This is a two-year position, with the possibility of a one-year extension depending on performance and funding, with an expected start date of October 2026. The person in this position will work with scientists at both the Chicago Botanic Garden and the Field Museum. The position combines two primary roles: supporting the curation and accessioning of insect collections from the Chicago Botanic Garden for long-term deposit at the Field Museum and leading the development and evaluation of eDNA-based approaches to study plant–pollinator interactions from biological collections. The postdoctoral research associate tasks will be twofold. The research associate will assist with the curation and organization of insect collections, with particular attention to micromoth species, helping prepare and transfer these materials to the Field Museum. In parallel, they will also lead a methods-driven research program to establish a flexible and scalable pipeline to reconstruct pollination networks using eDNA. This work will focus on one of two complementary strategies: (1) identifying plant species from pollen DNA recovered from insect specimens or other collections-based materials, or (2) identifying pollinator communities through insect DNA recovered from flowers and floral surfaces in living plant collections. Ultimately the project will depend on the researcher’s preferences, expertise, and professional aspirations. A key objective of the position is to evaluate the strengths, limitations, and potential taxonomic biases of current metabarcoding approaches and to develop improved workflows (e.g., marker selection, target capture, and validation strategies) for major pollinator groups. The postdoctoral researcher will integrate molecular data with observational or experimental datasets to assess methodological accuracy and ecological inference. While integration of both approaches is encouraged, the position allows for deep exploration of a single pathway if logistical or analytical constraints limit scope. The role offers substantial flexibility to shape the research direction while contributing to broader institutional goals related to pollinator conservation, collections-based science, and methodological innovation. The postdoctoral research associate will collaborate with scientists working in ecology, molecular biology, and collections management and will contribute to publications, protocol development, and future grant proposals.
Stand Out From the Crowd
Upload your resume and get instant feedback on how well it matches this job.
Job Type
Full-time
Career Level
Entry Level
Education Level
Ph.D. or professional degree