Agency: Southern Illinois University
Location: Carbondale, Illinois
Job Category: Graduate Assistantships
Salary: $22k/yr + tuition and student health care access; up to 3 years of 
support
Start Date: August 2025
Last Date to Apply: Open until Filled; applicants will be reviewed on rolling 
basis.
Advisors: Drs. Brent Pease and Guillaume Bastille-Rousseau
Website: https://peaselab.com/; https://bastillerousseau.wixsite.com/research

Description
Two MS-level Graduate Research Assistantships are available starting August 
2025 in the PEASE Lab (Population Estimation and Spatial Ecology; peaselab.com) 
and the Spatial Wildlife Ecology Lab at Southern Illinois University to support 
management and conservation of Wild Turkeys by the Illinois Department of 
Natural Resources. The students will be co-advised by Dr. Brent Pease 
(https://peaselab.com/) and Dr. Guillaume Bastille-Rousseau 
(https://bastillerousseau.wixsite.com/research) at Southern Illinois 
University. One student will lead efforts on Project 1 (details below) and the 
other student will lead efforts on Project 2.

Project 1: Wild Turkey gobbling chronology
Project 1 will focus on wild turkey gobbling chronology. The student will lead 
research using autonomous recording units (ARUs) to document spatial and/or 
temporal variation in the timing of male gobbling (e.g., Kreh et al., 2018 
Wildlife Society Bulletin). The focus of this research is to assess current 
spring harvest season regulations (e.g., timing, zoning, and length of spring 
harvest seasons) based on the timing of male gobbling across Illinois and then 
provide regulatory recommendations to the Illinois DNR.
The ideal student will have extensive experience deploying ARUs along with 
processing and analyzing acoustic data. The student should be excited about 
carrying out field work during winter and spring across Illinois, in sometimes 
difficult field conditions, and should have a general interest and knowledge of 
wild turkey and other upland gamebird ecology. The successful applicant is 
expected to communicate findings to state agencies and other on-going, regional 
monitoring efforts. The student will earn a MS in Forestry at Southern Illinois 
University.


Project 2: Wild Turkey nesting phenology
Project 2 will focus on wild turkey movement and spatial ecology. The student 
will lead research using GPS transmitters to document spatial and/or temporal 
variation in the timing of nesting as well as spatial ecology of turkeys. 
Primary field duties include capture and affixing GPS radiotags, monitoring hen 
survival and nesting and brooding success, and deploying and monitoring camera 
traps at nest sites. Research will also emphasize general spatial ecology and 
population ecology (e.g., movement, space-use, survival, etc.).
The ideal student will have knowledge of wild turkey ecology and will also have 
experience capturing and handling upland game birds. Additionally, the 
individual will ideally have experience with GPS/VHF technology, will have 
processed and analyzed movement data, and have general interest/experience with 
population modeling. The student should also be excited about carrying out 
field work during winter and spring across Illinois, in sometimes difficult 
field conditions. The successful applicant is expected to communicate findings 
to state agencies and other on-going, regional monitoring efforts. The student 
will earn a MS in Forestry at Southern Illinois University.

-- -- -- -- -- -- -- ---- -- -- ---- -- -- ---- -- -- ---- -- -- ---- -- -- --
General Qualifications
This is a well-funded, multi-agency research project, and the graduate students 
will be expected to assist in hiring and managing field technicians to support 
the data collection efforts. Additionally, although research questions will be 
unique among the selected students, their field work will be complimentary, and 
both students will be expected to contribute to all wild turkey research 
activities carried out.
The successful applicants will have (1) obtained B.S. degree in wildlife, 
ecology, biology, forestry, zoology, or related fields; (2) knowledge of wild 
turkey ecology; (3) exceptional quantitative skills with experience using a 
variety of data types and models; (4) knowledge of program R and spatial 
software (e.g., QGIS, ArcGIS); (5) a driver's license and ability to conduct 
independent field work in difficult conditions (e.g., steep terrain, poison 
ivy, ticks); (6) strong oral and written communication skills, and (7) a 
cooperative, team-oriented mindset eager to carry out wildlife research and 
address key problems in wildlife conservation and management.

To apply please email a single PDF to Dr. Brent Pease 
(bpea...@siu.edu<mailto:bpea...@siu.edu>) that includes:
1. A cover letter that describes your specific interest in this position and 
how your past experiences and career goals align with the goals of the project. 
Your cover should clearly articulate which position you are interested in 
(gobbling chronology, nesting phenology, or a ranking of the two if your 
skillset matches both positions).
2. Curriculum Vitae (with GPA and GRE scores included)
3. Undergraduate transcripts (unofficial is acceptable)
6. Contact information for 3 references
The email subject should be “MS – Wild turkeys”. Applications will be accepted 
until positions are filled and reviewed on a rolling basis.
Questions:
Contact Person: Dr. Brent Pease
Contact Email: bpea...@siu.edu<mailto:bpea...@siu.edu>




BRENT PEASE, PH.D.
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR, FORESTRY PROGRAM

SCHOOL OF FORESTRY AND HORTICULTURE
MAIL CODE 4411
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY
1205 LINCOLN DRIVE, AGRICULTURAL BUILDING, ROOM 186B
CARBONDALE, ILLINOIS 62901

bpea...@siu.edu<mailto:bpea...@siu.edu>
P: 618.453.7474

PEASELAB.COM



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