Sagebrush Pollinator Ecology
      
  
  Graduate Student Name
              Lauren Gramberg
          Email Address
              
          Faculty mentor/Supervisor
              Jim Rivers
          Email Address (Faculty mentor/Supervisor)
              
          Department Affiliation
              Forest Engineering Resources & Management
          Job Location
              Corvallis, OR
          Description of project or research opportunity
              The sagebrush bees project is investigating the response of wild bee communities to the spread of invasive annual grasses in sagebrush-steppe ecosystems. Based in eastern Oregon's Steens Mountain, the objectives of this project will provide supporting information of how pollinator communities are shifting as the wildfire-invasive grass cycle grows across much of the western US. In quantifying the bee communities across Steens Mountain and across the invasive grass gradient, sampling must include lethal take in order to record presence at a species-level scale. 
          Tasks student will perform
              For this project we are looking for assistance to help sort, pin, and label bee specimens (bees that have been collected in eastern Oregon). The student may also have the option of participating in field work (hand-netting bees and conducting vegetation surveys at Steens Mountain sites) in mid-summer with graduate student Lauren Gramberg.
          Special skills required
              Preference for a student who is proficient in excel data entry, comfortable working alone in a lab setting, has a strong attention to detail, and comfortable performing repetitive tasks. A student  who is passionate about entomology, pollinator ecology, or wildfire-rangeland relationships would likely enjoy this project.
          Proposed dates of employment
              
 - 
          Anticipated hours worked per week
              8-10