A PhD opportunity is available for a student to join the Schultz lab at 
the Washington State University Vancouver to investigate the ecology of 
Taylor’s checkerspot, a federal candidate butterfly in Oregon and 
Washington. The position is part of a new grant funded by SERDP (Strategic 
Environmental Research and Defense Program) to investigate source-sink 
dynamics of at-risk butterflies and includes collaborators at Harvard, 
Duke and University of North Carolina. The position will involve 
investigation of basic life history attributes of Taylor’s checkerspot, as 
well as experimental investigation of effects of key habitat management 
tools.  Experimental work will involve field and lab-based studies to 
assess impacts of grass-specific herbicides on butterfly demography and 
behavior.  Please see our website for overview of our research approach 
and list of publications: http://research.vancouver.wsu.edu/cheryl-schultz

PhD students are admitted through the Environmental Science Program at WSU 
Vancouver.  The Program provides students with an interdisciplinary, 
applications-oriented education in environmental science. Students will be 
financially supported through a combination of teaching and research 
assistantships.  Washington State University Vancouver is a new and 
rapidly growing campus in the WSU system located in Vancouver, Washington 
just north of Portland, Oregon.  Students benefit from outstanding 
faculty, world-class research, state-of-the-art facilities and small class 
sizes. For more information, see http://science.vancouver.wsu.edu/  
Graduate students enrolled in the Environmental Science graduate program 
may also apply for WSUV GK-12 Graduate Teaching Fellowships. GK-12 Fellows 
serve as graduate teaching assistants in a middle-school science classroom 
for an entire academic year and stipends are very competitive 
($30,000/year). All teaching/research assistantships include tuition 
waivers as part of their stipends. 

Interested students should send a CV/resume and a letter describing past 
research experience and future research interests to Cheryl Schultz, 
[email protected] or call 360-546-9525 for more information. 
Graduate applications receive priority consideration if received by 
January 10, 2011 for Fall 2011 admission.  Initial field work for the 
project begins in March 2011. We anticipate hiring the student as an 
assistant for the 2011 field season.  I encourage all interested students 
to get in touch to learn more about the program and research in our lab.

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