[ECOLOG-L] Job opportunity: Research Assistant in Biogeochemistry/Ecosystems Ecology, University of Cincinnati

2012-05-01 Thread Buffam, Ishi (buffamii)
UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI
DEPARTMENT OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Jr. Research Associate (212UC0748)

A full-time junior research associate position is available in the laboratory 
of Dr. Ishi Buffam, Department of Biological Sciences, at the University of 
Cincinnati, to assist in biogeochemical studies of the influence of vegetated 
roofs and other urban green infrastructure on surface water quality in the 
Cincinnati, OH region. Position duration is initially 1 year, possible 
extension based on funding availability.

Dr. Buffam is seeking a field/laboratory technician to join his research group. 
The technician is expected to carry out sampling of soil and water under a 
range of weather conditions and assist in designing and implementing plot-scale 
ecological and biogeochemical experiments. The technician will also analyze 
soil and water samples in the lab for a range of chemical parameters including: 
carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus content, concentration of metals, cations and 
anions. In addition, the technician is expected to oversee lab QA/QC and 
maintain a well-documented database of field and analytical data. The 
technician will interact closely with graduate students and help with the 
training and supervision of undergraduates in lab and field techniques.

The successful candidate will have a BS in Biology, Chemistry, Environmental 
Science or a related field, and a minimum of 1-2 years of experience in aquatic 
ecosystems ecology, biogeochemistry and/or water quality analysis, including 
both field and lab experience. Applicants should be in good health and capable 
of rigorous outdoor activity. Familiarity with standard water quality 
techniques (colorimetric nutrient analyses, dissolved organic carbon analysis, 
ICP-OES) is required. Maturity and self-motivation, good organizational skills, 
the demonstrated ability to work independently, and a strong capacity for 
focus, concentration, and attention to detail are all essential. Proficiency in 
MS Excel is required, MS Access a plus. Driver’s license in good standing also 
required.

If you should have any questions about this position, please feel free to email 
Dr. Ishi Buffam at  ishi.buf...@uc.edu.

For more details and in order to apply, go to:  http://www.jobsatuc.com. The 
position number is 212UC0748.

The University of Cincinnati is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer


[ECOLOG-L] Bubble production as a way to calculate photosynthetic rate

2012-05-01 Thread Jorge A. Santiago-Blay
 Hello Ecolog-Listers:

Centuries ago, Charles Bonnet reported that submerged plants produced
bubbles in the presence of light. Now, we know the gas is oxygen and the
process is photosynthesis. Do you know anyone who reported that before
Bonnet?

Calculating rate of photosynthesis by using the rate of bubble production
is widely (?) used in American intro. biology courses. Do you know *since
when* this exercise became popular? Is it used in other countries?

If you know of a venue more for intro. biology teachers/high school
teachers, etc. where this questions may be appropriate, please let me
know.  Some of us in this list may also be intro. bio. teachers. Apologies
for cross-posting. Will take answers on my email (below). Thank you.

Gratefully,

Jorge Santiago-Blay
blayjo...@gmail.com


[ECOLOG-L] Salford Systems Data Mining Conference

2012-05-01 Thread SUBSCRIBE ECOLOG-L Rachel Quinn
Don't miss it, it's this month!


Environmental Forecasting, Wildlife Research, Ecological Prediction

The 2012 Salford Analytics & Data Mining Conference aims to bring together 
researchers, practitioners, and data enthusiasts to exchange ideas and 
experiences.

Attendees will have the chance to have one-on-one meetings with Dr. Adele 
Cutler, co-creator of RandomForests algorithm and Dr. Richard Olshen, co-
creator of CART classification and regression algorithm. Both Algorithms 
are used in the modeling of environmental data.

http://www.salforddatamining.com/

In addition, the following presentations will be featured:


“Global Modeling of Biodiversity and Climate Change,” University of 
Alaska, Biology and Wildlife dept, Institute of arctic Biology, EWHALE Lab
 
"Data Mining to Reveal Biological Invaders,” Charles University in Prague
"Machine Learning in the Environmental Discipline," University of Alaska, 
Biology and Wildlife dept, Institute of arctic Biology, EWHALE Lab


[ECOLOG-L] 2012 Natural Area Conference Call for Papers

2012-05-01 Thread Patterson, Karen (DCR)
The Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation is co-hosting the 39th 
annual Natural Areas Conference in Norfolk, VA October 9-12, 2012

The Virginia Natural Heritage Program is leading the planning effort, in 
coordination with the Natural Areas Association. 

The link below has conference information and a call for papers and posters.

http://www.naturalarea.org/12conference/

Submissions are due by June 1, 2012.

