External Job Announcement
Reg.-Nr. 4-11316/24-H
Modern, interconnected, conscious of tradition: Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU) is the old-
est and largest university in the State of Saxony-Anhalt with a history dating back more than 500 years. Today
more than 20,000 students are enrolled at the university. MLU’s core research areas are in the nanosciences
and biosciences, the Enlightenment, as well as in social and cultural research. The university is also home to
a range of small disciplines, some of which can be found nowhere else in Germany. The university has excel-
lent national and international ties, and works closely together with leading research institutes, industry, and
more than 250 universities around the world.
The Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, in cooperation with the German Centre for Integrative Bio-
diversity Research (i Div) Halle-Jena-Leipzig, offers the following position in Halle, commencing on 1 January
2025 or at the earliest opportunity and limited to 3 years.:
Doctoral Researcher (m/f/d) in the i Div Flexpool project “Across the South Ameri-
can dry diagonals: Genetic exchange and connectivity between naturally isolated
ranges and fragmented habitats”
as part-time employment (65% of a full-time employment).
The salary will be up to Entgeltgruppe 13 TV-L, if the personal requirements and tasks are fulfilled. The
workplace will be at MLU Halle.
The project:
The German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (i Div) Halle-Jena-Leipzig explores how biodiver-
sity can be recorded, how it develops in the course of evolution, how it changes, what consequences it has for
the functioning of ecosystems and how it can be preserved in the long term. i Div is jointly funded by the Uni-
versity of Leipzig, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Friedrich Schiller University Jena and the Helmholtz
Centre for Environmental Research Gmb H - UFZ and will be continued with generous support from the federal
states of Saxony-Anhalt, Thuringia and Saxony after termination of the DFG funding. More information about
i Div: www.idiv.de.
Research topics: Population genomics, plant ecology, biogeography
This integrative project combines three interdisciplinary work packages (WPs) that aim to investigate the rela-
tionships between plant populations that occur in separated ranges across the so-called dry diagonals in south-
ern South America. Our model taxa are two genera of tree ferns, Dicksonia and Lophosoria, which are repre-
sented by just one species each in our focal regions of Bolivia, Brazil and Chile. We will use dd RADseq for ge-
nomic analyses investigating isolation, gene flow and dispersal across the dry diagonals (WP1). In each range,
the demography and genetic variation within populations are investigated to address the genetic and ecological
fitness of each species (i.e., how well are they regenerating?) and evaluate their potential impact on local forest
regeneration (WP2). Furthermore, flow cytometric measurements of the spores will be used to look for polyploid
taxa that could indicate cryptic speciation (WP3). The question how mass occurrences of each species after bio-
tope disturbances may influence the pace and direction of forest regeneration will be addressed in joint B.Sc.
projects at the respective local counterpart institutions. The resulting output will be incorporated into species-
and habitat-specific conservation and restoration strategies.
veröffentlicht am 07.11.2024