The Department of Wildland Resources, in the College of Natural Resources 
at Utah State University, will award a S. J. and Jesse E. Quinney PhD 
Fellowship to start fall 2012. The Fellowship provides four years support 
of $20,000 per year as a Graduate Research Assistant, plus tuition, student 
fees, and health insurance.

The Department of Wildland Resources (http://www.cnr.usu.edu/wild/) has a 
diverse faculty and a large, dynamic graduate student body. Research 
focuses on basic and applied aspects of the ecology, conservation, 
restoration, and management of a wide breadth of wildland ecosystems. The 
Department is an integral part of the three-department College of Natural 
Resources and the inter-collegiate Ecology Center 
(http://www.usu.edu/ecology/), and houses the USDA Predator Ecology Lab
(http://www.aphis.usda.gov/wildlife_damage/nwrc/field/utah/indexut.shtml), 
part of the USGS Utah Cooperative Fish & Wildlife Research Unit 
(http://ella.gis.usu.edu/~utcoop/), and the USU RS/GIS Laboratory 
(http://www.gis.usu.edu/). We also have important links with the USDA 
Forage and Range Research Lab (http://uaes.usu.edu/htm/farms-and-
facilities/usda-forage-and-range-research-laboratory/) and Poisonous Plants 
Research Lab (http://uaes.usu.edu/htm/farms-and-facilities/usda-poisonous-
plantresearch-lab/), the USDA Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research 
Station (http://www.fs.fed.us/rmrs/), and the Center for Integrated 
Biosystems (http://www.biosystems.usu.edu/).

Applicants should work with a potential faculty PhD advisor that will 
strongly support the application and apply for admission to the School of 
Graduate Studies. In addition to the graduate application, applicants
should submit (1) a letter of interest explaining why he or she would like 
to join the potential advisor’s research group and (2) a complete 
curriculum vitae. These materials should be sent to Marsha Bailey
(marsha.bai...@usu.edu). Review of complete applications will begin 27 
January 2012. Founded in 1888 as Utah’s land-grant university, USU’s main 
campus in Logan is composed of eight colleges and boasts a friendly, 
supportive faculty and campus environment. Currently, the University
hosts an enrollment of about 25,000 students, including 3,400 graduate 
students. Logan is a valley community of about 125,000 people nestled in 
between the Wellsville Mountains and the Bear River Range in northeastern 
Utah. In addition to providing access to extraordinary ecosystems for 
research, the many ski resorts, lakes, rivers, and mountains in the area 
make it one of the finest outdoor recreation environments in the nation. 
The city of Logan boasts a low crime rate, low cost of living, fine 
restaurants, a gardener’s market, summer arts festivals, and nationally 
known events, such as the annual Utah Festival Opera. The campus is 90 
miles north of Salt Lake City. With views of a natural area reserve from 
campus, the pristine natural environment of the area makes Logan one of 
America’s most desirable and affordable university towns 
(http://www.tourcachevalley.com/).

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