The McGuire lab at Texas Tech University is looking for a highly motivated PhD 
student to work as part of an NSF-funded collaborative study of flying foxes 
and Hendra virus in Australia. The successful applicant will work with an 
international and multidisciplinary team of collaborators, seeking to 
understand how human influences affect Hendra virus spillover events. As human 
development clears native forest resources, flying foxes that are traditionally 
nomadic or migratory have increasingly established permanent resident camps in 
urban and peri-urban areas. The PhD student will lead efforts to study the 
nutritional ecology, foraging dynamics, energetics, and stress physiology of 
resident flying foxes compared to migratory populations. Experience working 
with bats is an advantage, but more important is experience with ecophysiology 
methods such as energetics, nutritional physiology, and stress physiology. 
Fieldwork will extend for periods of up to 1 year in Australia, and therefore 
the successful candidate must be independent, motivated, and well organized, 
able to work well with a large team of collaborators under challenging field 
conditions. Another PhD position related to the project will be available in 
the Plowright lab at Montana State University, focusing on immunology and virus 
dynamics in flying foxes.

Anticipated start date for the position is January 1, 2018. For more 
information about the project, contact Liam McGuire 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>). The position will be based 
at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas, but extended periods of fieldwork 
will be conducted in Australia. Interested students should send a CV and brief 
summary of relevant experience to Liam McGuire 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>).


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Liam McGuire
Assistant Professor
Department of Biological Sciences
Texas Tech University
Lubbock, TX
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

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