Ruth Yanai is seeking new graduate students (MS or PhD) to participate in a 
large collaborative project investigating above and belowground carbon 
allocation, nutrient cycling, and tradeoffs involved in multiple resource 
allocation. The Multiple Element Limitation in Northern Hardwood Ecosystems 
(MELNHE) project has field sites located at Hubbard Brook, Jeffers Brook, and 
Bartlett Experimental Forests in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Since 
2011, thirteen stands have been receiving N, P, N&P, and control treatments in 
0.25-ha plots, with six stands receiving Ca treatments. Research in the MELNHE 
project includes soil respiration, soil mineralization, beech bark disease, 
leaf production by species,  foliar nutrient resorption, water use, 
mycorrhizae, forest productivity (among species and stand age classes), and 
snail and arthropod diversity.  More information on the project can be found at 
http://www.esf.edu/melnhe.

We also offer opportunities to contribute to uncertainty analyses.  QUEST 
(Quantifying Uncertainty in Ecosystem Studies) is a Research Coordination 
Network led by Yanai and others.  Learn more at 
http://quantifyinguncertainty.org<http://quantifyinguncertainty.org/>.

We welcome inquiries from prospective students interested in forest ecology, 
nutrient cycling, and uncertainty analysis. Applicants should be 
self-motivated, excited to work as part of a multi-investigator project, have 
laboratory and field experience, and be comfortable living and working in a 
group setting. A field crew blog from previous years is available at 
http://shoestringproject.wordpress.com/.

The ideal student will be able to start in May or June 2016, to allow 
familiarization with the field sites and our research activities.  A January 
2016 start is also an option.

Funding will consist of a combination of research and teaching assistantships. 
A stipend, full tuition waiver, health insurance, and a summer position with 
the field crew in New Hampshire will be provided. Prospective students may 
apply to the Department of Forest and Natural Resources Management or the 
Graduate Program in Environmental Science, both at the SUNY College of 
Environmental Science and Forestry, Syracuse, NY.

We appreciate communicating with students as part of the application process. 
Students are encouraged to review MELNHE related data and publications and 
supply their own ideas for research in relation to the project. Prospective 
students should begin that conversation by requesting the password for Ruth's 
project materials from Heather Engelman at 
forestecol...@esf.edu<mailto:forestecol...@esf.edu>

    Heather
________________________
Heather Engelman
Forest Ecology Lab, B-9 Marshall Hall, 315/470-4868 (generally M-W), 
forestecol...@esf.edu
(Mailing address:  105 Marshall Hall)
SUNY ESF
1 Forestry Dr.
Syracuse, NY 13210
http://www.esf.edu/for/yanai/research.htm

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