BBSRC CASE PhD Studentship in High Resolution (UAV) Remote Sensing for Improving Crop Field Trials

BBSRC CASE PhD Studentship in High Resolution (UAV) Remote Sensing for Improving Crop Field Trials

Kings college LondonBBSRC offers opportunities for postgraduate training in areas relevant to its mission through a wide range of training awards.

A four year, fully funded BBSRC CASE Phd Studentship is available in the area of remote sensing for improved phenotyping of wheat (i.e. the field-trialling of new wheat strains). Wheat is one of our most important and widespread food crops, grown on more land area worldwide than any other. Thousands of different strains of wheat currently exist, and to feed increasing world populations, whilst minimising adverse environmental impacts, crop breeding programmes breed new strains to try to further increase yields even under demanding environmental (e.g. drought-prone) and management (e.g. reduced fertiliser) conditions. The effectiveness of these new strains is usually gauged via dedicated field trials where hundreds of different crop varieties are grown side-by-side to provide comparisons of canopy temperature, structure, height, greenness etc; thus helping to select the varieties with the optimum characteristics (time to maturity, yield, drought tolerance etc). At present such ‘field phenotyping’ is, however, often laborious, inefficient and somewhat subjective. The objective of this PhD is to develop the use of remote sensing and unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) technology for improving field phentotyping methods, both in the UK and in more drought prone areas overseas.

The project is a BBSRC CASE PhD Studentship with King’s College London, conducted in collaboration with Rothamsted Research and Bayer CropScience AG. The project will be jointly supervised by Prof. Martin Wooster (KCL), Dr Malcolm Hawkesford (Rothamsted) and Dr Juan Pedro Ruiz-Santaella (Bayer CropScience AG).

Institution: King’s College London

Department/Faculty: Department of Geography

PhD Supervisor: Prof M Wooster

Application Deadline: December 1, 2014

At King’s College London the student will be a member of the Earth and Environmental Dynamics (EED) Research Group of the Department of Geography. Training on research methods, remote sensing, GIS, and environmental monitoring & modelling will be available, and they will attend appropriate national and European scientific meetings, for example the annual “Workshop on UAV-based Remote Sensing Methods for Monitoring Vegetation”. Training in software development will be given as required.

At Rothamsted the student will be part of a multi-disciplinary team involved in optimising crop perfomance (gene regulation, plant physiology, genetics and crop trials). The student will be given training in the trials design and ground-based phenotyping technologies used to compare against the UAV-based methods. Rothamsted provides a range of taught courses, e.g. in Crop Protection, to which the student will have full access as required, and access will also be provided to the seminars, workshops, and open weekends covering relevant areas of biotech/agricultural sciences.

Whilst at the Bayer CropScience field station the student will be part of an interdisciplinary working team of biologists, agronomists, breeders as well as field technicians, and their work will be supervised by an experienced agronomist on farm and by a senior scientist at the headquarters in Monheim (Germany).

The project will utilise a mix of airborne remote sensing, UAVs, photogrammetry, algorithm development (computer coding in Python, IDL, or R), laboratory instrument testing, use of scene and spectral simulation models, and substantial fieldwork in the UK and later overseas. Applicants should have a 1st or 2:1 degree in a science, engineering or geographic discipline, ideally an additional relevant MSc qualification or be currently on an MSc degree, and some experience relevant to at least one of the above areas. A driving license would be useful.

The project can commence any time between 1st January and 30 September 2015, and graduates with an existing good quality MSc degree, and those currently on MSc courses, are encouraged to apply.

Application deadline is 1st December 2014. Please send your CV and cover letter via email to lauren.perry@kcl.ac.uk .

Please check that you meet BBSRC requirements for both academic qualifications and UK residential eligibility before applying:  http://www.bbsrc.ac.uk/web/FILES/Guidelines/studentship_eligibility.pdf.

Full details can be found in our publication BBSRC Postgraduate Studentships Guide which is available on the BBSRC Website at: http://www.bbsrc.ac.uk/web/FILES/Guidelines/studentship_handbook.pdf.

Funding Notes:

Funding includes tuition fees a minimum of £15,500 per annum stipend + contribution from CASE partner, plus research expenses. This research project has funding attached. It is only available to UK citizens or those who have been resident in the UK for a period of 3 years or more. Some projects, which are funded by charities or by the universities themselves may have more stringent restrictions.

 

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Source: FindAPhD

Categories: Courses

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