The Quantitative Marine Conservation Ecology (QMCE) lab, run by Dr. Susan
Piacenza, at University of West Florida is currently recruiting 1-2
enthusiastic and motivated M.S. graduate students to begin in Fall 2019.
Students are expected to develop independent projects in applied marine
ecology that complement work in the lab.  Ongoing projects include both
theoretical and empirical work on sea turtle population dynamics and
recovery, monitoring and population assessment, improving the design of
satellite tags, and the ecology and population dynamics of marine fish.
Potential projects include modelling sea turtle population dynamics and
monitoring to improve the accuracy of population assessments, extending an
agent-based model of sea turtles to be spatially explicit (and could be
applied to test questions about sea turtle ecology and climate change), and
assessing how highly fecund individuals contribute to population recovery
under varying conditions. In addition, the lab is currently setting up
pilot studies for the use of stereo-video cameras to measure juvenile sea
turtles and fishes on natural and artificial reefs in the northern Gulf of
Mexico. We are also running an ongoing research project investigating the
drag of satellite tags applied to juvenile sea turtles and ultimately are
working towards design improvements to satellite tags applied to sea
turtles. We are also interested in the ecological interactions of man-made
reefs and reef fish abundance and diversity.

Competitive applicants should have a strong interest in quantitative marine
conservation ecology (i.e. like math and statistics), and a passion to
positively influence science and marine conservation. Students are expected
to obtain quantitative skills, fluency in scientific communication, and
learn some computer programming. Students with previous experience in math,
statistics, engineering, or computer science are especially encouraged to
apply. Applicants with experience in SCUBA-based research (AAUS, or
equivalent) are preferred (especially for field based projects), but not
required.

More details about work in the QMCE lab can be found here:
www.susanpiacenza.com. Details on the graduate program of the Biology
Department at UWF can be found at
http://uwf.edu/cse/departments/biology/graduate-programs/ms-biology/. For
preferred consideration (and access to graduate assistantships), graduate
applications are due February 1, 2019. Prospective students should include
a statement of research interests in the email text, a CV that includes
GPA, GRE scores, and list of references to Susan Piacenza (spiace...@uwf.edu
).

UWF is an equal opportunity employer and underrepresented and minority
groups are encouraged to apply.
-- 
Susan Piacenza, Ph.D.
*Assistant Professor - Department of Biology*
*Hal Marcus College of Science and Engineering*
*University of West Florida*
11000 University Parkway, Pensacola, FL 32514
Office: 62E -  Building 58
P: 850-857-6414
Email: spiace...@uwf.edu
Website: www.susanpiacenza.com

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