Funded graduate student opportunities in the Hydrometeorology Research Group, University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ

October 31, 2023

Alpine Watershed Hydroclimatology Research Opportunities

Fully funded MSc and PhD studentships are open in the Canadian Rocky Mountains to examine autogenic feedbacks on wetland and forest evapotranspiration using a combination of eddy covariance, sapflow and porometry to relate canopy controls to hydrologic conditions and the resulting feedbacks to surface evaporation, plant productivity and water use efficiency; and test and refine evapotranspiration and CO2 exchange models capable of representing this flux from alpine wetlands and forests, which are often confounded by complex turbulent regimes.

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Multiple Landuse Agricultural Basins: Ecohydrology

Fully funded MSc and PhD positions are available to examine the effects of management practices, soil conditions and climate on crop productivity andÌýwater use efficiency; and identify linkages between changing agricultural practices (4R's, residue management), regional hydrology and changing weather.

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Use of Novel Technologies to Examine the Impacts of Climate Change on Viticulture in Southern Ontario

Fully funded MSc and PhD positions are available to use novel micrometeorological approachesÌýand data mining and modelling techniques toÌýinfer the impacts of extreme weather on grape vine health, productivity and water-use at various temporal and spatial scalesÌýacross Ontario.

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Analysis of Peatland Carbon Cycling to Adjacent Disturbance and Development

Fully funded PhD and MSc positions are available that will collect new dataÌýin addition to existing archived data Ìýfrom alpine and boreal peatlands to estimate carbon stocks and sequestration from intact peatlands as well as under various land disturbance types, with the goal of determining the: (1) implications of conserving these peatlands; (2) impacts of current disturbances on C storage and sequestration; and (3) restoration opportunities and implications of restoration on C sequestration.

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For more information on any of these opportunities, or the Hydrometeorology Research Group at the University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ, please contact Professor Richard Petrone (rpetrone@uwaterloo.ca)