//www.google.com/trends/embed.js?hl=en-US&q=microbiome&tz=Etc/GMT%2B7&content=1&cid=TIMESERIES_GRAPH_0&export=5&w=500&h=330 //www.google.com/trends/embed.js?hl=en-US&q=microbiome,+microbiota&cmpt=q&tz=Etc/GMT%2B7&tz=Etc/GMT%2B7&content=1&cid=TIMESERIES_GRAPH_0&export=5&w=500&h=330
UPDATE: Added a zoomed in version
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Category: Misc.
Assistant Professor in Evolutionary Biology at UMass Boston
Assistant Professor in Evolutionary Biology
Job Description:
The Biology Department at the University of Massachusetts, Boston seeks applicants for a full-time tenure track Assistant Professor in Evolutionary Biology starting September 1, 2016. This individual should be well versed in evolutionary and ecological theory, and special preference will be given to investigators conducting research in the area of global change evolution. Applications are particularly welcome from candidates who use creative molecular, experimental, comparative, paleontological, or theoretical approaches to study the evolutionary responses of living organisms to global changes, but candidates working in any area of evolutionary biology are welcome to apply. The successful applicant is expected to establish an externally funded research program, direct the research of students at the undergraduate, masters and doctoral levels, and interact with a dynamic group of ecologists and environmental biologists. Excellence in teaching at the undergraduate and graduate levels is expected.
Requirements:
A Ph.D. and postdoctoral training (or equivalent professional experience) in evolution, ecology, or population genetics is required.
Additional Information:
UMass Boston has a strong faculty with substantial research programs in environmental areas, and doctoral programs in Environmental Biology; Molecular, Cellular and Organismal Biology; and Environmental Sciences. Excellent opportunities exist to collaborate and engage in multidisciplinary research in the new Integrated Science Complex on campus, across the five UMass campuses and at our Nantucket Field Station.
Application Instructions:
Application materials must be submitted online via the following link: https://umb.interviewexchange.com/jobofferdetails.jsp?JOBID=65133&CNTRNO=7&TSTMP=1445528235220
Applications should include a cover letter addressed to the search committee, a current curriculum vitae, 3-5 representative publications, a statement describing research interests and goals, a teaching statement documenting teaching experience and philosophy, and contact information for three letters of recommendation.
For further information, visit the Biology Department website at liam.revell or ron.etter, search committee co-chairs. Target date for receipt of applications is Dec. 1, 2015, but applications will be reviewed until the position is filled.
The University of Massachusetts Boston provides equal employment opportunities to all employees and applicants for employment without regard race, color, religion, gender, gender identity or expression, age, sexual orientation, national origin, ancestry, disability, military status, or genetic information. In addition to federal law requirements, the University of Massachusetts Boston complies with applicable state and local laws governing nondiscrimination in employment in every location in which the university operates. This policy applies to all terms and conditions of employment.
At #UCDavis today: Vance Vredenburg: ‘Amphibians at the forefront of the Sixth Mass Extinction’
Dr. Vance Vredenburg will be speaking on ‘Amphibians at the forefront of the Sixth Mass Extinction’ at 4:10pm in 176 Everson Hall today, Thursday Oct 22.
Dr. Vredenburg is a leading amphibian conservation ecologist, and an Associate Professor at San Francisco State University. He earned his doctorate at U.C. Berkeley.
All are welcome to attend his ‘no-host dinner’ at 5:30 (location to be announced at the seminar). Also, grad students/postdocs who responded to the lunch invitation are reminded to attend, 12 noon in 1017 Wickson.
Here is a copy of the information from his website: http://biology.sfsu.edu/people/vance-vredenburg
“ Vance Vredenburg was raised in Mexico and the United States. His scientific training began as an undergraduate at the University of California Santa Barbara where he worked on ecological research projects in coastal California, Alaska, the Caribbean and Antarctica. His Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley (2002) included whole-lake experiments that showed recovery of declining frogs in the Sierra Nevada, California after removal of introduced trout. His current research focuses on the impacts of emerging infectious amphibian disease (e.g. chytridiomycosis), the phylogeography of amphibians (using genetics, morphology, and mating behavior), and climate change impacts on aquatic food webs using stable isotopes. Vredenburg is the co-founder of AmphibiaWeb (www.AmphibiaWeb.org), an online conservation resource for the world’s amphibians. His research is currently funded by the National Science Foundation and seeks to understand how some populations of frogs survive epidemics. Vance Vredenburg is a research associate at the California Academy of Sciences and the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology.”
Asst. Prof. in Quantitative Ecology at UCSB h/t @seb_schreiber
Posting this which I got from Sebastian Schreiber
Assistant Professor Quantitative Ecology, UCSB
The Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology (EEMB; www.eemb.ucsb.edu) at the University of California, Santa Barbara invites applications for a tenure-track faculty position in Quantitative Ecology, at the rank of Assistant Professor. We are searching for a highly creative and interactive scholar who fits into our multidisciplinary department. The area and system of study are open, although we are most interested in candidates who will address fundamental topics in ecological theory through the use of modeling and analytical approaches. We encourage applications from candidates who adopt an integrative approach in their research.
The candidate is expected to have or develop an internationally recognized research program, mentor graduate and undergraduate students in the candidate’s area of expertise, and teach both graduate and undergraduate courses. This position requires a PhD at the time of appointment.
Applicants should submit: 1) a cover letter, 2) a curriculum vitae, 3) a statement of research that covers research accomplishments and future plans, 4) a statement of teaching experience and interests, 5) three selected publications, and 6) letters of recommendation from three to four persons with the ability to evaluate the candidate.
