Dr. Paige Ferguson, Assistant Professor in the Department of Biological 
Sciences at the University of Alabama, is seeking a research technician to 
collect field data during the Summer of 2017. The technician will work in 
conjunction with a MS student and an undergraduate student.  The duties of this 
position include interviewing landowners in the Black Belt region of Alabama 
and transcribing interviews on to computer files. Interview questions will be 
provided and focus on land management practices, land use history, and values 
related to land and wildlife. Pay is $4000 for the summer (early June-early/mid 
August). A field vehicle or fuel reimbursement will be provided.  Housing will 
be a sublet apartment in Tuscaloosa, and the research technician is responsible 
for rent.

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 who have or are currently pursuing a B.S. degree are preferred. 
Applicants should have experience in communicating with diverse members of the 
public. Applicants must have strong communication skills, work ethic, and 
behave professionally.

To apply, please email Dr. Ferguson 
(pffergu...@ua.edu<mailto:pffergu...@ua.edu>) the following:
1. a cover letter describing your interest in the project and prior experiences 
that have prepared you for the project,
2. CV, and
3. contact information for 3 references.

Review of applications will begin immediately and will continue until the 
position is filled.




Dr. Paige Ferguson

Assistant Professor, Department of Biological Sciences

The University of Alabama<https://www.ua.edu>
Bevill 2109C
Tuscaloosa, AL 35405
Phone 205-348-1787<tel:205-348-1787>
pffergu...@ua.edu<mailto:pffergu...@ua.edu> | https://bsc.ua.edu/paige-ferguson/

[The University of Alabama] <https://www.ua.edu>

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