Academic
Job Category Faculty Non Bargaining
Job Profile Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Job Title Postdoc position: Plant phenology change over time across spatial scales
Department Research | Myers-Smith Lab | Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences | Faculty of Forestry
Compensation Range $1.00 - $500,000.00 CAD Monthly
Posting End Date March 20, 2024
Note: Applications will be accepted until 11:59 PM on the day prior to the Posting End Date above.
Job End Date Mar 31, 2026
The expected pay for this position is $5,000.00/month.
Job description
There is an urgent need to understand the effects of climate change on tundra ecosystems including shifts in plant phenology \xe2\x80\x93 the timing of plant growth and reproduction. The timing of plant life events, phenology, is temperature sensitive in tundra ecosystems. Climate change could alter the timing of spring green up and how long plants grow resulting in changes to wildlife habitats including altered plant composition such as an increase in shrub species and a change in the timing of plant resources for wildlife.
The Canada Excellence Research Chair (CERC) project in global change ecology of northern ecosystems will investigate how warming temperatures and shifting seasonality affect Arctic tundra, alpine and boreal forest ecosystems, including changes in plant growth, habitat composition, wildlife movement and species ranges. It will also examine the collective impact of these changes on the livelihoods of Indigenous communities in the Yukon Territory, Canada. As a part of this CERC project, we are offering a postdoctoral position in the Faculty of Forestry at University of British Columbia for a self-motivated candidate with a strong scientific background in the fields of ecology, remote sensing or a related field with excellent English language skills.
In this postdoc project, you will study plant phenology change over time across spatial scales. You will work with available datasets including the International Tundra Experiment phenology dataset, cross-site time-lapse photography (phenocams) and remote sensing data to quantify changes in plant phenology over time and with warming across spatial and temporal scales. You will also have the opportunity to explore tundra vegetation changes below-ground including the timing of root growth using available cross site data collected as a part of the TundraTime project. This research will test the hypothesis that although warming is leading to earlier growing seasons, the period of plant growth is not extending longer above ground. This research will increase our understanding of tundra phenology change and will be used to predict rates of landscape and ecological change with global change across the tundra biome. We collaborate with a team of early career researchers, Northern partners and international experts to conduct this research.
Minimum Qualifications
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