Topics of particular interest are:
* Natural Areas Program Relevance and Resilience
* Marketing, Communications and Outreach
* Land Conservation
* Coastal/Marine Issues
* Cave/Karst Issues
* Cultural Resource Management
* Managing Climate Disruption Effects
* Managing Public Access in Natural Areas
* Fire Ecology and Management
* Invasive Species Management

http://www.naturalarea.org/12conference/



Karen D. Patterson 
Natural Heritage Vegetation Ecologist
Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation
217 Governor St, 3rd floor, Richmond, VA 23219





[ECOLOG-L] Fwd: [ECOLOG-L] Families in Science - Balancing your personal and professional life

2012-05-01 Thread Clara B. Jones
1. I'm linking a *New York Times* Opinion piece addressing, from several
women's points of view, a number of topics being  discussed in this thread:

http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2012/04/30/motherhood-vs-feminism/lets-not-pass-judgment-on-parenting-styles

2. After careful reading and consideration of your posts, I've formed the
opinion that, in the USA, it is most likely that each academic department
or university will respond individually to the concerns many of you have
(see Duke for one example in A&S). It seems unlikely to me that, in the
USA, the issues will be addressed structurally as they have been in most W
European countries. In the final analysis, there may be no strategy that
serves all requirements. Anyway...TBC...

clara b. jones
Blog: http://vertebratesocialbehavior.blogspot.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/cbjones1943



-- Forwarded message --
From: Jacquelyn Gill 
Date: Tue, May 1, 2012 at 12:49 PM
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Families in Science - Balancing your personal and
professional life
To: ECOLOG-L@listserv.umd.edu


Hi Karen,

The problem with this framework is that you risk guilting parents (usually
women) for choices they
are forced to make, or even those they may genuinely want to make,
especially if the parents' level of
engagement doesn't match what others expect. Like I said earlier, for some
people, a mother's
choosing to work at all is irresponsible. Framing arguments in this way is
ultimately damaging and
shifts the burden away from institutions who need to step up and support
parents, and instead shifts
that burden to parents for whom choice may be relative and is definitely
highly value-laden. I don't
see the value in reminding people who are probably already very aware that
that can't spend enough
time with their kids that, in addition for working hard to provide their
family at the expense of having
a fulfilling life, they're also not really raising their kids. Those
choices were probably hard to make. I
also still fail to see how that is relevant to a discussion of women in
academia-- the overwhelming
evidence is that women are leaving academia because there aren't
institutions in place to support
them, not that women are abandoning their families.

Best wishes,

Jacquelyn



-- 
clara b. jones


[ECOLOG-L] ESA SERDP Student Travel Awards - Last Day to Apply

2012-05-01 Thread Teresa Mourad
LAST DAY TO APPLY: May 1, 2012 
Submit Letter of Recommendation from Adviser by May 7, 2012

The Ecological Society of America (ESA) announces the availability of ten 
(10) travel awards of $500 each to students presenting papers at ESA's 
2012 Annual Meeting in Portland, OR. These awards are sponsored by the 
Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program (SERDP). SERDP is 
the U.S. Department of Defense's (DoD) environmental science and 
technology program, executed in partnership with DOE and EPA. SERDP 
invests in basic and applied research, and exploratory development. 

Please visit http://www.esa.org/education_diversity/serdp_awards.php for 
full details and FAQs on eligibility and required documents. Please follow 
submission instructions carefully. KINDLY NOTE THAT YOUR APPLICATION IS 
NOT COMPLETE UNTIL YOU HAVE SUBMITTED THE APPLICATION FORM, PROOF OF 
STUDENT STATUS AND THE LETTER OF RECOMMENDATION FROM YOUR ADVISER. You 
have up to May 7 to submit the letter of recommendation from your adviser.

Teresa Mourad
Director, Education and Diversity Programs
Ecological Society of America


[ECOLOG-L] Graduate Research Assistant in the Ecology of Green Infrastructure now being recruited at the University of Arizona, Tucson.

