The Evolving Meta-Ecosystems (EVOME) Institute is recruiting for four PhD
positions at three of its partner institutions: University of Alabama,
University of Alaska Fairbanks (2 positions), and University of
Connecticut. Students will work with a diverse and highly dynamic group of
collaborators and will have the unique experience of spending their summers
conducting field work at Toolik Field Station in the Alaskan Arctic.
Ideally students would begin in the spring of 2025, starting with summer
field work in the Arctic.

The Evolving Meta-Ecosystems (EVOME) Institute bridges disciplines to
explore if organisms can adapt to rapid climate change and maintain
ecosystem connectivity and productivity. EVOME integrates research from
genes to ecosystems, focusing on the resilience of Arctic Alaskan
stream-riparian systems amid fast climate shifts. Participants benefit from
training, mentoring, synthesis efforts, and networking with a fun and
dedicated research team. We welcome applicants to bring their unique
perspectives and identities through their culture, national origin,
ethnicity, race, gender, sexual orientation, veteran status, disability,
age, religion and beliefs to EVOME.

Short position descriptions:

University of Alabama – Atkinson and Lozier Labs

We seek a student interested in studying terrestrial and stream
invertebrates (ground beetles, mayflies, stoneflies) to investigate links
between community ecology, trait variation, ecological stoichiometry,
thermal biology, and genomics across a broad latitudinal gradient in
Alaska. The student’s research will help address major questions about
adaptability to a warming arctic in diverse terrestrial and aquatic
invertebrate species.

University of Alaska Fairbanks - Schoen, Westley and Gilbert labs

We are seeking candidates for two Ph.D. assistantships at the University of
Alaska Fairbanks College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences investigating how
Arctic grayling are responding to rapid climate change in northern Alaska. One
student will focus on questions of trophic interactions and growth. Another
student will focus on the evolutionary ecology of grayling through
measurement of fitness-related traits such as metabolism and timing of key
life history events. Both students will assess contributions of the
environment (phenotypic plasticity) and evolution (heritability) to thermal
performance through fieldwork along a 300 km latitudinal gradient and
through common garden and streamside experiments.

University of Connecticut – Urban Lab

We are seeking a graduate student to join a dynamic lab in the ecology and
evolutionary biology department at the University of Connecticut and the
EVOME Institute. A research assistantship and funding are available for
projects on ecology and evolution, with flexibility in taxa and questions.
Our lab focuses on biodiversity, ecosystem resilience to climate change,
and current projects include amphibian community experiments, climate
impacts on Arctic fish, adaptation genomics, and extinction risk
prediction. We welcome independent thinkers to complement our research team.

Detailed position descriptions and desired qualifications can be found at
this link:

https://www.woodwellclimate.org/project/evolving-meta-ecosystems-institute/join-the-team/


-- 

Andie N Norton  |  Research Assistant III

anor...@woodwellclimate.org <hgoldst...@woodwellclimate.org>

+1 612 860 7088 (cell)

she/her/hers

Woodwell Climate Research Center

149 Woods Hole Road, Falmouth, MA 02540 USA

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Woodwell Climate Research Center is located on the traditional and sacred
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language, traditional way of life, and culture continue to influence this
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