Recruiting: Ph.D. student
Project: Systems biology enabled research on the roles of microbial communities 
in carbon cycle processes – Determination of the roles of pyrophilous microbes 
in the breakdown and stabilization of pyrolyzed forms of soil organic matter
Institution: University of Wisconsin-Madison (Dr. Thea Whitman)
Collaborators: University of California-Berkeley (Dr. Matthew Traxler and Dr. 
Tom Bruns), and Joint Genome Institute (Dr. Igor Grigoriev)

We are recruiting a Ph.D. student to work on a DOE-funded multi-institutional 
project investigating the role of microbes in post-fire soil organic matter 
(SOM) dynamics. The ideal candidate will have an MS, with expertise and 
interest in some or all of the following areas: microbiology and soil science, 
stable isotope probing of DNA, bioinformatics, microbial community ecology, 
soil carbon cycling or pyrogenic organic matter cycling, and gas flux tracing 
using stable isotopes. Successful candidates will join a dynamic team of 
researchers to use a systems biology approach, coupling 13C stable isotope 
probing of nucleic acids, gas flux analyses, small experimental “pyrocosms”, 
and mass spectrometry to dissect the effects of microbes on post-fire SOM 
dynamics.

The position could start during the summer or fall semesters of 2017. If you 
are interested in this project, please contact 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>, sending a statement of interest 
and your cv before April 15, 2017.

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