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Job Category Student Employee Job Title PhD position: Spatial patterns and resilience in tundra community composition Department Research | Myers-Smith Lab | Department of Forest and Conservation
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Business Education: •Graduate Degree (PhD preferred) in Rhetoric, Composition, Business and Professional Communication, or a closely related field. •Evidence of having received training in the teaching of
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– Communication in Engineering : Education: Graduate Degree (PhD preferred) in Rhetoric, Composition, Business and Professional Communication, or a closely related field. Evidence of having received training in
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composition, wildlife movement and species ranges. This research will also examine the collective impact of these changes on the livelihoods of Indigenous communities in the Yukon Territory, Canada
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University of Toronto | Downtown Toronto University of Toronto Harbord, Ontario | Canada | 18 days ago
Qualifications: PhD in English with specialization in and/or experience teaching composition/writing at the university level; strong academic record, demonstrated teaching ability, evidence of currency in subject
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University of Toronto | Downtown Toronto University of Toronto Harbord, Ontario | Canada | 18 days ago
regular office hours; supervising any TAs assigned to course, if applicable. Minimum Qualifications: PhD in English with specialization in rhetoric or a related subject and/or experience teaching rhetoric
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plants grow resulting in changes to wildlife habitats including altered plant composition such as an increase in shrub species and a change in the timing of plant resources for wildlife. The Canada
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datasets of plant community composition working with the point framing data from the International Tundra Experiment (ITEX+) database. You will then statistically model vegetation change over time and in
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boreal forest ecosystems, including changes in plant growth, habitat composition, wildlife movement and species ranges. It will also examine the collective impact of these changes on the livelihoods
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to global change across the tundra biome. For this project, you will assemble spatially explicit datasets of plant community composition working with the point framing data from the International Tundra