2012-05-01 Thread Mitchell Pavao-Zuckerman
A research assistantship is available to support a M.S. or Ph.D. student
interested in investigating efforts to use green infrastructure to provide
ecosystem services in semi-arid cities. Stormwater harvesting, bioretention
basins, and rain gardens are green infrastructure elements that can improve
water quality in urban watersheds and increase plant cover in cities. We are
initiating a study of experimental rain gardens at Biosphere 2 that will
look at biogeochemical cycling and plant performance and also links to
ongoing monitoring of green infrastructure in Tucson, AZ.   Requirements:
for M.S.: B.S. degree in Ecology, Environmental Sciences, Hydrology, or
related field and minimum undergraduate GPA of 3.25.  for Ph.D.: M.S. degree
in Ecology, Environmental Sciences, Hydrology, or related field.  Desired
experience:  Strong lab and field skills with biogeochemistry, experience or
interest in data analysis, GIS, and biogeochemical/ecosystem modeling,
interest or experience with citizen science. Strong work ethic, good verbal
and written communication skills, ability to work independently, and
interest in public communication of science. Support: A graduate research
assistantship stipend, which includes a waiver of out-of-state tuition (but
not fees) for at least 1 full year.  Start date: Approximately 15 July 2012,
for the Fall 2012 semester.  To apply: Submit (via email:
mzuc...@email.arizona.edu): Letter of interest, resume, transcripts & GRE
scores (unofficial are fine), and names and contact information for three
references to Mitchell Pavao-Zuckerman, Biosphere 2 and the School of
Natural Resources and Environment, University of Arizona, Biological
Sciences West, Rm 310, Tucson, AZ 85721. The student would be enrolled in a
graduate program within the School of Natural Resources and Environment at
the University of Arizona (see,
http://snre.arizona.edu/academic/grad/prospective and
http://www.snr.arizona.edu/academic/grad/gradprograms)


Re: [ECOLOG-L] Families in Science - Balancing your personal and professional life

2012-05-01 Thread karen golinski
Please, I'm not sure how it has come down to this but for the record: I
absolutely *do* support work/life balance initiatives and models that are
family (and couple and single-person)-positive, both inside and outside of
academia.

On Tue, May 1, 2012 at 11:49 AM, Jacquelyn Gill  wrote:

> Hi Karen,
>
> The problem with this framework is that you risk guilting parents (usually
> women) for choices they
> are forced to make, or even those they may genuinely want to make,
> especially if the parents' level of
> engagement doesn't match what others expect. Like I said earlier, for some
> people, a mother's
> choosing to work at all is irresponsible. Framing arguments in this way is
> ultimately damaging and
> shifts the burden away from institutions who need to step up and support
> parents, and instead shifts
> that burden to parents for whom choice may be relative and is definitely
> highly value-laden. I don't
> see the value in reminding people who are probably already very aware that
> that can't spend enough
> time with their kids that, in addition for working hard to provide their
> family at the expense of having
> a fulfilling life, they're also not really raising their kids. Those
> choices were probably hard to make. I
> also still fail to see how that is relevant to a discussion of women in
> academia-- the overwhelming
> evidence is that women are leaving academia because there aren't
> institutions in place to support
> them, not that women are abandoning their families.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Jacquelyn
>
>


-- 
G. Karen Golinski, PhD


[ECOLOG-L] Job Announcement

2012-05-01 Thread Meggan Dwyer
*Managing Director, Center for Marine Studies, Blue Hill, Maine*



*Description*

The Marine Environmental Research Institute (MERI) is seeking an
experienced senior management professional with strong organizational
leadership, finance, communications and fundraising/ development skills to
fill the full-time position of Managing Director of the Center for Marine
Studies in Blue Hill, Maine, reporting to the Executive Director.



Located in the coastal village of Blue Hill, Maine, the Marine
Environmental Research Institute (MERI) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit charitable
organization founded in 1990. Its mission is dedicated to scientific
research, advocacy and education on the impact of ocean pollution on marine
life and human health, and to protecting the health and biodiversity of the
marine environment for future generations. The Institute’s initiatives
include scientific research on toxic chemical pollutants, a coastal
monitoring program, policy and advocacy outreach, and education programs.
For more information, visit our website: www.meriresearch.org.



The organization is poised to expand its influence on marine policy to a
national scale and the individual who fills this key position will be
instrumental in implementing this strategy.



*Position Description*

The Managing Director will be responsible for overseeing the organization’s
daily operations and enhancing internal business processes to help the
Institute grow and fulfill its mission. She/he will assist the Executive
Director with the design and implementation of the Institute’s strategic
plans, communications and development strategies as well as its advocacy
outreach. At a minimum, the Managing Director will manage five direct
reports, three additional part or full-time staff and a number of seasonal
interns.



*This is a full-time professional position based in Blue Hill, Maine, with
a competitive salary and benefits package.*



*Primary Responsibilities*

   - Working closely with the Executive Director and the Board, help
   develop and implement the Institute’s strategic business and operating
   plans.
   -  Oversee financial management and the budget. Lead the budget process,
   monitor financial performance, prepare, review and analyze financial
   reports, and advise the Executive Director in financial planning and
   decision-making.
   - Oversee development operations, including grants management,
   fundraising and major gift campaigns and donor relations. Interact
   regularly with the Executive Director and senior staff to accomplish
   fundraising goals.
   - Serve as a liaison with the Institute’s constituency, including
   funders, collaborating science and academic institutions and individuals,
   other non-profit organizations, community leaders, government officials and
   policymakers.
   - Supervise the Center’s senior staff, administrative support team and
   consultants, helping them direct interns and volunteers involved in the
   Center’s day-to-day programs and operations.
   - Coordinate the Center operations with the Institute’s evolving offsite
   activities, programs and staff.
   - Represent the Institute in the ocean, environmental and human health
   communities, delivering presentations to articulate and promote the
   Institute’s mission and programs.



