Start Date
Immediate
Expiry Date
14 Jun, 25
Salary
41020.0
Posted On
14 Mar, 25
Experience
0 year(s) or above
Remote Job
Yes
Telecommute
Yes
Sponsor Visa
No
Skills
Good communication skills
Industry
Information Technology/IT
KEW RESEARCH FELLOW (ACCELERATED TAXONOMY)
We are seeking applications from promising early-career scientists with interesting, innovative, and viable research ideas for the Kew Research Fellowship in Plant and Fungal Science.
The Kew Research Fellowship in Plant and Fungal Science provides a unique opportunity for early-career researchers to develop their scientific portfolio and skills in a vibrant research environment, working with colleagues in Kew Science to make substantial contributions to challenges facing humanity.
Kew offers five Kew Research Fellowships each year, aligned across our Research Priorities.
This Fellowship is within the Accelerated Taxonomy Priority of the Kew Science Strategy. The successful candidate will be based at Kew or Wakehurst depending on the discipline.
The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (RBG Kew) is a leading plant and fungal science institute, UNESCO World Heritage Site, and major visitor attraction. We are working to end the unprecedented extinction crisis and to help create a world where nature is protected, valued by all, and managed sustainably.
Our flagship Kew Research Fellowship programme (also sometimes called the Future Leader Fellowship) enables the brightest and most innovative early career scientists to develop research projects in their field of expertise while gaining the necessary leadership and professional skills for the next stage of their careers.
The successful applicants will form an integral part of our vibrant, dynamic and cross-disciplinary scientific environment and will gain direct access to the world’s most extensive plant and fungal collections along with state-of-the-art laboratory facilities.
Line managed by a senior researcher, the candidate will be benefit from opportunities for development that include – but are not limited to – training workshops on topics from grant writing to research impact, a mentorship programme, bi-annual mentoring meetings with the Director of Science, and other chances for researcher-led training. They will also be able to apply for secondment and research funding internally and are encouraged to use this funding to travel for their research.
The Fellowship aims to provide early career researchers with an internationally outstanding level of training and professional development, empowering them to become established as independent research leaders in their discipline by the end of the Fellowship. This Fellowship is offered as a four-year research post based at either Kew Gardens or Wakehurst.
Hours of work
Full time
Contract Type
Fixed Term (FTA)
Contract start date
September 2025
Contract end date
4 years from start date
Salary
£41,020 per annum (pro rata) [Band D]
Directorate
Science
Location
Kew Gardens, Richmond, Hybrid
Closing Date
20/04/2025
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MORE DETAILS
We are seeking a highly motivated scientist to undertake research aligned with the Accelerated Taxonomy priority of our ambitious strategy for Kew Science and Kew’s Manifesto for Change.
Are you an energetic taxonomist with a determination to revolutionise taxonomy? We want to hear from you. In Accelerated Taxonomy, one of five Priorities in the Science Directorate, our ambition is to speed up the description, naming and classification of plants and fungi using new data, tools and technologies.
Working with Kew’s Herbarium of c. 8 million preserved plant specimens, or our Fungarium of c. 1.25 million mycological specimens, your research will align closely to our ambitious strategy for Kew Science and to Kew’s Manifesto For Change.
We focus geographically on Madagascar, Africa, Asia and the Americas, with systematic strengths in cosmopolitan plant families such as Poaceae, Cyperaceae, Orchidaceae, Acanthaceae, Compositae, Fabaceae, Myrtaceae; and fungi genera such as Entoloma, Ramularia and Trichoderma.
We share four goals: (1) to prioritise taxonomic emergencies in the most biodiverse and threatened regions and systematic groups, (2) to complete Tree of Life for plants and 50% of fungi, (3) to develop new identification tools for collections and field use, and (4) to identify the Tropical Important Plant Areas. Your work will complement these shared research foci and strengths, finding a synergy within Accelerated Taxonomy and other areas of Kew Science.
You will hold a relevant PhD or equivalent experience and post-qualification experience in taxonomy, phylogenomics and their application. Your research interest will go beyond nomenclature and classification to address the scenarios where taxonomic progress will support the sustainable use and conservation of Earth’s plant and fungal biodiversity. In this post, you will have the opportunity to contribute to various aspects of Kew’s scientific remit, and your interests may include, for example, machine learning, imaging, the tree of life, or conservation prioritisation metrics. We are particularly keen to attract researchers who will benchmark machine learning approaches against DNA sequencing approaches to identify and/or delimit species based on our collections, or who use a multidisciplinary approach to study plant and fungal diversity integrating state-of-the-art morphological and molecular tools.
Please refer the Job description for details