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Postdoctoral Scholar - Mountainous Ecohydrology Modeling - Energy & Resources Group | University of California Berkeley


University of California Berkeley


Location

Berkeley, CA | United States


Job description

Postdoctoral Scholar - Mountainous Ecohydrology Modeling - Energy & Resources Group

Position overview Position title: Postdoc Employee
Salary range: The UC postdoc salary scales set the minimum pay determined by experience level at appointment. See the following table(s) for the current salary scale(s) for this position: . A reasonable estimate for this position is $76,800-$84,100.

Percent time: 100

Anticipated start: Fall 2023

Position duration: Initial appointment is for 2 years with possibility of renewal based on performance and availability of funding.

Application Window
Open date: July 25, 2023

Most recent review date: Friday, Dec 22, 2023 at 11:59pm (Pacific Time)
Applications received after this date will be reviewed by the search committee if the position has not yet been filled.

Final date: Thursday, Feb 29, 2024 at 11:59pm (Pacific Time)
Applications will continue to be accepted until this date, but those received after the review date will only be considered if the position has not yet been filled.

Position description

The University of California, Berkeley invites applications for a Postdoctoral Scholar position.

Complex mountainous terrain comprises more than 25% of the terrestrial surface, and water discharge from mountain zones accounts for at least half of the world's freshwater resources. Accurately representing interactions among vegetation, terrain, and the hydrological cycle in mountain zones remains one of the critical unsolved challenges in integrated Earth system modeling. The complex topography and subsurface heterogeneity constrain water flow paths to produce hydrological heterogeneity that is currently not well represented in land-surface or hydrological models. Importantly, in forested watersheds, trees mediate ecohydrological processes via physiological controls on water use and drought tolerance, but also via tree size, density and species composition, which alter precipitation interception and water retention. Therefore, plants respond and contribute to hydrological heterogeneity in ways that are only very recently integrated into some land surface models.

The postdoctoral scholar will work on a project funded by the US Department of Energy that aims to improve understanding and spatially explicit 3D prediction of tree-mediated water and energy fluxes and subsurface flow that together regulate ecohydrologic watershed function. The postdoc will play a central role in the project, testing and applying a cutting-edge integrated hydrologic model (ParFlow) coupled to a demographic, dynamic vegetation model (ELM-FATES-Hydro) as part of a high-resolution watershed modeling platform. ParFlow is a numerical model that simulates the hydrologic cycle using three-dimensional groundwater flow with overland flow using physically-based equations to simulate fluxes of water and energy in complex real-world systems. ParFlow was recently coupled to the Functionally Assembled Terrestrial Ecosystem Simulator (FATES), which is embedded within the ELM land surface model and includes a hydrodynamic formulation of water transport through trees modulated by tree hydraulic traits. High-resolution atmospheric forcing will be used and vegetation and hydrology output will be evaluated with field and remotely sensed observations.

The postdoc will work in collaboration with Dr. Lara Kueppers of the Energy and Resources Group at UC Berkeley and Dr. Erica Siirila-Woodburn at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, as well as project collaborators at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, University of the South (Sewanee), University of Illinois Chicago, and the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory. The postdoc will be located at UC Berkeley but will work closely with scientists within the Earth and Environmental Sciences Area at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

Responsibilities:

Primary responsibilities will be to perform and analyze watershed-scale simulations of a highly instrumented watershed in the Upper Colorado River basin using field measurements of tree hydraulic traits, transpiration, canopy water content, tree ring width variation, and soil moisture, airborne observations of transpiration and canopy water content, as well as other geophysical properties. The postdoctoral scholar is also expected to present results at project and international meetings, lead and contribute to related peer-reviewed publications and project reports, and mentor student researchers.

Qualifications
Basic qualifications (required at time of application)



Additional qualifications (required at time of start)



Preferred qualifications


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