*Reports to:*  Executive Director



*Qualifications*
Candidates should be highly organized, effective business managers with
nonprofit management experience and an interest in the marine environment
that is consistent with the Institute’s mission. They should have highly
developed written, verbal and interpersonal communications skills, program
and staff management experience, and a fundraising/development track
record. Familiarity with marine science and environmental research would be
an advantage and human resources experience helpful. The successful
candidate must enjoy working with a small staff balancing multiple tasks
under pressure in a growing organization.**



An MBA/MA/MSc with 5+ years of management and development experience, or a
BA/BSc with 10+ years and management and development experience is
preferred. Proficiency with the Microsoft Office suite is required,
familiarity with a Mac platform is a plus, and experience with development
software is beneficial.



*Start Date:  *June 2012

*
Salary:*   Competitive, DOE



*Benefits:*  Full benefits package



If you are interested in applying for this position, please submit by
e-mail your CV and cover letter with  MERI Search Committee/Managing
Director in the subject line to  i...@meriresearch.org.

-- 
Coastal Monitoring Coordinator
Marine Environmental Research Institute
55 Main St.
Blue Hill, ME 04614
207-374-8980
www.meriresearch.org


[ECOLOG-L] Job Opportunity - Remote Sensing/Ecology - NEON - Boulder, CO

2012-05-01 Thread Laura Reynolds
Overview:
The National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON), Inc., is a $430 
million dollar NSF-funded project dedicated to understanding how changes 
in climate, land use and invasive species impact ecology and ecological 
processes.  For the next three decades, NEON will collect a comprehensive 
range of ecological data on a continental scale across 20 representative 
ecoclimatic domains.  NEON will use multiple methods for data collection, 
including an airborne observation platform that will capture spectral and 
LiDAR data of regional landscapes and vegetation; mobile, relocatable, and 
fixed data collection sites with automated ground sensors to monitor soil 
and atmosphere; and trained field crews who will observe and sample 
populations of diverse organisms and collect soil and aquatic data.  
Linking these observations is a stable and extensible cyberinfrastructure 
that will calibrate, store and publish this raw data, as well as support 
the production of derived science products that address NEON’s grand 
challenges.  The Observatory will eventually employ up to 300 personnel 
nationwide and will be the first of its kind designed to detect and enable 
forecasting of ecological change at continental scales.

Position Summary:
As a member of the Data Products Group (DPG), the Staff Scientist will be 
responsible for contributing to the development and generation of all data 
products that will be released by NEON to the community.  This 
collaborative effort requires a broadly-trained scientist well-versed in 
and eager to learn the breadth of NEON scientific efforts, since the DPG 
works with the NEON’s science, cyberinfrastructure, and education teams, 
as well as the external community, to define and create the data products 
and manage their lifecycle.   

Specifically, this Staff Scientist position will act as the subject-matter 
expert supporting the development of NEON data products derived from 
and/or informed by waveform LiDAR and hyperspectral data collected by 
NEON’s Airborne Observation Platform (AOP).  This position, within the 
Data Products Group, will work closely with the members of the AOP team.

Essential Duties and Responsibilities:
•   Develop novel algorithms for processing LiDAR and hyperspectral 
data and producing related data products, in support of developing 
inferences related to ecological science;
•   Contribute to developing the science rationale for NEON data 
products, prototyping algorithms for their generation, and engaging all 
stakeholders in vetting the produced materials.  The candidate will help 
to define NEON’s strategy to scale ecological data across multiple 
temporal and spatial scales in support of continental-scale ecological 
science;
•   Engage the user community through meetings, workshops, and working 
groups, to ensure the utility and veracity of NEON data products.

