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Nazareth University

Rochester, United States
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About Nazareth University

Basic information and contact details for Nazareth University

institution

Nazareth College is a private liberal arts college in Rochester, New York. It was established in 1924 by the Sisters of St Joseph as a Catholic college, with 25 female students as its first class. In the 1970s the college became coeducational and religiously independent.

There are four academic divisions at Nazareth: the College of Arts and Sciences, the School of Education, the School of Health and Human Services and the School of Management. The liberal arts core curriculum at Nazareth is called the “uncommon core”. Rather than following a prescribed curriculum, students pick their own courses based on issues that interest them.

Service is a core value at Nazareth. A high proportion of Nazareth students are involved in community service, either through volunteering or through one of the college’s academic programmes, such as the community youth development major.

Nazareth College was the second formerly Catholic education institution to be declared no longer Catholic by a Bishop. Although it now has no official faith, the college maintains it connections with the Sisters of St Joseph while providing nondenominational ministry for students and staff. The college’s Center for Spirituality Council organises a range of spiritual and interfaith activities, from yoga to volunteering.

The main campus is located in Pittsford, a suburb of Rochester. Its 150 acres are the quintessential picturesque college, with landscaped gardens and woodland surrounding the college buildings. Several underground tunnels cleverly connect the classrooms and residential buildings, providing shelter from the cold New York winter. The Erie Canal runs alongside the campus and provides a bike path.

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Content and Discovery Manager

CRANFIELD UNIVERSITY

Cranfield University

United Kingdom, Bedford

institution

Cranfield University

United Kingdom, Bedford


Organisation: Cranfield University Faculty or Department: Student Experience Based at: Cranfield Campus, Cranfield, Bedfordshire Hours of work: 37 hours per week, normally worked Monday to Friday. Flexible working will be considered. Contract type: Permanent Salary: Full time starting salary is normally in the range of £48,760 to £58,664 per annum, with potential progression up to £71,050 per annum Apply by : 30/04/2026 About the Role This is a key role within the Library Services’ Management Team, requiring wide professional knowledge, the capability to drive the implementation of the Library strategic plan, and the ability to manage and motive staff in key functions. The Content and Discovery Team provides support for the acquisition, licensing, description and discovery of both print and online resources, and provides our document delivery service for items not held in library collections. You will have responsibility for staff located at both our Cranfield and Shrivenham campuses. About You You should hold a postgraduate qualification in Library/Information Science (or similar) and have substantive experience in an appropriate library environment preferably within the higher education sector, at least some of which should have been in a managerial position. You will possess an excellent mix of communication, interpersonal and lateral thinking skills combined with detailed knowledge of library content management practices which will help you plan and shape services for the future. You will be expected to engage with, and influence, staff across the University (and beyond) to achieve collective goals, serving as a role model to Library Services staff with your flexible, enthusiastic, and positive attitude.  About Us As a specialist postgraduate university, Cranfield’s world-class expertise, large-scale facilities and unrivalled industry partnerships are creating leaders in technology and management globally. Learn more about Cranfield and our unique impact here. Library Services is at the heart of Cranfield University with operations in three different sites. Learn more about Library Services here. Our Values and Commitments Our shared, stated values help to define who we are and underpin everything we do: Ambition; Impact; Respect; and Community. Find out more here. We aim to create and maintain a culture in which everyone can work and study together and realise their full potential. We are a Disability Confident Employer and proud members of the Stonewall Diversity Champions Programme. We are committed to actively exploring flexible working options for each role and have been ranked in the Top 30 family friendly employers in the UK by the charity Working Families. Find out more about our key commitments to Equality, Diversity and Inclusion and Flexible Working here. Working Arrangements Collaborating and connecting are integral to so much of what we do. Our Working Arrangements Framework provides many staff with the opportunity to flexibly combine on-site and remote working, where job roles allow, balancing the needs of our community of staff, students, clients and partners. How to apply For an informal discussion about this opportunity, please contact Anne Knight, Head of Library Collections and Operations, on (E): a.knight@cranfield.ac.uk Please do not hesitate to contact us for further details on E: hrrecruitment@cranfield.ac.uk. Please quote reference number 5282. Please note that we reserve the right to close this advert prior to the stated closing date should we receive sufficient numbers of applications. Therefore, we would encourage you to complete and submit your application as soon as possible

