The Nachman lab is hiring a postdoc as part of an NIH-funded project to study the genomic basis of environmental adaptation in house mice. House mice are native to Western Europe and were introduced into the Americas in association with humans during the last few hundred years. In this short time, mice have adapted to different environments through changes in morphology, behavior, and physiology. We seek to understand the genetic basis of this variation using a variety of approaches, including whole-genome sequencing of wild-caught mice across North and South America, studies of gene expression and chromatin accessibility, and genetic crosses using wild-derived inbred strains of mice from different environments. We are also using long-read data to study the role of structural variation, including insertions of transposable elements, in adaptation. The postdoc will work on existing projects in the lab and also have the opportunity to develop new projects in the context of our research program. Please direct questions about this position to Michael Nachman: mnachman@berkeley.edu. For complete details and to apply, please see https://aprecruit.berkeley.edu/JPF04754. Michael Nachman Director, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology Professor, Department of Integrative Biology 3101 Valley Life Sciences Building University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720-3160 (510) 642-1792, mnachman@berkeley.edu Michael Nachman (to subscribe/unsubscribe the EvolDir send mail to golding@mcmaster.ca)