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  Conservation ecology of a re-introduced dormouse population


   Institute of Integrative Biology

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  Prof Paula Stockley, Prof J Hurst  No more applications being accepted  Competition Funded PhD Project (European/UK Students Only)

About the Project

The impact of changing environmental conditions on endangered species is a subject of pressing conservation concern. Hazel dormice (Muscardinus avellanarius) are rare and vulnerable to extinction in the UK. Although once widespread throughout England and Wales, changes in land use and in the management of woodland and hedgerow habitat have led to significant reductions in dormouse distribution and population size, with remaining populations increasingly isolated. Hazel dormice are a priority species in the UK Biodiversity Action Plan and a European Protected Species.

This project will focus primarily on a re-introduced population of hazel dormice at a semi-ancient woodland site in Cheshire. The population was established as part of the English Nature Species Recovery Programme in 1996. Project CASE partner Cheshire Wildlife Trust have monitored this population for over 20 years, providing more than 200 artificial nest boxes to support breeding success.Key aims and objectives of the project will be developed in partnership with conservation practitioners, with the goal of directly informing conservation plans. Goals of the project include:

- Analyse and add to long-term data records on population size, demography and breeding success, to identify environmental factors explaining population trends.
- Determine the role of interspecific competition with wood mice and yellow-necked mice in the behaviour and population dynamics of hazel dormice.
- Test a range of non-invasive surveying and monitoring methods, to quantify the extent of dispersal to new sites, and inform plans for improving habitat connectivity.
- Apply non-invasive molecular tools for diet analysis, to inform future habitat management.
- Identify key habitat requirements to support the current population and plan for future reintroductions.

Working in partnership with CASE partner Cheshire Wildlife Trust, this project will provide new insight as to the ecological factors influencing successful conservation management of reintroduced dormouse populations. Such evidence is urgently needed to guide conservation efforts for this rare and declining native UK species.

You will join a highly active research environment within the Mammalian Behaviour & Evolution research group at the University of Liverpool’s Leahurst Campus on the Wirral Peninsula, with outstanding research facilities (http://www.liv.ac.uk/mbe). Informal enquiries about the project or research environment may be directed to Prof Paula Stockley at: [Email Address Removed].





Funding Notes

Competitive funding of tuition fee, research costs and stipend (£14,553 tax-free, 2017-18) from the NERC Doctoral Training Partnership “Adapting to the Challenges of a Changing Environment” (ACCE, http://acce.group.shef.ac.uk/ ). ACCE – a collaboration between the Universities of Sheffield, Liverpool, and York – is the only dedicated ecology/evolution/conservation Doctoral Training Partnership in the UK.

Applications (CV, letter of application, 2 referees) by email to [Email Address Removed], deadline: January 9th 2018. Interviews: 14th-16th February 2018. Shortlisted applicants will be interviewed for only one project from the ACCE partnership.

This project is also available to self-funded students. A fees bursary may be available.

References

Bright, P., Morris, P. & Mitchell-Jones, T. (2006) The dormouse conservation handbook. Second Edition. English Nature.

White, I. (2016) Strategy for dormouse reintroductions in England and Wales. People’s Trust for Endangered Species.


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