Salary

£48,760 to £71,050 per annum

Posted

10 Apr 2026

Senior Lecturer - Anatomy

UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY

The University of Sydney

Australia, Camperdown

institution

The University of Sydney

Australia, Camperdown


Full time, continuing position Exciting opportunity to be a Senior Lecturer in Anatomy within the School of Medical Sciences Base Salary starting from $156,103 + 17% superannuation About the opportunity The School of Medical Sciences is recognised as one of the leading centres for medical science education in the world. With over 100 years of excellence in education, we are proud to be training the next generation of medical scientists who will be leading members of the medical research community with an innovative integrated curriculum. Our team of researchers lead key internationally competitive research from molecules to medicines, from patient to policy across a range of therapeutic areas. We are seeking a Senior Lecturer in Anatomy with expertise in teaching head and neck anatomy to contribute significantly to research, teaching, and academic leadership within the school. The role involves delivering high-quality education, leading innovative research initiatives, supervising students, and strengthening the university's reputation as a national leader in the discipline. Your key responsibilities will be to: build and maintain a reputation for academic excellence through independent and innovative contributions to research and education, expanding knowledge and practice in the discipline establish collaborations and partnerships to enhance the research profile and reputation of the university coordinate and deliver high-quality teaching and learning experiences, including supervision of higher degree research students to successful completion develop and continually improve curricula, programs and learning resources to enhance educational outcomes coordinate activities of academic staff and provide training and mentorship to less experienced lecturers provide leadership in teaching, curriculum development, research training and supervision within the school or faculty contribute to a positive workplace culture in which diversity of thought, collaboration, excellence and achieving outcomes are valued and enabled understand and contribute to furthering the university and faculty or school strategic agenda undertake other duties and contribute to projects appropriate within the classification level as required. About you PhD and professional qualifications in a relevant field significant experience in teaching and learning within established programs across a variety of settings significant experience in education design and practice significant experience conducting original research and engaging in scholarly activity significant experience supervising and mentoring others an established network of academic, industry and professional partners and stakeholders a national reputation as influential in expanding knowledge, pedagogy or curriculum innovation strong skills in research, critical thinking, planning and organisation, communication, presentations, computer literacy and customer service. Pre-employment checks Your employment is conditional upon the successful completion of all pre-employment or background checks required for the role in terms satisfactory to the University. Also, to meet the University's obligations under the National Higher Education Code to Prevent and Eliminate Gender-Based Violence you will be asked to declare if you have been investigated for, or found to engaged in, sexual harm or gender-based violence in the course of previous employment or in a legal process. Similarly, your ongoing employment is conditional upon the satisfactory maintenance of all relevant clearances and background check requirements. If you do not meet these conditions, the University may take any necessary step, including the termination of your employment. EEO statement At the University of Sydney, our shared values are trust, accountability and excellence and we strive to be a place where everyone can thrive. We are committed to creating a University community that thrives through diversity and reflects the wider community that we serve. We deliver on this through our commitment to diversity and inclusion, evidenced by our people and culture programs, as well as key strategies to increase participation and support the careers of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People, women, people living with a disability, people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds, and those who identify as LGBTIQ+. We welcome applications from candidates from all backgrounds. We are proud to be recognised as an Australian Workplace Equality Index (AWEI) Gold employer. Find out more about our work on diversity and inclusion. How to apply Applications (including a cover letter, CV, and any additional supporting documentation) can be submitted via the Apply button at the top of the page. The cover letter should demonstrate how you meet the 'About You' criteria and be no longer than two-pages. For employees of the University or contingent workers, please login into your Workday account and navigate to the Career icon on your Dashboard. Click on USYD Find Jobs and apply. For a confidential discussion about the role, or if you require reasonable adjustment or any documents in alternate formats, please contact, Ajaypal Singh, Recruitment Operations by email to ajaypal.singh@sydney.edu.au. © The University of Sydney The University reserves the right not to proceed with any appointment. Click to view the Position Description for this role. Applications Close Sunday 10 May 2026 11:59 PM

Salary

$156,103 + 17% superannuation

Posted

10 Apr 2026

Research Engineer (Computer Vision - Wildlife Species) - SH1

SINGAPORE INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (SIT)

Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT)

Singapore

institution

Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT)

