We seek a postdoctoral researcher to investigate the effects of grazing in 
relation to fuel reduction treatments in sagebrush ecosystems. The Sagebrush 
Steppe Treatment Evaluation Project (SageSTEP; 
sagestep.org<http://www.sagestep.org/>) is a long-term fuel treatment 
experiment where herbicide, mechanical, and prescribed fire treatments were 
implemented ~18 years ago at 19 sites across the Intermountain West in either 
sagebrush or pinyon-juniper (PJ) plant communities. This long-term network is 
an impressive data resource with soil, vegetation, and climate measurements 
from 2006 to present. First, we will evaluate the effects of various fuel 
treatments on annual/perennial grass dynamics and forage production across soil 
and climatic gradients over the past 18 years. Second, most plots are fenced on 
grazed lands, allowing us to make grazed and ungrazed comparisons. The 
candidate will analyze data from 2006-2014 to investigate differences in plant 
communities between grazed and ungrazed areas, and opportunities exist to 
collect current data outside exclosures next spring, including adding soil 
measurements. This long-term data set also allows for examining invasion 
dynamics in the context of climate change over the past two decades. 
Additionally, SageSTEP is a highly collaborative project allowing for 
interdisciplinary projects with other team scientists.

Primary duties include analyzing existing data sets, as well as writing 
manuscripts. Pending additional funding, the candidate may also lead efforts 
collecting new data in relation to both plant communities and soils inside and 
outside exclosures. The candidate will work in interdisciplinary teams across 
federal agencies and universities to answer land management research questions.

Qualification Requirements: Ph.D. in biology, ecology, or other natural 
resource-related disciplines. The position requires advanced statistical skills 
to evaluate large data sets, as well as demonstrated scholarship from 
first-authored publications and presentations. The candidate should be 
proficient in plant ecology. Knowledge about soils, fire ecology, restoration, 
climate change, desert ecology, as well as geospatial data sets and machine 
learning, is desired. The candidate must be a US citizen.

Application reviews will start on November 20, 2024, until the position is 
filled. A Spring 2025 start date is preferred before the field season. Salary 
is $65,000/yr currently with 2.5 years of funding. To apply, please send a 
cover letter, CV, and contact information for three references to Dr. Beth 
Newingham at 
beth.newing...@usda.gov<file:///Users/Beth.Nnewingham/My%20Drive/ARS/Administration/AppData/Local/Microsoft/Windows/INetCache/Content.Outlook/AppData/Local/Microsoft/Windows/INetCache/Content.Outlook/1CY9O58C/beth.newing...@usda.gov>.
 More information about the lab can be found at http://newinghamlab.weebly.com. 
Please contact Dr. Newingham with any questions. The USDA Agricultural Research 
Service is an equal opportunity provider and employer.

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