Populations of birds like ruffed grouse (Bonasa umbellus), eastern Whip-poor-will (Antrostomus vociferus), and American woodcock (Scolopax minor) have been consistently declining over the past several decades primarily due to young forest habitat loss. The introduction of West Nile virus (WNV) into the United States has only accelerated these declines, especially for the ruffed grouse, over the past two decades. In Pennsylvania, for example, ruffed grouse has now been designated as a Species of Greatest Conservation Need and there is enormous need to determine the impact of various stressors (e.g., changing spring weather, disease, landscape changes) to patterns of grouse occurrence and abundance.
We are recruiting a student pursue a Ph.D. degree at University of Kentucky (UK) in the Department of Forestry & Natural Resources (https://forestry.ca.uky.edu/), advised by Dr. D.J. McNeil (https://darinjmcneil.weebly.com). The student will ultimately develop a research project that builds our understanding of how landscape characteristics and West Nile Virus (WNV) disease risk affect occupancy of ruffed grouse and associated bird species (e.g., eastern whip-poor-will, American woodcock). All sampling will be done by deploying and recovering Autonomous Recording Units (ARUs; AudioMoth, Song Meter, etc.) and running classifiers we have previously developed for focal species. Focal research areas will include: 1) Quantifying occupancy of grouse, whip-poor-wills, and woodcock across a gradient of WNV risk, 2) Assessing patterns of colonization and extinction through the use of dynamic occupancy models, and 3) potentially assessing patterns of occupancy for other species across WNV risk or other landscape characteristics of interest (e.g., using LiDAR, etc.). Specific research questions will be determined jointly by the advisor and selected candidate. Research advisor will be Dr. DJ McNeil (UK), co-advised with Dr. Jeff Larkin (IUP)
Required Qualifications:
B.S. and M.S. in wildlife science, ecology, zoology, or closely related field (≥3.0 GPA)
A strong work ethic, drive, and motivation to succeed
Ability to conduct state-wide monitoring of hundreds of sites using ARUs
Strong verbal and written communication skills
Demonstrated ability to work independently and as a strong leader, overseeing the work of field technicians/assistants
Ability to work under adverse field conditions, often in remote areas
Strong working knowledge of R and GIS software (e.g., qGIS, ArcGIS, etc.)
Preferred Qualifications:
Experience with occupancy models
Background or interest in avian ecology, quantitative ecology, and Bayesian analyses
Experience driving a 4WD vehicles
Experience working and communicating with other biologists, landowners, and the public.
Experience with autonomous recording units (ARUs)
Stipend/Salary: $26,000 + health care
Start Date: January 2025
Application Deadline: We will begin reviewing applications on 30 September 2024 and will continue until a candidate is selected.
To Apply: Please send: (1) a cover letter focused on the listed qualifications, as well as how the opportunity would help further career goals, (2) resume/cv – listing presentations and publications, (3) unofficial copies of transcripts, and (4) contact information for 3 references to Dr. D.J. McNeil (darin.j.mcneil@uky.edu).
Contact
D.J. McNeil
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