GRADUATE POSITION ON PREDATOR SENSITIVITY TO EXTINCTION

The Aquatic Ecology and Global Change Lab in the Department of Watershed 
Sciences at Utah State University is seeking Ph.D or M.Sc applicants to 
undertake research on predator sensitivity to extinction. Trophic 
cascades are a charismatic topic in ecology, and one that has received 
wide attention from both the scientific and public community. The drive 
for understanding the effects of predator loss on the structuring and 
functioning of ecological communities is largely based on the assumption 
that predators are at a high risk of local or global extinction. Yet 
several studies that have investigated ecological mechanisms that 
underlie extinction risk have failed to investigate whether trophic 
level is an important trait. As a result the question still remains, 
“Are predators at a higher risk of extinction compared to other trophic 
levels?” The project involves meta-analyses and working with big data.
  
The successful applicant will be based out of the Atwood 
(http://trishaatwood.weebly.com/) and Hammill lab’s at Utah State 
University, but will work closely with the McCauley lab 
(https://labs.eemb.ucsb.edu/mccauley/doug/) at the University of 
California, Santa Barbra (USA) and the Madin lab 
(http://oceansphere.org/) at Macquarie University (Sydney, Australia). 
Although this project does not contain a field component extensive 
travel to California and Australia is required. As a results the 
selected student must be able to travel and have a clear criminal 
record. Students with a prior knowledge of computer programming, the 
statistical programming package R, ArcGIS, and prior experience 
extracting and analyzing big data are particularly encouraged to apply.  
Student must meet the minimum qualifications for acceptance into the 
graduate program: GPA of at least 3.4, 50th percentile in both verbal 
and quantitative sections of the GRE’s, three letters of recommendation.   

Utah State University (http://www.usu.edu) is a Research I (Extensive 
Doctoral) land-grant institution with a student body of over 24,000, 42 
departments, 8 academic colleges, a school of Graduate Studies, and 
diverse research programs. The main campus is located in Logan, a 
community of 100,000 people. Logan is 85 miles north of Salt Lake City 
in scenic Cache Valley, a semi-rural mountain basin with nearby ski 
resorts, lakes, rivers, and mountains providing many recreational 
opportunities. The area has a low cost of living and provides a high 
quality of life.  For more information on Logan see 
http://www.tourcachevalley.com.

Initial funding for tuition and salary has been secured. However, 
candidates are strongly encouraged to apply for external fellowships 
through the NSF and other sources, and internal fellowships at Utah 
State (http://rgs.usu.edu/graduateschool/htm/finances/fellowships, and 
http://rgs.usu.edu/graduateschool/finances/funding-available-to-
graduate-students). Candidates will be provided extensive support with 
the application process. Starting salaries are $20,000 for a PhD. 
Please contact Trisha Atwood ([email protected], 435 797 5729) for 
more information or to submit application materials (CV, cover letter, 
any publications, details of research interests, official/unofficial GRE 
scores and transcripts, and names of three people willing to provide a 
letter of reference). Lab website http://trishaatwood.weebly.com/

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