Ambrosia Symbiosis
  • Ambrosia Symbiosis
  • Ambrosia Beetles
    • Classification
    • Ecology
    • Diversity
    • Importance
    • Genetics and Sociality
    • Fungus Pockets
    • Fungus Stealing
    • Rearing Beetles
    • Catching Beetles
  • Ambrosia Fungi
    • Who Are the Fungi?
    • Genetics and Metabolism
    • Beetle-Fungus Interactions
  • Researchers
    • Hulcr Lab
      • Jiri Hulcr
      • Craig Bateman
      • Martin Kostovcik
      • Caroline Storer
    • Collaborators
      • Tom Atkinson
      • Anthony Cognato
      • Peter Biedermann
      • Bjarte Jordal
      • Paul Kendra
      • Jason Smith
      • Sarah Smith
      • Fernando Vega
  • Resources
  • In the Media
  • Lab

Looking for grad students & postdocs

Several PhD or Maters student & postdoc positions available in bark beetle evolution, systematics & symbiology

Students seriously interested in any or all of the following should apply:
• molecular phylogenetics
• hi-tech morphological systematics
• bark beetles, their ecology and evolution
• symbioses among insects, fungi and bacteria
• citizen science, science communication

Join our growing Forest Entomology and Symbiology team at the University of Florida on a new NSF-funded project. Feel free to call for more info on 352-273-0299, or simply send your CV and a short summary of your accomplishments to Jiri Hulcr, hulcr@ufl.edu. Please use PHD APPLICANT 2013 as the e-mail Subject.

Application deadline: February 15, 2013.
Start date: flexible, the sooner the better.

Jiri Hulcr

(c) 2013 Ambrosia Symbiosis - Web Work by Jiri Hulcr and Neil Mccoy Design