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You will be updated with latest job alerts via emailNote: Applications will be accepted until 11:59 PM on the Posting End Date.
Applications submitted through Workday will NOT be reviewed. Please forward application directed to Dr. Marie Auger-Méthé () and Dr. Marianne Marcoux ().
We are seeking a highly motivated and skilled postdoctoral fellow to join a project focused on developing statistical models to understand the spatiotemporal distribution of marine mammals in the Arctic. The project will help the Canadian government identify key areas for these animals and predict the impacts of projected increases in shipping and associated risks in oil spills in the Arctic. This work would be done under the co-supervision of Dr. Marie Auger-Méthé (Statistical Ecology Research Group University of British Columbia) and Dr. Marianne Marcoux (Fisheries and Oceans Canada).
Shipping traffic is increasing in the Arctic including in the Hudson Strait and Foxe Basin. As a result Arctic mammals are exposed to increasing noise pollution and increased risks of ship-source oil spills. The goal of the project is to develop a method that allows to use disparate sources of data ranging from aerial surveys satellite telemetry acoustic data and Inuit knowledge distribution maps for a range of marine mammal species (walrus bowhead whales narwhals belugas ringed and bearded seals) to be able to identify areas of high density and high diversity of marine mammals. An additional goal is to combine this model with shipping data to make predictions of the spatiotemporal exposure of marine mammals to shipping and quantify the risk of being exposed to oil spills.
We expect the postdoctoral fellow to focus on building a statistically sound model that builds on a rich literature of spatiotemporal methods for habitat use and species distribution models. The main extension will be to develop joint modelling technique to model both structurally different data streams and information from species that will differ in their habitat preference. The postdoctoral fellow will also be asked to use the method developed to provide risk assessment and guide decision-making in the event of a spill.
Anticipated start date: October 15 2025 or a date to be mutually agreed upon.
Compensation: $54550/year research stipend and a concurrent $15450/year Postdoctoral Teaching Fellow appointment with benefits.
Term: Two years
Qualifications:
The ideal candidate would have the following skills and attributes:
How to apply
Interested candidates should submit the following documents:
Application should be directed to Dr. Marie Auger-Méthé () and Dr. Marianne Marcoux (). Applications will be reviewed as they arrive.
UBC hires on the basis of merit and is committed to employment equity. Equity and diversity are essential to academic excellence. An open and diverse community fosters the inclusion of voices that have been underrepresented or discouraged. Inclusion is built by individual and institutional responsibility through continuous engagement with diversity to inspire people ideas and actions for a better world. We encourage applications from members of groups that have been marginalized on any grounds enumerated under the B.C. Human Rights Code including sex sexual orientation gender identity or expression racialization disability political belief religion marital or family status age and/or status as a First Nation Métis Inuk or Indigenous person.
All qualified candidates are encouraged to apply; however Canadian citizens and permanent residents will be given priority and members of historically marginalized groups will be given special consideration.
UBCs campuses are located on the traditional ancestral and unceded territories of the Syilx (Okanagan) Peoples and of the Coast Salish Peoples including the territories of the xwməθkwəyəm (Musqueam) Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish) and Stó:lō and Səlílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil Waututh) Nations.
Full-Time