I’m looking for a postdoc (quantitative wildlife ecologist) to join our team to estimate white-tailed deer density and group size using camera traps (with implications for pathogen spread). https://t.co/FSL9vPobmX
Exciting news for our former student & current #research technician, David Dayan! He is now an @NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program award winner! He is continuing his #WildlifeHealth#education at @umncbs EEB program w/ @MegganCraft Read about David: https://t.co/rz1NIKZkYf
New in ME!
@J9Mistrick et al. use 16S @nanopore sequencing to investigate the role of agricultural landscapes as potential sources of putative bacterial pathogens in wild mice 🐁. @CedarCreekESR@ItascaBio @WileyEcolEvol
Read more: https://t.co/KFjwEZXFR2
📷: @MegganCraft
I'm hiring a postdoc to work on epidemiological models at the human-deer interface in partnership with USDA APHIS. To apply: 1) visit https://t.co/mDUEP8QT68, 2) “Apply for a job today”, and 3) search for Job ID 358672. @ESAdisease@ESAEcology
Reach out if you are interested in a writing a NSF-GRFP to conduct graduate work in my lab. We have exciting new fieldwork and modeling involving white-tailed deer movement/behavior and SARS-CoV-2 in the Twin Cities, MN. https://t.co/NwhzsChNmN
We have successfully hired enough women faculty and department chairs over the last several years that we can begin a brand new initiative! Cutting staff positions by 60% because women are better at doing university service! (Don’t worry, we’ll keep all our associate deans).
Disease Ecology Research Technician opening in my lab to study resource-coinfection interactions! Collaborative field and lab work in Finland. 1+ year position. Great research opportunity for postbac or MS. Apply here: https://t.co/3aJBHsxObX
The dates for EEID 2023 are set!
We kick off with registration and reception on 22 May and have scientific sessions on 23, 24, and 25 May in State College, PA.
Mark your calendars!
@rwidome You did the right thing or you could just step out of its way without yelling instructions. :-) Did you put its sighting on the inaturalist map?