Education:
•   PhD, ScD, or equivalent degree in atmospheric science, 
biogeochemistry, ecology, physics, or related fields is required.
•   Postdoctoral experience is preferred, but not required

Required Experience:
•   Application of remote sensing theory to biological and/or physical 
systems
•   Expertise with common software packages (e.g., IDL/ENVI)
•   Experience building novel algorithms in support of LiDAR and/or 
hyperspectral data processing.
•   Experience integrating remote sensing data with a variety of 
ground-based data, including measurements of biophysical variables and 
observations of flora and fauna.
•   Familiarity with a variety of remote sensing platforms (e.g. 
MODIS, AVIRIS, Landsat)

Preferred Experience:
•   Familiarity with data processing workflows in a production 
environment
•   Programming & analysis software experience (C/C++, Java, Python, 
MATLAB, IDL, R, etc.)
•   Teaching experience

Skills and Abilities:
•   Skilled at scientific writing and review
•   Strong communication and interpersonal skills
•   Experience working in a collaborative scientific enterprise
•   Open to undertaking responsibilities beyond those associated with 
individual research projects
•   Ability to work independently and as part of an active science team
•   Problem solver who can successfully apply experience, judgment, 
and creativity to both short- and long-term challenges, independently and 
within a larger team

Apply to:  www.neoninc.org 

NEON Inc. is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Women, Minorities, Veterans 
and Disabled Persons are encouraged to apply. 


[ECOLOG-L] MS position: oak savanna fire ecology

2012-05-01 Thread Duncan Wilson
Two Graduate Research Assistantships (M.S.) are available to study the 
ecology of oak-pine savanna in eastern Oklahoma to begin Fall 2012. This 
project is part of a larger funded research effort examining the community 
and restoration ecology of the tallgrass prairie – oak & pine forest – 
prescribed fire interactions in newly restored savanna. Research 
opportunities can be tailored to interest, and we invite students to apply 
with research interests ranging from plant community ecology, to carbon 
sequestration dynamics, production ecology or ecological modeling. The 
position will require substantial field work. For information about the 
Dept. of Natural Resource Ecology & Management at Oklahoma State 
University, please see: http://nrem.okstate.edu. A stipend is available at 
$15,500/yr for two years, with renewal after the first year based on 
satisfactory progress. Benefits include tuition waiver and health 
insurance. A complete application includes: statement of research 
interests and relevant experience, three letters of reference, curriculum 
vitae, official transcripts of all college level study, GRE scores and a 
completed OSU Graduate College application. Unofficial transcripts and GRE 
scores are fine for initial consideration. For further information contact 
Duncan Wilson, (duncan.wil...@okstate.edu).


[ECOLOG-L] MS position: forest nutrition and soil moisture

2012-05-01 Thread Duncan Wilson
A Graduate Research Assistantships (M.S.) is available to study forest 
productivity–soil moisture and nutrition relationships in loblolly pine to 
begin Fall 2012. Research will focus on soil-plant interactions, with 
substantial opportunity to tailor a research project to a student’s 
interests. The position will allow wide interaction with a diverse set of 
University and Federal researchers from across the southeastern U.S. on a 
common rain exclusion experimental platform. For information about the 
Dept. of Natural Resource Ecology & Management at Oklahoma State 
University, please see: http://nrem.okstate.edu. A stipend is available at 
$15,500/yr for two years, with renewal after the first year based on 
satisfactory progress. Benefits include tuition waiver and health 
insurance. A complete application includes: statement of research 
interests and relevant experience, three letters of reference, curriculum 
vitae, official transcripts of all college level study, GRE scores and a 
completed OSU Graduate College application. Unofficial transcripts and GRE 
scores are fine for initial consideration. For further information contact 
Duncan Wilson, (duncan.wil...@okstate.edu).


Re: [ECOLOG-L] Families in Science - Balancing your personal and professional life

2012-05-01 Thread Jacquelyn Gill
Hi Karen,

The problem with this framework is that you risk guilting parents (usually 
women) for choices they 
are forced to make, or even those they may genuinely want to make, especially 
if the parents' level of 
engagement doesn't match what others expect. Like I said earlier, for some 
people, a mother's 
choosing to work at all is irresponsible. Framing arguments in this way is 
ultimately damaging and 
shifts the burden away from institutions who need to step up and support 
parents, and instead shifts 
that burden to parents for whom choice may be relative and is definitely highly 
value-laden. I don't 
see the value in reminding people who are probably already very aware that that 
can't spend enough 
time with their kids that, in addition for working hard to provide their family 
at the expense of having 
a fulfilling life, they're also not really raising their kids. Those choices 
were probably hard to make. I 
also still fail to see how that is relevant to a discussion of women in 
academia-- the overwhelming 
evidence is that women are leaving academia because there aren't institutions 
in place to support 
them, not that women are abandoning their families.  