Singapore


As a University of Applied Learning, SIT works closely with industry in our research pursuits. Our research staff will have the opportunity to be equipped with applied research skill sets that are relevant to industry demands while working on research projects in SIT.  The Research Engineer will play a key role in automated wildlife identification and classification from trap camera images using cutting-edge computer vision technology. Working closely with the Principal Investigator, Co-PI, and interdisciplinary research team, RE will develop and implement deep learning algorithms to analyze trap camera footage for wildlife monitoring and conservation efforts. Job Responsibilities Participate in and manage the research project together with the PI, Co-PI, and research team to ensure timely achievement of project deliverables. Undertake the following specific responsibilities in the project: Develop, train, and optimise deep learning models for wildlife species identification, classification, and segmentation using real-world datasets. Design and implement software modules to integrate the models into a working system prototype. Perform data annotation. Conduct experiments, analyse results, and iterate models for improved accuracy and efficiency. Prepare project documentation, technical reports, and academic publications. Collaborate with industry partners and contribute to technology transfer efforts. Support the design of simple web interfaces or dashboards to visualise CV model outputs, working alongside developers when needed. Contribute to system integration by applying familiarity with backend/frontend workflows, ensuring CV models can be accessed through user-facing applications. Assist in deployment of CV solutions on cloud or edge platforms with basic interface support for end-users. The candidate is to liaise and communicate with any internal or external stakeholders to ensure project deliverables are met and to perform any other adhoc duties assigned by Supervisor.  Technical Requirements: Possess strong technical knowledge and hands-on experience in: Deep learning frameworks (e.g., PyTorch, TensorFlow, Keras) Computer vision models for object detection and classification (e.g., YOLO, R-CNN variants, EfficientNet, ResNet, U-Net) Image processing and computer vision techniques  Python programming and relevant libraries (e.g., OpenCV, NumPy, scikit-learn, Pandas, Matplotlib) Experience with dataset preparation, model training, and performance evaluation Candidates with strong computer vision expertise and proven success in 1-2 substantial CV projects are welcome to apply regardless of domain-specific experience Familiarity with Web/Full-Stack Development: Basic understanding of frontend frameworks (e.g., React, Angular, or Vue.js) Eposure to backend development (e.g., Flask, Django, Node.js) Awareness of RESTful APIs and microservices architecture. General knowledge of database systems (SQL/NoSQL). Experience with cloud platforms (AWS, GCP, Azure) for deployment and scaling Educational Requirements: Hold at least a Bachelor's degree in Computer Science, Software Engineering, Data Science, or a related technical field Master's or PhD degree in Machine Learning, Computer Vision, or related areas will be advantageous Preferred Qualifications: Experience with biological/ecological datasets or wildlife imagery Familiarity with data annotation tools and practices for large-scale datasets Knowledge of model deployment and optimization (e.g., ONNX, TensorRT, model quantization) Experience with edge computing or embedded systems (e.g., NVIDIA Jetson, Raspberry Pi) Background in real-time processing and GPU acceleration (CUDA) Participation in relevant competitions (e.g., Kaggle, computer vision challenges) Experience with version control (Git) and collaborative development practices

Salary

Competitive

Posted

10 Apr 2026

Project Manager

MAYNOOTH UNIVERSITY

Maynooth University

Ireland, Maynooth

institution

Maynooth University

Ireland, Maynooth


Department : School of Business Vacancy ID: 040903 Closing Date: 03-May-2026 The International Research on Energy System Integration, Education, and Environment for Sustainability and Innovation (IRESI) Research Centre invites applications for an experienced Project Manager to lead the coordination and delivery of the 3DP STEF (3D Printing for Sustainable Technology Education Futures) project. The 3DP STEF project focuses on upskilling students and professionals for a circular economy, with a strong emphasis on additive manufacturing (3D printing), sustainability, and digital fabrication. The Project Manager will play a central role in ensuring the successful implementation, scaling, and impact of the project across training, research, and stakeholder engagement activities. Administrative Officer II (2026) Salary Scale: €46,918-€56,663 p.a. (5 points) Appointments will be made in accordance with public sector pay provisions. Closing Date: 23:30hrs (local Irish time) on Sunday, 3rd May 2026 Applications must be submitted by the closing date and time specified above. Any applications which are still in progress at the closing time on the specified closing date will be cancelled automatically by the system. Late applications will not be accepted. Maynooth University is an equal opportunities employer The position is subject to the Statutes of the University “Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Health and Digital Executive Agency. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.”

