PhD scholarship opportunities –  climate change effects on Australian fish and 
fisheries species

Funding has been obtained from the Australian Research Council for a 3-year 
project studying the effects of climate-driven range extensions of tropical 
coral 
reef fishes on temperate Australian coastal ecosystems. I am seeking several 
excellent prospective PhD students to participate in various parts of the 
project.

Projects summary: 
We tackle the Research Priority ‘Environmental change’ by innovatively 
analysing a 
long-term dataset to reveal the drivers of successful native invasions, 
experimentally evaluating their effect on fish diversity and productivity, and 
developing holistic models that forecast their impacts on the near-future 
distribution and stocks of inshore fisheries species. In a changing world where 
many people depend on oceans for food and livelihood, predicting the future 
distribution of fisheries species is one of the big challenges we face. Many 
inshore fisheries species are being stressed simultaneously by native invasions 
and ocean warming, but rigorous empirical data and models that can provide 
reliable forecasts of these impacts are lacking.

The project involves field work and/or experimental lab work in Adelaide and 
along 
the east coast of Australia (New South Wales), and is a collaborative project 
between the University of Adelaide, University of Technology Sydney and the 
University of the Sunshine Coast. Multiple PhD projects are available on 
behavioural ecology, food-web dynamics (including stable isotope analysis), 
otolith bio-chronology, community dynamics, population biology, ecophysiology, 
and 
(aut)ecology, all of which with a focus on the above project objectives.

Research funding is available to support several PhD projects but candidates 
need 
to obtain a scholarship to cover their tuition and living expenses. 
International 
candidates can apply for an IPRS or ASI scholarship through the University of 
Adelaide (next deadline: 31 Jan 2017) while domestic candidates (Australian and 
New Zealand citizens and Permanent Residents of Australia) can apply for an 
Australian Postgraduate Award (next deadline: 31 May 2017). Applicants with 
funding from other sources are also welcome to apply. Only excellent candidates 
will be invited to apply for these competitive scholarships. Successful 
international scholarship applicants typically have at least a few scientific 
articles in reputable peer-reviewed journals (with high ISI impact factor), 
with 
at least one as lead author. Other requirements are high B.Sc./M.Sc. grades, 
excellent writing skills, good referee reports, relevant research experience, 
and 
being able to operate successfully in a team. Applicants should be native 
English 
speakers or show recent evidence of English language proficiency (e.g. TOEFFL, 
IELTS). 

The University of Adelaide is a research-intensive university, and one of 
Australia’s top eight Universities. The School of Biological Sciences has 
strong 
expertise across the disciplines of marine ecology and global change biology 
(www.marinebiology.adelaide.edu.au). Successful candidates will join a dynamic 
group of students and academics working on climate change at the School. They 
will 
perform research leading to a Doctoral degree in Marine Biology.

To apply: Send your cover letter, CV, list of publications, and 
Bachelors/Masters/Honours transcripts to Prof Ivan Nagelkerken 
([email protected]; 
http://researchers.adelaide.edu.au/profile/ivan.nagelkerken) before 16 January 
2017. Applications will also be considered after this date for the next rounds 
of 
scholarships later this year.

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