Best wishes,

Jacquelyn


[ECOLOG-L] New blog on sexy groupers

2012-05-01 Thread Sarah Frias-Torres
Introducing my new blog, Grouper Luna : sexy groupers united.

http://grouperluna.wordpress.com/
Brief descriptionThis is a blog about sexy groupers going on a honeymoon.
The honeymoon is what scientists call a reef fish spawning aggregation, one of 
the most breathtaking shows in nature.
Most reef fish species aggregate at only a few sites of the reef during one or 
two months of the year to spawn. The spawning event is always linked to the 
moon cycle.
Hundreds, sometimes thousands of fish (depending on the species) swim in a 
synchronized ballet  under a moonlit ocean.
When the moment of spawning arrives, they release the next generation of baby 
fish into the ocean currents.
Worldwide, 80 % of known reef fish spawning aggregations are overfished, and 20 
% of them have been fished to extinction.
This blog will focus on research and conservation of reef fish spawning 
aggregations, specially those of large-bodied grouper fish.
Other topics on marine conservation will also be explained.
Sarah Frias-Torres, Ph.D. Schmidt Ocean Institute Postdoctoral FellowOcean 
Research & Conservation Association (ORCA) 1420 Seaway Drive, Fort Pierce, 
Florida 34949 USA Tel (772) 
467-1600http://www.teamorca.orghttp://independent.academia.edu/SarahFriasTorres

  

Re: [ECOLOG-L] Families in Science - Balancing your personal and professional life

2012-05-01 Thread Martin Meiss
  Interesting observations, Robert H., perhaps summed up by the
metaphor "The best steel goes through the fire."  But what does it imply
for implementing social policy, or academic policy?  Deliberately harsh or
downright brutal conditions might be appropriate for training Navy Seals,
and tough ghetto conditions might produce the best boxers, but should this
apply in academia?  Aren't high academic standards and intellectual rigor
better tools for training productive scientists?

  And if these high standards are not accompanied by things like
support for family and other "work/life balance" issues, what are we
selecting for?  The most ruthless, cutthroat competitors?  Such people
might be very poor at the cooperative aspects of science, and so science
would suffer.

  Would we be selecting for people with "iron constitutions" that makes
them resistant to ulcers and mental breakdown?  Perhaps, but people who
might be "weak" by this criterion could have brilliant minds that would
make great contributions.

  Are we really in danger of making life so cushy for students and
scientists that they will grow complacent, slack off on their work, and
merely warm their academic chairs?  And even if scientific productivity
were to fall off a bit, is that the end of the world?

  I think that harsh conditions, such as those imposed by totalitarian
regimes, can boost performance in the short term, but in the long run it is
unstable.  People hate it and they rebel against it by passive/aggressive
non-cooperations,, voting with their feet, sabotage, etc.  The history of
the twentieth century shows this.  And smart, qualified people leaving
academia shows it, even if less dramatically.

 I think these are factors we should bear in mind when considering how
the academic life should be structured.


Martin M. Meiss


2012/4/30 Robert Hamilton 

> I have had both young men and young women (much more often young women)
> in my classes who are/were single parents, working and going to school
> full time and raising children. IMHO they have a much better sense of
> the urgency of life, and while they are not the top students, the ones
> that get through do very well, much better (in general) than those who
> simply live in a dorm or some rental housing of some sort and do nothing
> they are obliged to do but go to school. JMHO again, but it seems that
> those who are given a tough row to hoe early in life, and hoe it, find
> the challenges of the rest of life a lot easier and get a lot more done
> than those who have it really easy, and this is as true of Ecologists as
> any other sorts of professionals. Having to both raise a family,
> including finding the resources needed to raise that family, represent a
> very common challenge in any society and it just seems to me that we
> academics, who are obliged to teach 7-15 hours of classes a week for 32
> weeks, mentor some grad students and maintain a research program at the
> most, have it pretty soft, with plenty of time for family and other
> obligations.
>
> Robert Hamilton, PhD
> Professor of Biology
> Alice Lloyd College
> Pippa Passes, KY 41844
>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news
> [mailto:ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU] On Behalf Of Clara B. Jones
> Sent: Monday, April 30, 2012 1:11 AM
> To: ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU
> Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Families in Science - Balancing your personal
> and professional life
>
> ...just out of curiosity...are some suggesting that people, in
> particular, women, should not be surgeons or pediatricians or
> line-persons for an electric or cable company or members of First
> Response Teams in, say, Ecology, or soldiers or on-call nurses, say,
> members of anesthetic support teams, or firefighters or crisis
> negotiators or specialized rescue workers, say, EMTs or fieldworkers
> studying crepuscular taxa or safari guides or owners of high-traffic
> motels or restaurants, say, a 24-h diner on Rt. 22 in NJ, or deep-sea
> "fishermen" or CDC epidemiological specialists or priests or mountain
> climbers or nannies or sanitation workers or medical examiners or Red
> Cross pilots or members of the US Senate from, say, CA or Oregon, or any
> number of additional tasks and, dare I say, passions...and *
> life*-skills...
>
> On Sun, Apr 29, 2012 at 6:02 PM, karen golinski
> wrote:
>
> > I wonder how a person who is regularly away from home from 6 AM until
> > after
> > 10 PM really raises a family? Most kids are sleeping during the "at
> home"
> > time of 10 PM-6 AM.
> >
> > It saddens me to think that people want to silence the discussion of
> > positive models of work-life balance. Just because people have to work
>
> > the long hours described below does not mean it is a good (or
> > productive) way to live our lives.
> >
> > On Sun, Apr 29, 2012 at 1:20 PM, Robert Hamilton
> >  > >wrote:
> >
> > > I must say that I find this conversation somewhat embarrassing, and
> > > ho