Salary

€46,918-€56,663 p.a.

Posted

10 Apr 2026

GCZSC - Postdoc in Field-Based Boron and Potassium Biogeochemistry

MOHAMMED VI POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY

Mohammed VI Polytechnic University

Morocco

institution

Mohammed VI Polytechnic University

Morocco


Area of specialization: Critical Zone is the “heterogeneous, near-surface environment in which complex interactions involving rock, soil, water, air, and living organisms regulate the natural habitat and determine availability of life-sustaining resources”. Its limits range from the top of the canopy down to the bottom of the aquifer. The successful applicant to this position will join the Global Critical Zone Science Chair to develop and conduct a research program to better understand forest nutrition and nutritional stress in Eucalyptus forest stands in Brazil. Research context: Forests cover 1/3 of the continental surfaces and play a crucial environmental role both at local and global scales. Forests sequester 25% of the carbon injected each year to the atmosphere by human activities and thus regulate the Earth’s global climate at short time scales. In its 2022 report for policymakers, the Word Resource Institute (Seymour et al., 2022) draws attention to the fact that forests do not only play a role by absorbing carbon from the atmosphere but also influence global and local temperature, rainfall patterns through albedo, evapotranspiration (forest ecosystems provide 2/3 of the continent precipitation), surface roughness and aerosols emission. At longer timescales, forests, via the formation of soil organic matter, erosion and deposition in the ocean, play an essential role in the regulation of climate at the geological time scale. As a consequence, protection and better management of forests is crucial for climate warming mitigation through carbon sequestration, as well as for other ecosystem services such as wood production or recreation. However, forests are “not just carbon”. For forests to play their role on the planet, not only do they need carbon withdrawn from the atmosphere and water from the soil, but they also require a number of major and minor nutrients. Among the factors that limit the energetic yield of photosynthesis to 0.1%, and thus the productivity of forest ecosystems, the availability of soil nutrients is probably one of the most important. With the exception of nitrogen (N) that can be fixed from the atmosphere, major nutrients such as potassium (K), silicon (Si), phosphorus (P) or minor nutrients such as metals (zinc, Zn; magnesium, Mg; calcium, Ca; boron, B; molybdenum, Mo,…) are ultimately derived from the transformation of soil minerals into secondary phases such as cation-poor clays and oxides, a process known as chemical weathering and taking place in soils or affecting atmospheric mineral aerosols. There is now ample evidence that forests are under increasing nutritional stress (Penuelas et al., 2020). The limitation of forest productivity by nutrients like N and P has been extensively studied (Du et al., 2020; Hou et al, 2020), while the role of other mineral-derived nutrients has attracted less studies. This situation is all the more critical now that we know that the pure “liebigian” limitation (one factor limits the growth) is not true for most ecosystems (Wurzburger et al., 2012), implying that the effect of other nutrients and micronutrients must be studied in detail. Hence a prerequisite for our ability to assess forest ecosystem evolution and maintenance of biomass productivity of agroforests, in the face of environmental change, is a better understanding of how plant nutrient requirements are met beyond C, N, and P. K is one of those mineral nutrients that has been investigated. Fertilization experiments have confirmed that K deficiency limits tree growth and forest productivity and mechanistic models have been developed that confirm the strong response of GPP (gross primary production) to a nutritional stress for K (Cornut et al., 2022) The overall objective of this postdoc project is to improve our knowledge of nutritional dynamics in forest ecosystems based on the balance between organic (dead biomass recycling) and mineral (chemical weathering or added sources by fertilization) sources. To achieve this goal the project aims at make use of isotopes, in particular boron isotopes, and potentially K isotopes. Recently, the analytical and conceptual development of so-called non-traditional stable isotopes opened up a new avenue for the study of nutrient cycling in forest ecosystems, the main idea being that biogeochemical processes will generate measurable discriminations between metal isotopes that can be used to trace their routes through living individuals, ecosystems, or the critical zone (e.g. Cividini et al. 2010, Dessert