PhD position available in my lab!
I am now recruiting for a PhD student to join my group at SBCS, Queen Mary University of London in the UK.
Integrating fossils and genomes to elucidate the evolutionary history of species through time
The genomes of organisms bear the footprint of their evolutionary history. By combining information from molecular sequences (genomes) with information from the fossil record, inferences about this evolutionary history can be obtained and placed in the right geological context. However, the fossil record is notoriously incomplete, and patterns of genome evolution vary substantially among species, providing important challenges to the study of ancient evolutionary events. Recent advances in Bayesian statistics allow probabilistic modelling of the uncertainties in fossils and genomic evolutionary rates, so that robust inferences about species divergence times, that integrate these sources of uncertainty, can now be made. The Bayesian method is now being used to study controversial topics such as the pattern of diversification of birds and mammals relative to the End-Cretaceous mass extinction, or the elucidation of the time of origin of animals over 540 million years ago in the pre-Cambrian. In this project the student will work in the application and/or development of Bayesian MCMC statistical methods to study species divergences through time. The project will include the collection of genomic and fossil data from online databases, and the use of computer software for analysis. Experience in the use of statistical packages (such as R) and computer programming would be an advantage. The project is suitable for students interested in genomics, palaeontology and Bayesian statistics. Students with backgrounds in the life sciences, earth sciences, physics, computing or maths are welcomed to apply.
Deadline: 31st of March 2016. Interviews are expected to take place at the end of April or beginning of May.
Eligibility: Open to UK and European students.
Funding: The studentship will cover tuition fees and provide an annual tax-free maintenance allowance for 3 years at Research Councils UK rates (£16,057 in 2015/16).
Reference: dos Reis et al. (2016) Bayesian molecular clock dating of species divergences in the genomics era. Nature Reviews Genetics, 17: 71–80. go.nature.com/Q4vHzQ
More info and application form: bit.ly/dosreislab-phd
Enquiries: m.dosreisbarros@qmul.ac.uk