http://crcareers.thegreatbasininstitute.org/careers/careers.aspx?rf=ECOLOG&req=2016-RAP-007

The Great Basin Institute, in cooperation with the Bureau of Land
Management, is recruiting up to 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. The Technicians will support the Mount Lewis (1) and Tonopah
Field Office (1).

General duties include working cooperatively with BLM Rangeland Management
Specialists as part of an upland rangeland monitoring team utilizing
various field data collection methodologies to determine current upland
range condition. Drought monitoring may also be conducted to identify
affected resources and monitor the condition of forage resources and level
of use by livestock within allotments, wild horses and burros within Herd
Management Areas, and within greater sage-grouse priority habitat
management areas. Monitoring data may also be collected to determine the
effectiveness of emergency stabilization and rehabilitation (ESR)
treatments after wildfires.

The Technicians will be responsible for providing written documentation of
data collection (survey forms) and organizing photographic and GPS/GIS
documentation of survey areas. Based on collected data, conclusions and
recommendations can be made in support of evaluating upland range and
vegetative conditions in order to maintain, restore, and/or improve upland
resource values to achieve a healthy and productive ecological condition.
GBI is seeking Research Associates that possess the following
qualifications to perform the duties described:

1. Plant Identification - plant and plant community identification,
including upland range plant taxonomy and ecology common throughout the
Great Basin. Responsible for the identification of individual plants,
describing existing and potential plant communities using soil survey
information, interpreting vegetation, and successional sequences.
2. Upland Monitoring Studies – utilize plant and soil identification skills
to conduct upland range monitoring studies under established BLM protocols.
Monitoring consists of double-weight sampling, ecological site inventory,
utilization, use pattern mapping, cover, line-point intercept,
gap-intercept, and density techniques. Duties may also consist of
conducting livestock compliance checks, which provide information on
livestock placement and movement as it relates to annual authorized use.
3. Soil Identification - exposure to identification of soils, use of soil
surveys, determine soils grouped into the site, identify landscape and soil
factors, and determine existing or potential erosional factors. This
information is utilized to aid in determining site potential and evaluation
of current conditions.




Location:
Battle Mountain, NV is located ~220 miles east of Reno, NV along Interstate
80. Battle Mountain and the surrounding area (pop. ~4,000) is predominantly
rural; situated in the high desert (~4,500 ft. elevation) where
ranching/mining are the local economic drivers. The Mount Lewis Field
Office is responsible for managing approximately 4.5 million acres of
public land typically of basin-and-range topography with Great Basin
Desert/sage brush steppe ecotype.

Tonopah, NV is located roughly half way between Reno and Las Vegas, NV
along Interstate 95. Economic drivers in the Tonopah, NV and surrounding
area (pop. ~2,600/~6,000 ft. elevation) include mining and renewable
energy. The Tonopah Field Office manages 6 million acres of public land and
has two distinct ecotypes Mojave desert and Mojave/Great Basin transition
zone.

Compensation & Timeline:
o Rate of Pay: $17.50/hour
o Medical benefits (health and dental)
o Timeline: appointment to begin May 22, 2016 (or upon availability) and
continue through mid-November; potential for extension pending funding and
a favorable performance review
o Full-time position (40 hours/week) with occasional overtime

Qualifications:
o Applicants should have a combination of educational and field experience
related to the position of interest, and an understanding of basic
principles related to the fields of botany and/or soil science;
o Knowledge of Great Basin ecology, preferable;
o Ability to navigate and collect data using handheld GPS units, required;
o Experience working with ArcGIS, desirable;
o Possess a clean, valid, state-issued driver’s license with the ability to
safely operate a 4WD vehicle on and off paved roads;
o Proficient in the use of a compass and ability to read a topographical
map;
o Effectively communicate, both written and orally, with a diverse
audience; and
o Ability to live and work in rural and remote field and office
environment; and
o Physically fit to work outdoors, carry personal and field equipment, and
withstand the rigors of the Great Basin in the spring, summer and fall
and/or early winter.

o Successful applicant(s) must complete a Department of Interior (DOI)
Background Investigation (BI) or submit paperwork to BLM human resources
indicating an active and fully adjudicated BI has already been completed
prior to beginning position.

To apply:
http://crcareers.thegreatbasininstitute.org/careers/careers.aspx?rf=ECOLOG&req=2016-RAP-007

Reply via email to