et al., 2015). In this respect, the trace element boron (B) appears as a powerful tool as it is a micronutrient involved in a wide variety of physiological processes where it undergoes significant isotopic fractionation of the two stable isotopes: 10B and 11B (Gaillardet et Lemarchand, 2018, Roux et al., 2021, Chetelat et al., 2021). In the Eucalypus stands, Boron is frequently added to the soil as it has been observed that boron fertilization improves the resistance of the trees to drought. The aim of the project is to focus on forest plantations as a “model forest” to better understand the behavior of boron and other major nutrients (and in particular potassium) and how their cycles is linked to the ecosystem services. It is coupling experimentation, isotopic measurements and modeling aspects taking advantage of a network of international collaboration and collaborations with the private sector. Importantly, this project is associated to a broader project funded by the French National Research Agency (Nutribor project, PI Pr. Jérôme Gaillardet) which aims at applying boron isotopes to a range of critical zone observatories covering environmental and geological gradients. The successful postdoc will integrate the scientific community of the Nutribor project.  Briefly, the Nutribor project consists of different workpackages. 1/in-situ experimentation at the Ile de France Ecotron near Paris. 2/ boron isotope measurements in the critical zone of three natural catchments from the OZCAR network (French Critical Zone Observatory network) in Northern France, Southern France and the French Lesser Antilles. 2/ecophysiological and reactive transport modelling. The postdoctoral work will particularly be interesting for the comparison with the controlled experiments at the Ecotron facility near Paris. It will benefit for a pluridisciplinary research environment.  Eucalyptus plantations in Brazil and methodology: Brazil has one of the world’s largest surface areas of planted forest (9.9 million ha), of which more than 70 % is covered by eucalyptus (Pena-Vergara et al. 2022). These fast-growing forest plantations have high wood productivity, coming from the intensive management practices including short rotation, fertilization and genotype selection. These plantations are providing an increasing share of wood biomass for producing pulp and paper, charcoal, firewood, and panels. The rapid growth rates of eucalyptus with large wood exports at harvest make this ecosystem particularly interesting for studying and modeling biogeochemical cycles (Cornut et al. 2021), and poses important challenges in finding the right levels of fertilization to limit their environmental impact. Boron-poor soils are commonly found in the ‘Cerrados’ region of Brazil, where there is the greatest expansion of eucalyptus spp plantations on degraded pastures (José et al. 2009, da Silva Damasceno et al. 2023). Boron is one of the most limiting nutrients to eucalyptus seedling growth in these soils (Sgarbi et al. 1999, Sakya et al. 2002). Fertilization in boron is therefore necessary in the more depleted soils, but is also important in other areas where chemical weathering is no longer sufficient for sustaining the high exportations. The primary field site in Brazil, EucFlux, is a 200 Ha Eucalyptus instrumented plantation that has been highly monitored since 2008 with an eddy-covariance flux tower together with numerous ancillary data related to water, carbon and nutrient cycles (Christina et al. 2017). The soils at this site are deep Ferrasols (FAO classification) developed on Cretaceous sandstone, with approximately 80 % sand content down to the water table at 17 m. The mean annual rainfall is 1430 mm year-1. Harvest is planned for September 2025, following which a nutrient omission design for boron and potassium will be included for the next plantation cycle (of 6-7 years). The primary objectives of the postodoctoral work at this site will be to use existing infrastructure and additional experimental equipment to establish a partial boron mass balance at two developmental stages of Eucalyptus spp subject to different fertilization regimes: in a mature fertilized Eucalyptus spp stand after canopy closure in the final months leading to harvest, from January to September 2025, as well as post-harvest over the early developmental stages of the same clone of a Eucalyptus spp plantation subject to a fertilization design with boron and potassium omissions (Figure 1). Figure 1. Schematic design of nutrient omission in the Eucflux experiment made in collaboration with the private companies of forest exploitation. Various critical zone compartments will be analysed for B content and isotopic signature, as well as for the various macro- and micronutrient contents of these compartments (soil, soil