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related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description The current PhD position is immediately available for a highly motivated candidate within the research group of Prof
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Primary Supervisor - Prof David S Richardson Scientific Background Genetic variation within populations is essential to their ability to adapt and survive, but most mutations that change function
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Primary Supervisor: Prof Thomas Mock Scientific background Microbial rhodopsins (RHOs) are common in eukaryotic plankton including diatoms, which contribute ca. 45% of annual oceanic primary
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Primary Supervisor: Prof Neil Hall Scientific background Ectomycorrhizal fungi (ECMF) are a crucial yet often overlooked group of organisms that play a key role in the functioning of terrestrial
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PhD Studentship: Decoding Campylobacter pathogenesis in chickens: From colonisation to contamination
collaborate with Prof Alison Mather’s group at the Quadram Institute. Expert training in anaerobic bacterial culture, establishment and functional analysis of intestinal cells and organoids, molecular biology
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Primary supervisor - Prof Jonathan Todd Introduction: Demand for natural weight loss remedies is exceptionally high. Central Pharma Biotechnica (Biotechnica) mass produce “ALGAFILL,” a seaweed
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Primary supervisor - Prof Cristóbal Uauy Wheat provides 20% of the calories and protein consumed by humans. The world population will reach 9 billion by 2050, which requires food production
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well as the organic matter persistence. Responsibilities and qualifications Your tasks will be to: Use bioinformatic tools to mine metagenomic datasets for enzyme-specific sequences (oxidoreductases and/or hydrolases
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Primary Supervisor - Prof Jacob Malone Scientific Background Soil contamination with plastics and other pollutants causes significant challenges in terms of environmental containment and restoration
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Primary Supervisor: Prof Cock van Oosterhout Scientific background: Population bottlenecks erode genetic variation, which makes threatened species susceptible to viral epidemics. So, what makes