Do you want to contribute to the protein transition? Are you interested in understanding how novel protein crops respond to abiotic stress? Then one of these 2 PhD positions within the REAP2SOW programme might be suited for you!We are looking for two enthusiastic and motivated PhD candidates to study (PhD1) abiotic signals that regulate below‑ground development and (PhD2) above-ground responses of to stress and source–sink relationships of three novel protein crops — quinoa, white lupin and tuberous pea (a.k.a. aardaker,
Lathyrus tuberosus). The research will focus on how temperature and water stress affect nitrogen acquisition, photosynthesis, root development and the allocation of carbon and nitrogen between source and sink tissues.
Your rolePhD1: - Together with other project members you will design and execute controlled-environment experiments, including targeted phenotyping of roots, nodules, and tubers, using reference genotypes and by manipulating abiotic factors (e.g. temperature, water, N).
- You will conduct molecular and cellular analyses using histology, microscopy, single-cell and bulk transcriptomics, mutant screens and transformation approaches to identify signalling pathways and regulatory components.
- You will analyze data and integrate multi-modal datasets by applying quantitative/statistical and bioinformatics skills.
- You will coordinate collaboration by managing cross-team experiments.
- You will write and publish your research in leading scientific journals and communicate your findings through your PhD thesis and via broader societal outreach.
PhD2: - Together with other project members you will design and execute controlled-environment experiments using reference genotypes and by manipulating abiotic factors (e.g. temperature, water, N).
- You will collect physiological and whole-plant measurements including gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence, optical spectroscopy, and stable isotope labelling to quantify C and N fixation, uptake, and allocation.
- You will analyze data and integrate multi-modal datasets by applying quantitative/statistical skills.
- You will coordinate collaboration by managing cross-team experiments.
- You will write and publish your research in leading scientific journals and communicate your findings through your PhD thesis and via broader societal outreach.
You will work hereThis research is embedded within four research groups, at Wageningen University and Utrecht University: the Centre for Crop Systems Analysis (WU-CSA), the Laboratory of Cell and Developmental Biology (WU-CDB), the Plant Stress Resilience research group (PSR-UU) and the Experimental and Computational Plant Development research group (ECPD-UU). Supervision will be by Prof. Jochem Evers (WU-CSA), Dr. Steven Driever (WU-CSA), Prof. Viola Willemsen (WU-CDB), Dr. Wouter Kohlen (WU-CDB), Dr. Martijn van Zanten (PSR-UU) and Dr. Kaisa Kajala (ECPD-UU).
These NWA-funded PhD positions are part of the REAP2SOW programme, a national collaboration between Wageningen University & Research, Utrecht University, Leiden University, the University of Twente, and the University of Groningen, together with partners across the agri-food sector. REAP2SOW addresses the urgent challenge of transitioning to a sustainable, plant-based protein system by 2050, aiming to reduce the environmental impact of agriculture and strengthen food security in the face of climate change and increasing weather extremes that affect ecosystem functioning. The programme brings together interdisciplinary expertise spanning natural, social, and technical sciences.
Within REAP2SOW, our work package investigates below-ground development, nitrogen acquisition, and above-ground carbon fixation in quinoa, white lupin, and aardaker, focusing on root traits, nodules, and tuber development to assess nutrient-use efficiency. It tests how abiotic stresses—especially high temperature and fluctuating water availability—affect photosynthesis, nitrogen uptake, and carbon–nitrogen allocation using advanced tools such as single-cell transcriptomics, root imaging, isotope tracing, gas-exchange, and leaf spectroscopy. The projects aim to uncover physiological processes, signalling pathways and traits that improve crop resilience. This work package closely collaborates with other REAP2SOW WPs addressing nutrient efficiency, and nutritional quality to guide genotype selection under stress.