water, different parts of the vegetation, rivers). More specifically, soils will be collected at four depths to 150 cm and multiple belowground and aboveground tree compartments at these different development stages (roots at three depths, branch wood & branch bark, stem wood & stem bark, leaves (high canopy and low canopy), and monthly litterfall samples. In addition, will be collected monthly composite samples of : 1/throughfall (using a funnel system connected to reservoirs), 2/stemflow (using PVC pipes spiraling down a section of the trunk to reservoirs), 3/soil solutions (using gravitational flow to lysimetric plates at the litterfall-soil surface interface and at 15 cm, with collections planned for further analyses at 40 cm and 100 cm post-harvest), 3/atmospheric deposition (with a receptor above the tree canopies at the top of the flux tower), 4/groundwater samples (collected via the piezometers using a weighted tube receptor). In addition, samples will be collected from water points and micro-watersheds in Itatinga close to the EucFlux site during the second phase of the project. In parallel, experiments will be run at the Ecotron (Ile de Paris) that will allow various levels boron application, as well as drought simulation to be applied to these eucalyptus (of the same clone, AEC144). Running these experiments in parallel will be of great value, between the precisely contrived conditions of the Ecotron to the in-situ field measurements at Itatinga. The Ecotron experiments are not part of the postdoctoral work and will be made by a French PhD student. Combining data from Eucalyptus stands and experimentations in Ecotron will allow boron fractionation between different soil, tree and water reservoir compartments to be determined, as well as the relationship between boron and other macro- and micronutrients will be evaluated. These findings have the potential to improve knowledge on the nature of nutritional dynamics in these Eucalyptus plantations in typically nutrient-deficient soils and subject to the increasing intensity and frequency of droughts. Boron isotopic measurements, major elements and complementary analyses will be conducted in Brazil as much as possible. These measurements will open perspectives of of collaboration with a modelling team at Cirad.  Job application: The Global Critical Zone Science Chair at the Mohammed VI Polytechnic University (UM6P) invites applications for a two years postdoc fellowship (candidates from Moroccan or African universities). The successful applicant will conduct research on the boron and potassium biogeochemistry in the critical zone of instrumented sites in Brazil. He.She will be mostly based in Brazil. The different compartments of the system will be investigated (soil, vegetation, soil pore water, river water) in the framework of the in-situ research experiment described above. The work will be done in collaboration with international teams and teams in Brazil. Boron isotopic measurements will be made in Brazil at least in a routine phase. Collaboration will also associate the private sector in charge of the forest exploitations. High precision isotopic measurements will be conducted. The candidate must have a background in either isotope geochemistry and if possible, an experience working with MCICPMS. The candidate is expected to adopt a system approach in its way to understand the behavior of boron and other nutrients in the studied agrosystems (/planted forestry systems). Modeling skills will be appreciated even if the main part of the postdoctoral work in field and lab-related. Writing skills are necessary as the results of the postdoctoral work will be published in high standard scientific journals. Criteria of the candidate: PhD in environmental science, soil science, surface geochemistry, or related fields from a recognized Moroccan or African university. At least one or two high publications record in international well-ranked journals Significant knowledge in environmental science studies, including experienced in soil field work and abilities in isotopic geochemistry techniques and/or modeling capabilities. Excellent verbal and written communication skills in English. Skilled in both field and lab work Proactive, ethic, and respectful person Tentative Schedule: Year 1 1 Collection of flux data B isotopic analysis, macro- and micronutrient analysis Monitoring and analysis of flux data 2 Collection of flux data B isotopic analysis, macro- and micronutrient analysis Monitoring and analysis of flux data 3 Monitoring and analysis of flux data Relationship between B and other macro- and micronutrients 4  Monitoring and analysis of flux data Relationship between B and other macro- and micronutrients Modelling boron and potassium fluxes Year 2 1 Monitoring and analysis of flux data Establishment of boron and potassium budgets Relationship between B and other macro- and micronutrients Paper 1: Boron budget in tropical soil-tree planted systems. Modelling boron and potassium fluxes  Paper 2: Boron and potassium dynamics in a planted tropical forestry system 2. 