Graduate school research opportunities in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

The School of Biological Sciences at Washington State University invites 
motivated applicants for graduate training and research in ecology & 
evolutionary biology.

Research opportunities in both plant and animal systems are diverse.   Research 
focus areas include disease and community ecology, ecosystem ecology, 
evolutionary genetics, ecological and evolutionary physiology, genomics, 
evolutionary theory, and phylogenetics and systematics.  The following is a 
brief sketch of our faculty active in these areas:

Jesse Brunner: Disease ecology
Jeremiah Busch:  Population genetics, plant evolution
Patrick Carter:  Quantitative genetics, animal physiology
Omar Cornejo:  Genomics, host-pathogen evolution
Erica Crespi:  Animal developmental physiology
Wes Dowd:  Animal evolutionary physiology
Mark Dybdahl:  Evolutionary ecology, adaptation, phenotypic plasticity
Dave Evans:  Ecosystem ecology and nutrient cycling
Richard Gomulkiewicz:  Evolutionary genetics and theory
Joanna Kelley:  Genomics, adaptation to extreme environments
Eric Roalson:  Plant phylogenetics and systematics
Elissa Schwartz:  Disease dynamics and virus-host interactions
Andrew Storfer:  Landscape genomics, disease evolution
Heather Watts:  Animal behavior and physiology

For more information on specific research areas in evolution and ecology, 
please visit their websites, available via sbs.wsu.edu<http://sbs.wsu.edu>

Our graduate training program offers many opportunities for excellence.  Every 
SBS student is fully funded with generous stipends through teaching or research 
assistantships, accompanying tuition waivers, and health benefits. Plus, SBS 
endowments provide over $100,000 per year in student awards to facilitate 
research, training, and professional travel. PhDs receive up to $10,000 in 
guaranteed support for research-related travel and MS students receive up to 
$5,000 in guaranteed support. The campus houses outstanding facilities, 
including plant and animal growth chambers, managed field sites, a modern 
genomics core, stable isotope facility, and a campus-wide computer cluster.

Washington State University is located in Pullman, WA, a friendly mid-sized 
town on the rolling hills of the unique Palouse region in eastern Washington.  
The campus is only eight miles from the University of Idaho in Moscow, ID.   
The two towns and campuses provide an academically and culturally rich 
community. The area offers great parks, bike paths, restaurants, farmer's 
markets and unbeatable opportunities for recreation in the adjacent mountains 
and rivers.


For more information regarding the Graduate School applications at WSU, see:  
gradschool.wsu.edu<http://gradschool.wsu.edu>

If you have any questions regarding the application process, please
contact:

Jenny Davis ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>)

The deadline for application of prospective students is January 10,
2018, but students are encouraged to apply anytime.


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