PhD IN ISOTOPIC ECOLOGY OF WILD (FERAL) HORSES ON SABLE ISLAND   

Location: University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada AND/OR University of 
Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada (collaboration). Field work occurs on 
Sable Island, Nova Scotia, Canada.

Supervisors: Dr. Keith A. Hobson, University of Western Ontario, London, ON 
and Dr. Philip McLoughlin, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada. 

Salary: $20000/year for a minimum of 3 years.

Start date: September 1st 2016 (preferred) or May 1st 2017.

APPLICATION DUE DATE: Applications will begin being reviewed April 1, 2016.

Project: We are looking to recruit a PhD student to contribute to our long- 
term individual-based study of feral horses on Sable Island (Nova Scotia, 
Canada) initiated in 2007. This project will focus on the evolutionary 
consequences of a strong gradient in habitat quality along the length of the 
island (horse density drops by half from west to east). The student will 
investigate sources of nutrition and drinking water to feral horses using 
naturally occurring stable isotope (d13C, d15N, d2H) tracers as well as more 
conventional methods. The student will spend up to 2 months on Sable Island 
each summer for fieldwork. Daily tasks, shared by the entire research team, 
will include walking censuses and photography of horses, collection of 
samples, laboratory work, identification of individuals from digital 
photographs, and database management. Students visiting Sable Island must work 
well in teams, deal well with life in a remote research station, be able to 
travel by small airplane, fishing trawler, helicopter, or frigate, and be 
reasonably fit as walking censuses require lots of hiking. Courses on first 
aid and driving All Terrain Vehicles will be provided prior to fieldwork. 

This position is fully funded for a minimum of 3 years (salary of $20
000/year) but the student will be expected to apply for internal scholarships 
(e.g., teaching assistant positions) and external scholarships (e.g. NSERC). 
While all applications are welcomed, preference will be given to Canadians who 
are competitive for an NSERC scholarship (GPA > 3.8) and international 
students who can secure a scholarship in their home country. Previous 
experience with using stable isotope methods in ecological research is an 
asset.

To apply send an email titled SABLE ISLAND PHD 2016 by APRIL 1, 2016 to 
[email protected] and [email protected] (cc’d) including:

-       A short summary of research interests
-       A current CV
-       PDFs of undergraduate and graduate transcripts
-       The names and email addresses of 3 potential references

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