For the project MOUNTLAND (http://www.cces.ethz.ch/projects/sulu/MOUNTLAND ) and its module on impact of land use and climate change on pasture- woodland ecosystems, we are looking for a

Ph.D. student in plant and soil ecology

who will undertake the specific task “Fine-scale monitoring and manipulative field experiments”. The work place will be at our Laboratory ECOS in Lausanne.

You will set up two manipulative field experiments, one with soil transplantation down an altitudinal gradient and another with active soil warming at high elevation in the Jura Mountains. You will carry out precise vegetation relevés, measure primary production and soil functioning (respiration, litter decomposition), and do laboratory analyses (soil nutrients, dissolved and inorganic C and N, microbial C and N, plant N and P). Microbial diversity will also be investigated.

You will be affiliated to the Doctoral Program Environment at the EPFL Doctoral School (http://phd.epfl.ch/page55510.html) and start your work in early 2009.

Your qualifications: M.Sc. degree in biology or environmental engineering, preferably with a thesis topic in ecology of terrestrial ecosystems. Good English communication and writing skills are required. Practical experience in plant ecology, functional ecology, statistical analysis, vegetation and soil analysis will be of advantage. You work cooperatively in an interdisciplinary team effort and wish to take initiatives and go at work with ambition.

Interested? Please send your complete application, including a motivation letter and a CV with photo, brief description of M.Sc. thesis work as well as a list of publications, to Prof. A. Buttler, EPFL, Ecological Systems Laboratory ECOS, Station 2, CH-1015 Lausanne (Switzerland). Contact can be made at [email protected], with the mention PhD-Mountland.



EPFL is, together with ETHZ, one of the two federal institutes of technology in Switzerland (http://www.epfl.ch/index.en.html).These academic institutions have three missions: education, research and technology transfer at the highest international level. Associated with several specialised research institutes, the two EPFs form the EPF Domain, which is directly dependent on the Federal Department of Home Affairs.

The Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL is part of the EPF Domain. Approximately 500 people work on topics related to the sustainable use and protection of the environment and on an integrated approach to handling natural hazards.

The Ecological Systems Laboratory ECOS (http://ecos.epfl.ch/) meets in Lausanne a multidisciplinary team of scientists attached to either EPFL or WSL with a focus on community and restoration ecology.

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