Academic
Job Category Faculty Non Bargaining
Job Profile Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Job Title Postdoc position: Tundra vegetation change and implications for wildlife habitats
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.
Postdoc position: Tundra vegetation change and implications for wildlife habitats
Job description
There is an urgent need to understand the effects of climate change on tundra ecosystems including vegetation change such as shrubification. Increasing shrub cover is modifying the habitats of key wildlife species including caribou, muskox (Ovibos moschatus), moose (Alces alces) and Dall sheep (Ovis dalli dalli), facilitating increases in predator populations. Changes to plant habitat can have critical impacts on animal population dynamics and trophic interactions among plants, prey and predators. Thus, understanding vegetation change will be critical to understanding the fate of wildlife populations and shifts in Arctic food webs in a rapidly warming Arctic.
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 vegetation change over time across spatial scales and will explore the implications for wildlife habitats. You will work with available ecological and remote sensing data to quantify changes in vegetation change across spatial and temporal scales and the implications for wildlife. Research questions will be co-developed with Indigenous communities in the Canadian North. This research will increase our understanding of tundra vegetation change and the implications for wildlife species. We collaborate with a team of early career researchers, Northern partners and international experts to conduct this research.
Minimum Qualifications
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