Rocky Mountain 
Research Station) and statistical ecologists Andrew Finley (Michigan State 
University) and Mike Dietze (Boston University), along with the 
cyberinfrastructure support of NSF’s CyVerse. Applicants should have a PhD 
in ecology, forestry, or related field with strong statistical and 
computing skills, or a PhD in mathematics, applied mathematics, statistics, 
or a related field, with experience or interest in plant or forest ecology. 
The successful candidate will have a background and/or strong interest in 
hierarchical Bayesian models, data assimilation, dynamic linear modeling, 
ecological forecasting, uncertainty quantification, spatial statistics, 
dendrochronology, and/or computer science (e.g., writing MCMC samplers). 
Experience working with large datasets or databases, strong writing skills 
and associated publications in peer-reviewed literature, communication 
skills, and mentoring and collaboration skills are also strongly valued.
The position is funded for two years, beginning as soon as September of 
2018. Duties will be carried out at the Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research on 
the University of Arizona campus in Tucson, Arizona. Situated an hour and a 
half from Mexico in the Sonoran desert and Sky Island region of 
southeastern Arizona, Tucson has an exceptionally low cost of living along 
with a wide range of opportunities for outdoor recreation and biological 
and cultural richness. One example is the recent designation of Tucson as a 
UNESCO World City of Gastronomy. Interested candidates should contact Dr. 
Margaret Evans at mekev...@email.arizona.edu. The position can be discussed 
in person at the upcoming annual meeting of the Ecological Society of 
America in New Orleans, LA (Aug 5-10, 2018). Complete applications must 
include (1) a cover letter, (2) curriculum vita, and (3) names and contact 
information for three references. Applications will be reviewed until the 
position is filled.

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