Ecology Postdoctoral Position  

A two year postdoctoral position in ecology funded by a David and Lucile 
Packard Foundation award is available in the research group of Jonathan 
Levine at the University of California, Santa Barbara (see our lab webpage 
for more details: www.lifesci.ucsb.edu/eemb/labs/levine ).  In 
collaboration with Levine, the successful candidate will develop a 
research project using empirical or theoretical approaches to explore 
questions in plant ecology.  Work in our lab focusses on the controls over 
the success and impacts of biological invasions and the controls over 
coexistence in communities, especially that mediated by germination 
biology and temporal variability.  The research focus is extremely 
flexible, and need not focus on plants exclusively, but must facilitate 
interaction with other lab members or faculty. 

The research group currently includes one graduate student (Stephanie 
Yelenik) and three postdocs (Margaret Mayfield, Louie Yang, and Elizaveta 
Pachepsky).  Although plant invasions continue to be a major focus, much 
of our research uses models and experiments to examine the controls over 
coexistence in plant communities.  Individual projects focus on the 
importance of spatial and temporal mechanisms of coexistence in annual 
plant communities, the role of plant-soil feedbacks in modulating native 
shrub reinvasion of exotic-dominated systems, the demographic controls 
over invasive spread, and the importance and extent of seed dormancy in 
the California annual flora. These projects involve collaboration with the 
numerous other UCSB faculty in ecology (see 
www.lifesci.ucsb.edu/eemb/resources/tepee/index.html and 
http://www.lifesci.ucsb.edu/eemb/faculty/index.html).  The Santa Barbara 
area and UC Natural Reserve System provide exceptional field sites in 
habitats ranging from grassland, sage scrub, chaparral, and oak woodland.  
Desert and alpine systems occur within half a day's drive. Santa Barbara 
is also home to the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis 
(NCEAS).    

Applicants must have relevant Ph.D. experience in ecology.  Funding for 
salary and research expenses is initially available for two years with a 
very flexible start date.  In addition, the successful applicant will work 
collaboratively to obtain additional funding.  Applications will be 
accepted through December 9, 2005, though applicants interested in 
submitting grants this year for external funding should contact me 
sooner.  To apply, email a statement of research interests including one 
to two paragraphs describing a project that you might be interested in 
conducting at UCSB, a curriculum vitae, relevant publications, and names 
of three references to Jonathan Levine, Department of Ecology, Evolution 
and Marine Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106.  
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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