EEMB is especially interested in candidates who can contribute to the diversity and excellence of the academic community through research, teaching and service.
Submit applications electronically at: https://recruit.ap.ucsb.edu/apply/JPF00583
Review of applicants will begin November 25, 2015 and will continue until the position has been filled.
The University of California is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability status, protected veteran status, or any other characteristic protected by law.
#UCDavis Provost’s Forum 10/21 “Universities, Hospitals and the Social Good” w/ Julie A. Freischlag & Glenn Richard Olds
Dear UC Davis Faculty, Staff, Students and Community Members,
We are delighted to announce that the first lecture in the 2015–16 season of the Provost’s Forums on the Public University and the Social Good will take place on Wednesday, October 21, 2015.
The first lecture of the season, titled “Universities, Hospitals and the Social Good,” features Julie A. Freischlag, Vice Chancellor for Human Health Sciences and Dean of UC Davis School of Medicine, and Glenn Richard Olds, founding Dean of UC Riverside School of Medicine and President of St. George’s University. Our speakers will talk about the complex and interconnected relationship between medical schools and the hospitals and other clinical settings that they rely on to train medical students. Dean Freischlag will discuss the benefits and challenges of partnerships between universities and hospitals, as well as share insights on opportunities for mutual success during a time of intense change in health care and health education. Dr. Olds will discuss how the new medical school at UC Riverside was built around community needs, using the community’s resources as a teaching platform. He also will discuss his work on replicating this model on a national scale in his new position as the President of St. George’s University in Grenada.
The event will take place at the Kalmanovitz Appellate Courtroom in King Hall (UC Davis School of Law) from 3 to 4:30 p.m. with a reception to follow until 5 p.m. Light refreshments will be served.
For more details about this event, please see the attached flyer or contact Francis Santos.
In addition, please forward this information to any interested parties, as all events are free and open to the public.
I cannot wait: Rachel Whitaker is coming to #UCDavis 10/29 to talk about viruses in microbial populations
Dr. Rachel Whitaker
Associate Professor of Microbiology
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
“What Won’t Kill Me Makes Me Stronger: Expanding the Role of Viruses in Natural Microbial Populations”
Thursday, October 29, 2015
4:10 p.m.
1022 Life Sciences
Host: Scott Dawson
(scdawson)
(If you wish an appointment with the invited speaker, please contact the host.)
Today at #UCDavis: Claudia Schmidt-Dannert on Natural Products from Fungi
Just got sent this … looks like it should be good (although am annoyed at the use of the term "higher")
Tuesday, October 13, 2015 4:10 PM
179 Chemistry
Host: Justin Siegel
refreshments in Room 172 before the seminar
Prof. Claudia Schmidt-
Dannert
Dept. of Biochemistry University of Minnesota
“Uncovering the Natural Products Potential of Higher Fungi (Basidiomycota)”
EMBO Symposium “A New Age of Discovery for Aquatic Microeukaryotes” 1/26-29, 2016
Posting this notice I receive from Jon Kaye at the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation:
Colleagues –
We have lined up a fantastic group of speakers for the upcoming EMBO Symposium on aquatic protist ecology and evolution and are seeking additional speakers and poster contributions to be selected from submitted abstracts!
Abstract submission deadline is approaching — October 22. The symposium is stimulated by the completion of the Marine Microbial Eukaryote Transcriptome Sequencing Project (MMETSP) and major milestones achieved by the Tara Oceans and Malaspina expeditions. The goal is to bring together the MMETSP, Tara Oceans, Malaspina, and well-established protist model systems communities. The Symposium will take place in Heidelberg, Germany from 26–29 January 2016.
http://www.embo-embl-symposia.org/symposia/2016/EES16-01/index.html
Invited speakers include the following scientists whose specialties range from marine and freshwater microeukaryote ecology to studies of long-standing protist model systems such as Tetrahymena and Chlamydomonas:
http://www.embo-embl-symposia.org/symposia/2016/EES16-01/speakers_gallery/index.html
The sessions are:
1. And You May Ask Yourself, “Well…How Did I Get Here?”: Biodiversity Patterns across Space and Time
2. Love–Hate Relationships: Intimate Interactions, from Trophic Interactions to Symbiosis
3. Weird and Wonderful Organelles and Symbionts—Photosynthesis, Respiration, and Beyond
4. Knock, Knock—Who’s There? Extracellular Signaling
5. Genetic Transportation: Causes and Consequences of Gene Exchange in Protists
6. Small Microbe, Big World: Microeukaryotes in Aquatic Ecosystems
7. Situation Normal, All Stressed Out
8. Evolutionary Tipping Points: How Do Protists Adapt?
The organizers will be selecting poster and additional oral presentations from the submitted abstracts. The abstract submission deadline is 22 October 2015, and the registration deadline is 3 December 2015.
Wrap up of talk by Rich Lenski at UC Davis
Rich Lenski gave a talk today at UC Davis – part of a two talk series. This was a presentation more for the public and tomorrow he gives one more for the science crowd. Today’s talk was a really nice overview of Lenski’s work on long term evolution experiments in E. coli. I made a Storify of the tweets about the talk:
At #UCDavis 10/8: MicroRNAs and the diabetic beta cell
Dr. Anath Shaleve
Professor of Medicine
Nancy R. and Eugene C. Gwaltney Family Endowed Chair in Juvenile Diabetes Research
Director, Comprehensive Diabetes Center
University of Alabama at Birmingham
“MicroRNAs and the diabetic beta cell”
Thursday, October 8, 2015
4:10 p.m.
1022 Life Sciences
Host: Mark Huising
(mhuising)
(If you wish an appointment with the invited speaker, please contact the host.)

