Research associate/postdoc – Nitrogen fixation and cyanobacteria in cool 
terrestrial habitats

Opportunity for field and laboratory analysis of nitrogen fixation and primary 
production in widespread but neglected habitats dominated by mosses,
lichens, fungi and cyanobacteria.

The Biology Laboratory at the University of Iceland in Reykjavík is seeking a 
research associate/postdoc for a leading role in a two to three year project
supported by the Icelandic Research Fund and the University of Iceland, in 
collaboration with professor Ólafur S. Andrésson and professor Ingibjörg
Svala Jónsdóttir and several postgraduate students. Solid background in 
terrestrial ecology, analytical methods, statistics, microbiology, with
field and laboratory experience is required.

The research will be based at the Biology Laboratory, Faculty of Life and 
Environmental Sciences at the University of Iceland, but sampling will
mostly be during summers in the southern highland area, often under demanding 
conditions. In addition to terrestrial ecological methods, use
will be made of the acetylene reduction assay and 15N isotope labeling, PCR, 
gene sequencing and advanced methods for determining alternative 
nitrogenfixation.
The Icelandic Research Fund will provide total salary funds of 4500 thousand 
Ikr per year.

Applicants should contact professor Ólafur S. Andrésson at the University of 
Iceland (o...@hi.is) and apply at the University of Iceland application portal:
http://english.hi.is/content/post_doc_position_biology_institute_life_and_environmental_scineces_hi17020146

Applications should include a recent CV, a short statement of research 
interest, names and contact information for two
references, and an academic transcript. The application deadline is 27th March 
2017 or until an appropriate candidate has been recruited.

Project synopsis

Availability of fixed nitrogen is essential for primary production. We will 
gather information on biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) in eight defined 
subarctic habitats
(EUNIS classification) representing nearly 90% of cryptogam (lichen, moss and 
biocrust) cover in uncultivated areas of Iceland; by measuring of BNF, by 
identification
 of the bacteria and nitrogen fixation systems involved, including the 
alternative Vnf system, and by testing hypotheses regardingthe major players in 
laboratory
 experiments, making use of chemical and isotope analysis, gene sequencing 
technology and bioinfomatics.
The objectives are:
1) Obtain reliable estimates of BNF in major cryptogam habitats using 
ARA(acetylene reduction assay) standardized with 15N uptake.
2) Characterize nitrogen fixing bacteria and main components in the selected 
habitats using methods of microbiology and gene sequencing.
3) Carry out field observations, plus field and laboratory experiments to 
quantify cyanobacteria and environmental factors controlling BNF.
4) Establish the contribution of the alternative Vnf system to nitrogen 
fixation in the cryptogam communities, both in the field and in the
laboratory. For this we will a) determine 15N isotope discrimination by mass 
spectrometry (greater with Vnf than Nif), and b) determine levels of vnf and
nif gene expression by reverse transcript quantitative PCR.
5) Extend findings to habitats with same EUNIS classification elsewhere, model 
BNF and assess global relevance.

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