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from the dept. Prospective Ph.D. students interested in studying behavioral, evolutionary, and physiological ecology should contact Dr. Dustin Rubenstein (http://www.columbia.edu/cu/e3b/faculty/rubenstein.html), a newly hired faculty member in the Department of Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology (E3B) at Columbia University located in New York City. The Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (EEB) Ph.D. program is designed to provide the broad education needed to describe, understand and conserve the Earth's biological diversity in all its forms. Matriculating students will have the skills to conduct ecological, behavioral, systematic, molecular, and other evolutionary biological research, as well as to formulate and implement environmental policy. Graduates may pursue academic careers as researchers and teachers, or professional positions in national or international conservation, environmental, and multilateral aid organizations. Specific project topics to be completed in Dr. Rubenstein’s lab will vary according to the interests of the student, but will generally be integrative in nature and combine studies of behavior, evolution, ecology, life history, population biology, or physiology. Students interested in working with Dr. Rubenstein should have a B.S. or A.B. in biology or a related field, coursework in the relevant sub-disciplines (e.g., evolution, ecology, animal behavior), and an interest in integrative approaches to behavioral ecology research. Particularly qualified students will have both laboratory and field experience. The application deadline for admission into the Ph.D. program in Fall 2009 is January 3rd, 2009. Prior to applying, students should contact Dustin Rubenstein via email (drubenstein@berkeley.edu) and provide a copy of their CV and an explanation of what types of questions and topics interest them, what they might want to study in graduate school, and what they have done in the past. For more information about the Ph.D. program in the Department of Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology at Columbia University, visit http://www.columbia.edu/cu/e3b/phd.html. < OPPORTUNITY FOR GRADUATE STUDY (MS, PhD) at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee | Human Behavioral Ecologist >
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