Back to search results

PhD Studentship: The Clock is Ticking: Time Lags & Nature Recovery

University of Birmingham - School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences

Qualification Type: PhD
Location: Birmingham
Funding for: UK Students, EU Students, International Students
Funding amount: This project is offered through the CENTA3 DTP, with funding from the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC). Funding covers an annual stipend, tuition fees (at home-fee level) and Research Training Support Grant
Hours: Full Time
Placed On: 3rd December 2024
Closes: 8th January 2025
Reference: CENTA 2025-B11

Global biodiversity targets are repeatedly not met despite increasing conservation efforts. While in some cases this is due to inappropriate interventions or external pressures, in other cases, this is due to time lags in species’ responses to conservation efforts. Ecological time lags occur when there is a change to an ecosystem and species’ do not respond immediately. Extinction debt occurs following habitat destruction or degradation, and has been the focus of many theoretical and empirical studies. The converse of this is ‘colonisation credit’ – where species’ do not respond immediately to restoration efforts.  

While there is an understanding that colonisation credit is a pervasive phenomena following habitat creation and restoration, there has been a failure to translate this ecological process into policy targets. Perhaps, because the empirical evidence for such lags is incomplete. These time lags suggest that when setting conservation targets, we also need to be setting milestones to ensure progress is on track.  

The aim of this project is to provide an empirical basis for ecological time lags across species, scales and ecosystems. Building on theoretical and modelling work led by PI Graham and Co-I Watts, the project will aim to quantify ecological time lags and to test hypotheses generated by the theoretical work. We will aim to quantify the variation in the lag between restoration and meeting conservation targets, depending on (a) ecosystem type (forest or grassland), (b) species life history traits, and (c) landscape composition and configuration. The work will occur across three scales: a global synthesis will allow us to identify regions which show habitat gains and to unpick how these gains translate into changing trends for a range of species; at the national (UK) scale, we will dig deeper into these trends to understand how long restoration efforts take to yield biodiversity benefits across different taxa; at site scale, we will further develop our understanding of these lags and how they vary between species.  

For further information on this project and details of how to apply to it please click on the above 'Apply' button

Further information on how to apply for a CENTA studentship can be found on the CENTA website: https://centa.ac.uk/

We value your feedback on the quality of our adverts. If you have a comment to make about the overall quality of this advert, or its categorisation then please send us your feedback
Advert information

Type / Role:

Subject Area(s):

Location(s):

PhD tools
 

PhD Alert Created

Job Alert Created

Your PhD alert has been successfully created for this search.

Your job alert has been successfully created for this search.

Ok Ok

PhD Alert Created

Job Alert Created

Your PhD alert has been successfully created for this search.

Your job alert has been successfully created for this search.

Manage your job alerts Manage your job alerts

Account Verification Missing

In order to create multiple job alerts, you must first verify your email address to complete your account creation

Request verification email Request verification email

jobs.ac.uk Account Required

In order to create multiple alerts, you must create a jobs.ac.uk jobseeker account

Create Account Create Account

Alert Creation Failed

Unfortunately, your account is currently blocked. Please login to unblock your account.

Email Address Blocked

We received a delivery failure message when attempting to send you an email and therefore your email address has been blocked. You will not receive job alerts until your email address is unblocked. To do so, please choose from one of the two options below.

Max Alerts Reached

A maximum of 5 Job Alerts can be created against your account. Please remove an existing alert in order to create this new Job Alert

Manage your job alerts Manage your job alerts

Creation Failed

Unfortunately, your alert was not created at this time. Please try again.

Ok Ok

Create PhD Alert

Create Job Alert

When you create this PhD alert we will email you a selection of PhDs matching your criteria.When you create this job alert we will email you a selection of jobs matching your criteria. Our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy apply to this service. Any personal data you provide in setting up this alert is processed in accordance with our Privacy Notice

Create PhD Alert

Create Job Alert

When you create this PhD alert we will email you a selection of PhDs matching your criteria.When you create this job alert we will email you a selection of jobs matching your criteria. Our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy apply to this service. Any personal data you provide in setting up this alert is processed in accordance with our Privacy Notice

 
 
 
More PhDs from University of Birmingham

Show all PhDs for this organisation …

More PhDs like this
Join in and follow us

Browser Upgrade Recommended

jobs.ac.uk has been optimised for the latest browsers.

For the best user experience, we recommend viewing jobs.ac.uk on one of the following:

Google Chrome Firefox Microsoft Edge