Wild Horse & Burro Habitat Monitoring Technician

The Great Basin Institute, in cooperation with the Bureau of Land
Management Mount Lewis Field Office, is recruiting one rangeland ecologist,
wildlife biologist, or botanist to conduct upland monitoring across the
public lands. The Monitoring Technician will work cooperatively as part of
a multi-disciplinary rangeland monitoring team. The overall objective is to
collect and compile monitoring data within Wild Horse and Burro Herd
Management Areas including but not limited to utilization, nested
frequency, rangeland health indicators, water availability/condition, and
wild horse or burro body condition. The Monitoring Technician may also be
required to work as part of other monitoring teams collecting riparian or
wildlife data or vegetation data for fire rehabilitation monitoring.


Visit our website for the full position description and application
instructions:

http://www.thegreatbasininstitute.org/employment/research-associates-employment/wild-horse-burro-monitoring-technician/

Rangeland & Drought Monitoring Technician

Impacts from a changing climate are being realized in a variety of ways,
including prolonged and intensified drought conditions. The Great Basin
Institute, in cooperation with the Bureau of Land Management, is recruiting
two (2) Rangeland Monitoring Technicians to implement a variety of upland
monitoring protocols across public lands in support of drought management
decisions and/or rangeland health evaluations. Working with existing GBI
staff, and will support the Tonopah Field Offices.


Visit our website for the full position description and application
instructions:
http://www.thegreatbasininstitute.org/employment/research-associates-employment/rangeland-drought-monitoring-technician-2/

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