Postdoctoral Fellowship in Fisheries Oceanography- Renewed Posting 
Open until filled.

A postdoctoral fellowship is available in fisheries oceanography starting 
Nov. 1, 2009 (one-year, renewable) at the Pacific Biological Station, 
Nanaimo, British Columbia (Fisheries and Oceans Canada, DFO). The goal of 
the project is to forecast the distribution of Pacific hake using 
satellite-derived information on ocean conditions. The principle 
investigator is Dr. Carrie Holt (DFO), with co-investigators Dr. John 
Holmes (DFO, PBS), Dr. Bill Crawford (DFO, Institute of Ocean Sciences), 
Dr. André Punt (University of Washington), Dr. Melissa Haltuch (Northwest 
Fisheries Science Centre, NOAA), Ed Armstrong (Jet Propulsion Lab, NASA), 
and Ben Holt (Jet Propulsion Lab, NASA).

The distribution of Pacific hake is of special interest because it 
overlaps with that of overfished stocks (e.g., widow rockfish), thereby 
constraining harvest of hake in the United States. Although such 
constraints on harvest do not currently occur in Canada, efforts to avoid 
catch of depleted species (e.g., in protected areas) will likely continue 
to increase given Canada's commitments to maintain biodiversity. More 
broadly, improved methods for predicting fish distribution will assist 
ecosystem-level conservation initiatives by identifying areas of high 
biodiversity where large numbers of species co-occur.

The postdoctoral fellow will be responsible for compiling satellite-
derived information on ocean conditions, developing candidate models for 
forecasting distribution (e.g., generalized linear models, general 
additive models), and assessing model skill. The fellow will have the 
opportunity to work with a dynamic, interdisciplinary team of experts, 
attend national level scientific meetings, and address an important 
challenge currently faced by Canadian and US fisheries. Experience with 
statistical modelling (e.g., GLMs, GAMs, and hierarchical models) and 
manipulating oceanographic data, especially satellite-derived data, would 
be an asset, but candidates with other, similar skill sets will be 
considered. A Ph.D. in fisheries, oceanography, biology, resource 
management, mathematics or statistics is required. Candidates should be 
able to communicate fluently (written and verbal) in English.

Please apply to Dr. Carrie Holt by email ([email protected]) with 
a cover letter describing your research interests and attachments 
containing your curriculum vita and up to three PDF reprints of your 
publications. We will request references from only those candidates that 
are short-listed. 

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