mmgray6 Posted January 28, 2020 Share Posted January 28, 2020 The Helen G. and Allan D. Cruickshank Research Awards are given to support projects dealing with wild birds in Florida. Proposals submitted for research awards should be directed at improving knowledge of Florida birds and should propose work to be done in Florida. Students (undergraduate to PhD) are especially encouraged to apply; post-doctoral level scientists and non-profit organizations or their representatives may also be considered for funding. The maximum amount awarded each year typically falls in the range of $2000-2500; multiple awards for smaller grants are occasionally provided. Proposal Due Date: February 15 of each year. Proposal Preparation and Evaluation Applications must contain 4 distinct parts: (1) an updated CV of the applicant with current contact information; (2) a research proposal of up to 8 double-spaced pages (4 single-spaced; excluding references, figures, and tables); (3) a 1-page research budget showing total project costs, and what portion of the total this award will cover; and (4) a timeline indicating when work will be completed. Research proposals must be well-written and contain an Introduction/Background section with Literature Review; a clear statement of Research Objectives, Study Design, proposed Methods and Materials that include information on the study area/species, and a short Synthesis and Significance section at the end emphasizing why funding this project will enhance knowledge or conservation of Florida birds. All application materials should be put into a single PDF file, in order, and emailed to the Committee Chair with CRUICKSHANK PROPOSAL in the title line. Applications should be strong in one or more of these focal areas: (1) basic biology (new understanding of bird biology in area(s) of specialization) (2) conservation biology (new understanding of how populations, species, or communities (patterns, processes) are affected by humans such that this understanding could lead to designing better protection of avian biodiversity) (3) management application (testing of management techniques that foster native birds: species, populations, communities) Please see http://www.fosbirds.org/cruickshankr.html for more information Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.