2 Monitoring and analysis of flux data Establishment of boron and potassium budgets Relationship between B and other macro- and micronutrients Paper 1: Boron budget in tropical soil-tree planted systems Modelling boron and potassium fluxes Paper 2: Boron and potassium dynamics in a planted tropical forestry system 2. 3 Relationship between B and other macro- and micronutrients Paper 1: Boron budget in tropical soil-tree planted systems. Modelling boron and potassium fluxes Paper 2: Boron and potassium dynamics in a planted tropical forestry system 2. Executive summary for policy makers 4  Paper 2: Boron and potassium dynamics in a planted tropical forestry system 2. Executive summary for policy makers Final report References: Chetelat, B., Gaillardet, J., Chen, J.Bin, 2021. Dynamic of boron in forest ecosystems traced by its isotopes: a modeling approach. Chem. Geol. 560, 119994. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2020.119994. Christina, M., Nouvellon, Y., Laclau, J. P., Stape, J. L., Bouillet, J. P., Lambais, G. R., & Le Maire, G. (2017). Importance of deep water uptake in tropical eucalypt forest. Functional Ecology, 31(2), 509-519. Cividini D., D. Lemarchand, F. Chabaux, R. Boutin, M.-C. Pierret (2010) From biological to lithological control of the B geochemical cycle in a forest watershed (Strengbach, Vosges) Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 74 3143– 3163  Cornut, I., Le Maire, G., Laclau, J. P., Guillemot, J., Mareschal, L., Nouvellon, Y., & Delpierre, N. (2021). Potassium limitation of wood productivity: A review of elementary processes and ways forward to modelling illustrated by Eucalyptus plantations. Forest Ecology and Management, 494, 119275. Cornut I. et al. (2022a) Potassium-limitation of forest productivity, part 1: A mechanistic model simulating the effects of potassium availability on canopy carbon and water fluxes in tropical eucalyptus stands. EGUsphere, 1-37. Cornut I. et al. (2022b). Potassium-limitation of forest productivity, part 2: CASTANEA-MAESPA-K shows a reduction in photosynthesis rather than a stoichiometric limitation of tissue formation. EGUsphere, 1-27 Dessert et al. (2025), Geochim. et Cosmochim. Acta 171, 216–237 Du, E., Terrer, C., Pellegrini, A. F. A., Ahlström, A., van Lissa, C. J., Zhao, X., Xia, N., Wu, X., and Jackson, R. B. (2020). Global patterns of terrestrial nitrogen and phosphorus limitation. Nature Geoscience, 13(3):221–226. Gaillardet J. and Lemarchand D. (2018) Boron the weathering environments. In Boron isotopes, the fifth element. Springer ISBN 978-3-319-64664-0 Hou  et al. (2020), Nature communications 11, 637. José, J. F. B. D. S., Silva, I. R. D., Barros, N. F. D., Novais, R. F., Silva, E. F., Smyth, T. J., ... & Gebrim, F. O. (2009). Boron mobility in eucalyptus clones. Revista Brasileira de Ciência do Solo, 33, 1733-1744.Lemarchand, D., Cividini, D., Turpault, M. P., & Chabaux, F. (2012). Boron isotopes in different grain size fractions: Exploring past and present water–rock interactions from two soil profiles (Strengbach, Vosges Mountains). Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 98, 78-93.  Pena-Vergara, G., Castro, L. R., Gasparetto, C. A., & Bizzo, W. A. (2022). Energy from planted forest and its residues characterization in Brazil. Energy, 239, 122243. Penuelas et al. (2020), Communications Biology 3, 125. Sakya, A. T., Dell, B., & Huang, L. (2002). Boron requirements for Eucalyptus globulus seedlings. Plant and soil, 246, 87-95. Sgarbi, F., Silveira, R. L. V. A., Takahashi, E. N., & Camargo, M. D. (1999). Crescimento e produção de biomassa de clone de Eucalyptus grandis x Eucalyptus urophylla em condições de deficiência de macronutrientes, B e Zn. Scientia Forestalis, 56(1), 69-82. da Silva Damasceno, A. S., Boechat, C. L., de Souza, H. A., Capristo-Silva, G. F., de Sousa Mendes, W., Teodoro, P. E., ... & da Silva Junior, C. A. (2023). Nutritional monitoring of boron in Eucalyptus spp. in the Brazilian cerrado by multispectral bands of the MSI sensor (Sentinel-2). Remote Sensing Applications: Society and Environment, 29, 100913. Roux, P., Lemarchand, D., Redon, P. O., & Turpault, M. P. (2022). B and δ11B biogeochemical cycle in a beech forest developed on a calcareous soil: Pools, fluxes, and forcing parameters. Science of the Total Environment, 806, 150396. Seymour et al. (2022), Not just carbon, https://doi.org/10.46830/wrirpt.19.00004 Wurzburger et al. (2012), PLOS ONE 7, e33710

Salary

Competitive

Posted

9 Apr 2026

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