Dear Colleagues,

I have openings in my lab for two PhD students to study butterfly ecology, 
conservation, and monitoring in British Columbia, Canada.

Start date: September 2025
Location: University of British Columbia, Vancouver BC
Due date: We will begin reviewing applications on Dec. 15, 2024. The position 
will remain open until suitable candidates are found.
More information here https://www.bugsandplankton.com/ and pasted below.

Thank you,
Michelle

______________________________________________
Michelle Tseng
Assistant Professor
Departments of Botany and Zoology
University of British Columbia
tse...@mail.ubc.ca<mailto:tse...@mail.ubc.ca>
Lab website: bugsandplankton.com

UBC-Vancouver is located on the traditional, ancestral, and unceded lands of 
the Musqueam
Students: Please include your name in the filename of any attachments
______________________________________________


PHD POSITION: BUTTERFLY ECOLOGY, CONSERVATION, AND MONITORING


Research Group: Aquatic and Insect Ecology and Evolution lab; PI: Dr. Michelle 
Tseng, Biodiversity Research Centre, Departments of Botany and Zoology, 
University of British Columbia
Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada
Start date: September 2025
Duration: 4 years
Number of positions: 2

Description: Butterflies have become model organisms for studying population 
and community responses to warming temperatures and habitat change. Butterflies 
are ecologically and culturally significant and landscapes with diverse 
butterfly communities often support other beneficial wildlife. This PhD 
position investigates the combined effects of climate change and introduced 
plants on butterfly ecology and conservation in British Columbia. Data sources 
will include historical collections, contemporary biodiversity databases, 
photographs taken by our community science partners, computer vision models, 
and fieldwork. This project is part of an ongoing partnership with a national 
environmental non-profit organization. The PhD student will work closely with 
participants in this organization. The PhD student will be supervised by Dr. 
Michelle Tseng (UBC). The position is based in Vancouver, BC, Canada.

The PhD student will conduct field studies and use statistical and data science 
tools to assess long-term changes in butterfly abundance and phenology 
throughout several regions in British Columbia. The student will also examine 
nectar-plant preferences and the role of introduced vs. native plants in 
shaping butterfly phenology, population dynamics, and community composition. 
The student will help develop two public-facing butterfly conservation and 
monitoring tools, participate in annual outreach events, and engage with 
Indigenous communities.

Preferred qualifications: You have an MSc in ecology, entomology, conservation, 
or similar discipline or have extensive experience conducting independent 
research as an undergraduate student. You have experience working on butterfly 
ecology/taxonomy and are comfortable working in the field. You are comfortable 
wrangling and analyzing large datasets in R or Python. You have a solid 
foundation in ecological statistics. A valid class 5 driver’s license is an 
asset. You are self-motivated to answer fundamental and applied questions in 
butterfly ecology and can meet self-assigned deadlines. You have an in-depth 
understanding of the importance of equity, diversity, and inclusion in academia 
and can articulate the value of both Western and Indigenous perspectives to 
understanding the natural world.

Stipend: The PhD stipend starts at $40,000 CAN and increases annually for four 
years. Domestic and International PhD tuition is covered by the UBC Faculty of 
Science Tuition award for 4 years. Applicants should be competitive for 
internal or external fellowships (e.g. UBC Four-Year Fellowship, NSERC CGS, 
Vanier Fellowship). Additional funds are available for travel, outreach, and 
research expenses.

Include with your application:
· Cover letter: please discuss why your background, education, and research 
experience make you well-suited for this position;
· Relevant Research Questions: Please describe three research questions you 
would be personally interested in addressing for your PhD in the context of the 
information described above. Answers generated using large language models like 
ChatGPT will not be considered;
·  Academic CV, including the name and contact information for two references;
·  Unofficial academic transcript

To Apply:
Please email your application in a single PDF with your name and “Butterfly 
Ecology PhD Position” in the subject line to: Michelle Tseng, 
tse...@mail.ubc.ca<mailto:tse...@mail.ubc.ca>

Due Dates:
We will begin reviewing applications on December 15, 2024. Applications who 
wish to be considered for UBC PhD Fellowships for the 2025-2026 academic year 
will need to submit their UBC application by January 8, 2025 (including 
references). We will contact you if we would like you to submit the full UBC 
application. The positions will remain open until suitable candidates are 
found. Please email Dr. Tseng if you have any questions.

More information about the school and units:
Graduate school at UBC: https://www.grad.ubc.ca/
Botany Department: https://botany.ubc.ca/
Zoology Department: http://zoology.ubc.ca/
UBC Biodiversity Research Centre: https://biodiversity.ubc.ca/
Tseng lab website: https://www.bugsandplankton.com/
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