We are seeking candidates for a fully-funded PhD scholarship to work on 
timescale interactions in marine ecosystems. 

We aim to use diverse modelling approaches to explore the different layers of 
temporal complexity present in the lower trophic levels of the marine food web. 
Thus, this project would suit a theoretical biologist, or mathematicians and 
physicist interested in biological questions. Applicants should already hold a 
Masters qualification or a first class or upper-second class undergraduate 
degree.

The preliminary starting date is October 2014, but application review will 
continue until the position is filled. Further details below.

--------------------------DESCRIPTION--------------------------

PhD project title: Timescale interactions in marine microbes.

Institution: University of Strathclyde, Glasgow (Scotland)

Group/Department: MASTS Marine Population Modelling Group, Department of 
Mathematics and Statistics 

Supervisor: Prof. Michael Heath, Dr. Juan Bonachela

This studentship will be of 3 years duration with stipend and fees for a UK/EU 
student. (Final funding arrangements under negotiation)

Description: Marine microbes (viruses, bacteria, phytoplankton) are a key 
component of the marine food web and of the most important biogeochemical 
cycles on Earth. Because of their short generation time and vast amount of 
offspring, these organisms evolve in timescales that are similar to the 
individual's lifetime. Therefore, phenotypic plasticity (dynamic responses to 
environmental changes) and evolution interact necessarily during the 
single-organism life span. However, theoretical research typically study 
ecological and evolutionary matters separately.

This project aims to study how considering these interactions may challenge 
current predictions about the long-term behaviour of marine microbes. The 
project will use existing mathematical models, and develop new ones, able to 
account for these interactions and dynamics. Due to the highly nonlinear 
ecological relations between organism, stochasticity inherent to mutations, and 
overlap between ecology and evolution, the study and analysis of these models 
will require from sophisticated (and probably innovative) mathematical and 
numerical methods. This project will be important to understand how the lower 
trophic levels in particular, and the complete marine food web in general, 
react to e.g. different climate change scenarios.

Start date: October 2014.
For more information please contact: Dr Juan Bonachela 
([email protected]; [email protected]).

To apply: http://www.strath.ac.uk/admissions/postgraduateresearch/

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