Kim Reuter has won a Ding Darling Wildlife Society Scholarship for Environmental Studies. This scholarship will provide support for Kim’s field research for her dissertation this summer in Madagascar. Her field research will enable an improved understanding of the mutualistic interactions between fruit-bearing trees and frugivorous (fruit-eating) lemurs and birds, a topic with important implications for tropical forest conservation. For more on the Ding Darling Wildlife Society, click here. Congratulations to Kim!!
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We have open postdoctoral fellow positions including one beginning in early to mid 2024 on Butterfly Ecology and Conservation and another with a flexible start date on Quantitative Ecology and Conservation Biology (see Opportunities page)
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We have open doctoral positions beginning in summer or fall of 2024 on Protecting Hibernating Bats from White-Nose Syndrome and the Ecology and Conservation of Rare and Threatened Butterflies
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Other opportunities are also available for postdoctoral fellows, graduate students, and undergraduate students (see Opportunities page)