[ECOLOG-L] MS position: Modeling the impacts of sea level rise on coastal ecosystems

2012-05-01 Thread Matt Fitzpatrick
MS position: Modeling the impacts of sea level rise on coastal ecosystems 

The University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science has an open
position for a motivated MSc student interested in studying the impacts of
sea level rise on coastal ecosystems. The student would join a team of
ecologists, geomorphologists, and remote-sensing scientists working to
develop novel approaches to quantify how sea level rise could alter patterns
of biodiversity in coastal marshes along the Potomac River (see
http://www.umces.edu/al/project/predicting-vulnerability-sea-level-rise for
details). There are numerous opportunities for a student to extend the
broader project objectives to include specific ideas the student is
interested in pursuing. 

This is an ideal project for an individual interested in working at the
interface of theoretical and applied ecology, while developing the following
set of skills:

- statistical modeling generally and species distribution modeling in particular
- spatial analysis, including GIS
- remote sensing
- Computer programming, with an emphasis on the R statistical language

The project is based at the Appalachian Laboratory in Frostburg, Maryland,
with Matt Fitzpatrick, Andrew Elmore, and Katia Engelhardt. Student support
has been secured through funding from the National Park Service. The student
will matriculate through the Marine, Estuarine, and Environmental Sciences
Program (MEES) at the University of Maryland, College Park.

Review of applications will begin immediately and will continue until the
position is filled, with an anticipated start date of Fall semester 2012. To
apply, please email as a *single pdf* document: (1) a statement of interest,
(2) a CV, and (3) contact information for three referees to
mfitzpatr...@umces.edu.


Re: [ECOLOG-L] Families in Science - Balancing your personal and professional life

2012-05-01 Thread karen golinski
Jacquelyn,

If you re-read my post you will see that I said nothing about the working
poor. Nor did I criticize anyone. As a field ecologist who spends most of
the field season away from my young family, I am acutely aware that I
cannot parent my kids when I am not there. Thankfully, my husband (a
grad-student) and parents have been willing and able to shoulder my
responsibilities, but it isn't an ideal situation by any means.

My point was, to suggest that parents who aren't present, for whatever
reason, effectively raise their children--*without giving credit to those
who helped or did most of the "raising"*--isn't fair.

Many academic women don't have family nearby or a partner who is willing
and able to help. If we don't want to lose those people from the system, we
need to think of ways of attracting them to stay in or to re-enter. Some
great suggestions are given in the second to last paragraph of the article
posted by David Schneider.

Karen

On Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 1:36 PM, Jacquelyn Gill  wrote:

