Posts Tagged ‘Graduate Student Assistantships’

Graduate Student Assistantships in Marine Biology

San Francisco State University’s Romberg Tiburon Center is offering two student Research Assistantships to conduct research toward Master’s degrees on a project recently funded by the National Science Foundation. These assistantships will begin in the fall semester 2010, and are contingent on the students being accepted into the SFSU Masters program in Marine Biology.

This research will investigate feeding by copepod nauplius larvae, the most abundant metazoans in the sea. Comparative experiments and field-based measurements will contrast the food consumed, and the effects of food limitation, between nauplii and later life stages. A variety of techniques will be applied to account for the inevitable biases and limitations of each. These will include laboratory feeding experiments using cultured prey individually and in mixtures, and experiments using natural prey, with a variety of methods used to measure food consumption. Separate experiments will determine how nauplii and copepodites survive and grow at different concentrations of food.

Investigations of feeding by a predatory copepod (Tortanus dextrilobatus) will use molecular techniques to identify mitochondrial and nuclear DNA from diverse suspected prey species. Specific primers will be developed for common zooplankton species consumed by T. dextrilobatus in the laboratory.

One student will work predominantly on experimental approaches with Dr. Wim Kimmerer (PI), and one on molecular approaches to investigate feeding with Dr. Sarah Cohen (co-PI). However, both will gain experience with all techniques and we will all work as a team. Support will include a tuition waiver and a stipend.

Application deadline to Biology Department is 1 February 2010, see http://biology.sfsu.edu/programs/graduate

Five graduate student assistantships in ecological stoichiometry of detrital food webs

Five graduate student assistantships (3 Ph.D. and 2 M.S.) are available as part of a newly funded project examining the responses of detritus-based stream food webs to concentrations and ratios of dissolved nitrogen and phosphorus. Two Ph.D. positions will be based at the University of Georgia and will focus on detrital carbon dynamics and responses of predatory salamanders, respectively. A third Ph.D. position will be based at the University of Alabama and will examine macroinvertebrate food web responses. Both M.S. positions will be based at Coastal Carolina University and will focus on microbial responses to N:P gradients using field and laboratory experiments. All fieldwork will be based at the Coweeta Long term Ecological Research site in Otto, North Carolina. We are looking for students with a holistic view of ecological ramifications of nutrient enrichment, strong interest in integrating a stoichiometric perspective across taxonomic groups, significant research experience and demonstrated communication skills. The positions will start in Summer or Fall 2010, with microbial positions starting as early as January 2010. The successful candidates will receive full tuition waivers and competitive stipends. For more information, contact Amy Rosemond (rosemond@uga.edu) or John Maerz (jmaerz@warnell.uga.edu) for the UGA positions, Jon Benstead (jbenstead@bama.ua.edu) for the UA position, or Vlad Gulis (vgulis@coastal.edu) for the two CCU positions.

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