MS Assistantship at Virginia Tech in Water Quality, and Coupled Human –
Environmental systems

Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Virginia Tech
Blacksburg, VA 24061-0321

Water-restricted environments that experience strong seasonal changes
are extremely vulnerable
to human landscape alteration and pollution. Increasingly, pollution
of limited water resources
is identified as an important and urgent problem facing much of the
world and, in particular,
Africa. This NSF supported project will evaluate coupled human and
ecological drivers
influencing water quality and the health of human and animal
populations in the Chobe River
Region of Botswana, a location where human health is seriously
impacted. Using predictive
models calibrated with field samples, existing and potential long-term
effects of climatic
changes, seasonal variation in hydrology, increases in human
populations and landscape
modification on human and animal health will be investigated. Project
outcomes will contribute
to theory and methods for assessing the effects of coupled
socioecological systems on water
quality and environmental health.

Project and Responsibilities: Support is available for an academically
outstanding and
professionally motivated student to pursue a MS in the Department of
Fish and Wildlife
Conservation at Virginia Tech. The student will be funded through the
above multidisciplinary
National Science Foundation (NSF)-sponsored project. The student will
contribute to the
development of hydrological models designed to contribute to our
understanding of system
dynamics and the impact of water quality on human and animal health in
the system.
.

The incumbent will work with hydrological models, manage and analyze
data, prepare reports
and manuscripts, present research at professional meetings, help with
other projects in the lab,
and complete coursework pursuant to the MS degree.

Required qualifications: The applicant should have a BS in an
environmentally related field
of science. The incumbent will also need to have strong mathematical
skills to successfully
complete the project. The candidate should have an interest in water
quality, public health
and the environment; expertise in statistical computing and geographic
information systems is
desired.

Stipend: $19,177 per year plus tuition

Closing date: November 15-Candidate selection will begin immediately
and we recommend
applying as quickly as possible.

Starting date: January, 2012 or earlier

Contact: Email letter of interest, academic resume (with names and
contacts of three references,
GRE scores, unofficial transcripts to: Dr. Kathleen Alexander,
Department of Fish and Wildlife
Conservation, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University,
Blacksburg, VA 24061-0321;
Phone: 540-231-5059; email: [email protected]

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