> To clarify: my statement about conflating women academics with the working
> poor was not in response to Sarah's post, which came after mine, but in
> response to Karen Golinski's criticism of people working long hours being
> poor parents.
>
> I made the point in my post that people forced to work multiple jobs and
> long hours are not in the same situation as working academic mothers, even
> though both would benefit from increased institutional support. This is not
> to criticize either group, but to point out that having a work-life balance
> discussion at all is, for some, not an option. I suspect most academics are
> above the poverty line, underpaid though they may be (adjuncts are a
> different story). Whether you have to work or choose to work, you should
> have the same access to support and protection from criticism.
>
> Jacquelyn
>
> On Apr 30, 2012, at 11:51 AM, Sarah Fann  wrote:
>
> > A couple of notes to my post. :)
> >
> > I made a silly assumption that readers would check out the link that
> David
> > originally posted, and I then re-posted. Without reading the article, my
> > paragraph is out of context. The article follows women and men with at
> > least a B.S. in mathematics, and found that a disproportionate number of
> > women with these degrees do not attend graduate school and do not become
> > professors. It then asked the questions I re-posted (in green which I
> > forgot doesn't show up on this list serve) about why these women leave
> and
> > where they go. As a woman who fits into that category, I answered their
> > questions about myself.
> >
> > The second is in response to this quote.
> >
> > "Conflating the plight of the working poor with the choice of a woman to
> > have a career and a family is false equivalence."
> >
> > Robert Hamilton gave an example of the "6am-10pm" parent working fine for
> > the family, and I provided a counter-example. Others may disagree with
> me,
> > but personally I don't think my example should be discarded simply
> because
> > my family was part of the "working poor". Professors do not make that
> much
> > money, especially when compared to administrators in academia, or to
> > scientists outside of academia. Additionally, cost of living raises are
> > rare and sometimes non-existent for professors. Many universities are
> > rolling back and cutting health insurance benefits while cost of living
> > (rent, gas, food, commodities, education, etc) is skyrocketing around the
> > nation, and programs put in place to help support families (in retirement
> > or other stages) are being cut by States and the Federal government. My
> > generation of scientists are faced with the additional burden of
> > considerable debt for undergraduate studies, of which congress is voting
> to
> > possibly double the interest rate on. My point is that my family
> situation
> > in high school might not be all that different for a "sole-bread winner"
> > professor in today's America. I maintain my original point, which is that
> > having one parent working gross overtime on a consistent basis only works
> > if either one parent can be home more frequently, or the family is rich
> > enough to cover child care costs. Both of these scenarios are unlikely
> > amongst my generation, and having this high demand of time spent away
> from
> > family is one factor that drives some of women out of science careers in
> > academia.
> >
> > On Mon, Apr 30, 2012 at 11:05 AM, R Omalley 
> wrote:
> >
> >> This all started with a query about how best to bring kids along on
> >> fieldwork...
> >> It may be helpful to remind ourselves of our predecessors, to be able to
> >> believe in our own capacities.
> >> I love the story of Dorothea Lange, who had two kids and two step-kids.
> >> http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothea_Lange#_
> >> (forgive the Wikipedia source)
> >>
> >> Excellence is defined in many different ways.  Sole-authored research
> >> papers is a mighty narrow defi

[ECOLOG-L] 2 positions in Australia

2012-05-01 Thread Matheus Carvalho
I found this on another mailing list, and believe it might interest some 
ecologists. Again, please, don't contact me, but the people offering the job. 
Good luck.

 
Matheus C. Carvalho
Senior Research Associate
Centre for Coastal Biogeochemistry
Southern Cross University
Lismore - Australia
http://www.angelfire.com/pa/ostro


##1st JOB OFFER#

Research Fellow – Methane (Methanotrophic Bacteria) - School of Marine & 
Tropical Biology



Ref. No. 12145 – Townsville



The appointee will conduct and lead research on genetic/molecular 
identification of archaebacteria and/or cyanobacteria within the methanotrophic 
bacteria sub-project of the Bioremediation of Methane from Mine Ventilation Air 
Project. The appointee will also conduct research on the development and 
optimisation of a biphasic growth system connecting methanotrophic bacterial 
and diazotrophic cyanobacterial culturing, for the remediation of methane and 
the resulting CO2. The ability to work in a team is crucial as all work will be 
undertaken in collaboration with industry partners.



Employment Type: Appointment will be full-time for a fixed-term to 30 June 2014.



Salary: Academic Level B - $76,767 - $90,581 per annum. Commencing salary will 
be in accordance with qualifications and experience. Benefits include 5 weeks 
annual leave, generous employer superannuation contribution and attractive 
options for salary packaging.



Applicants must follow the Method of Application procedures (including 
systematically addressing the Selection Criteria). Further information is 
available at http://www.jcu.edu.au/jobs/ or by contacting the Recruitment 
Officer, Human Resources Management, e-mail jcu.recruitm...@jcu.edu.au

Applications close on 25 May 2012


 ##2nd JOB OFFER# 

Research Fellow – Methane (Diazotrophic Cyanobacterial) 



Ref. No. 12146 – Townsville



The appointee will be responsible for the diazotrophic cyanobacteria 
sub-program of the Bioremediation of Methane from Mine Ventilation Air Project. 
The appointee will conduct and supervise research on strain identification, 
culture optimisation and biochemical profiling of diazotrophic cyanbacterial 
biomass for end product assessment.  As part of the team, the appointee will 
participate in research for the development of biphasic methane remediation 
systems.  Report writing and the ability to work in a team is crucial as the 
research is industry-partnered.



Employment Type: Appointment will be full-time for a fixed-term to 30 June 2014.



Salary: Academic Level B - $76,767 - $90,581 per annum. Commencing salary will 
be in accordance with qualifications and experience. Benefits include 5 weeks 
annual leave, generous employer superannuation contribution and attractive 
options for salary packaging.



Applicants must follow the Method of Application procedures (including 
systematically addressing the Selection Criteria). Further information is 
available at http://www.jcu.edu.au/jobs/ or by contacting the Recruitment 
Officer, Human Resources Management, e-mail jcu.recruitm...@jcu.edu.au

Applications close on 25 May 2012.