Dr. Paige Ferguson, assistant professor in the Department of Biological
Sciences at the University of Alabama, is seeking a PhD student to begin in
Summer or Fall 2017. Research will use structured decision making to
evaluate methods of private land use in the Black Belt Region of Alabama. The
PhD student will plan and run workshops with Black Belt prairie landowners
and build and analyze a Bayesian decision network to identify optimal
methods of private land management. Project outputs will include a better
understanding of landowner objectives, identification of land management
options that can help landowners meet their objectives, a decision network
modeling prairie ecology and the expected outcomes of management options,
and a ranking of management options by their expected ability to produce
outcomes that satisfy land use objectives.



The Black Belt Region is of great interest ecologically and culturally. Land
use change throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries have left less
than 1% of the native Black Belt prairie. There is evidence that the Black
Belt Prairie was historically connected with the Great Plains and may have
served as a refugium for Great Plains species during glacial episodes.
Several invertebrate species have disjunct distributions, with the Black
Belt prairie comprising the eastern boundary of their range. The Black Belt
prairie provides important habitat for many species of grassland birds and
invertebrates Sites in the Black Belt are also used for recreational
hunting of white-tailed deer and quail. The human history of the Black Belt
Region is as equally important as the natural history, and both have
contributed to current patterns of land use and prairie habitat quality.
>From the mid-1800s to the early 1900s, the Black Belt Region was the site
of extensive slave-based cotton farming. When cotton farming declined, land
was often converted to pasture. In 2014, the poverty rate in the Black Belt
Region of Alabama was 30.0%, well above state (19.2%) and national (15.5%)
averages. How land is distributed and used may contribute to socio-economic
patterns among landowners and to social, political, and economic dynamics
in a region.



Applicants should have a MS and experience in many of the following:
ecology, environmental science, working with landowners and management
agencies, leading discussions, communicating with diverse people, project
planning and organization, GIS, ecological modeling, statistics, computer
programming, and field work. Applicants should be highly motivated and
prepared to conduct independent research.



*To apply, please email Dr. Ferguson (pffergu...@ua.edu
<pffergu...@ua.edu>) the following:*

*1. a cover letter describing your interest in the project and prior
experiences that have prepared you for a PhD in Dr. Ferguson’s lab *

*2. your undergraduate transcript (an unofficial copy is fine), *

*3. GRE scores, *

*4. a sample of your scientific writing (for example a manuscript or lab
report), and *

*5. contact information for 3 references.*

Review of applications will begin immediately and will continue until
positions are filled.



The position comes with a full tuition waiver, a competitive stipend, and
health insurance. Funding during the academic year is available as a
Graduate Teaching Assistant through the Department of Biological
Sciences. Highly
qualified applicants may be considered for Graduate School Fellowships,
which offer a Research Assistantship during the student’s first year. A
summer stipend and funding for summer field work expenses are available,
and additional funds, as needed, will be acquired through internal and
external funding sources in close collaboration with Dr. Ferguson. For
example, funding for conference presentations is available competitively
through the University of Alabama.



Additional information is available from the following links:

Dr. Ferguson’s Research: http://bsc.ua.edu/paige-ferguson/

Department of Biological Sciences: *http://bsc.ua.edu/ <http://bsc.ua.edu/>*

Graduate School: http://graduate.ua.edu

University of Alabama: http://www.ua.edu

Outdoor opportunities in Alabama: http://www.outdooralabama.com

Tuscaloosa: http://www.tuscaloosa.com/visitor-services

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