The Great Basin Institute’s Ecological Monitoring (EM) Program focuses on collecting monitoring data to inform conservation and land management in the Intermountain West, while providing emerging professionals opportunities to begin or enhance their careers. This program provides hands-on experience with terrestrial vegetation monitoring and ecological landscape assessments.
One component of the GBI EM program works in cooperation with the Nevada Department of Wildlife (NDOW) to implement NDOW’s Vegetation Health Assessment (VHA) program. The goal of NDOW's VHA program is to provide ecological monitoring data to inform conservation planning and adaptive management decisions. This data is used by resource specialists and land managers to inform future resource management decisions focused on protecting Nevada’s biodiversity and restoring productive terrestrial ecosystems to support wildlife.
For the 2025 field season, GBI is recruiting Vegetation Health Assessment (VHA) Technicians to work with NDOW and GBI staff. Each Field Tech will work under the supervision of a Crew Lead to characterize vegetation using VHA protocols, on various sampling sites across northern Nevada. Monitoring projects are predominantly located in sagebrush ecosystems and focused on post-fire restoration, habitat improvement, and baseline condition of sage-grouse habitat. This opportunity differs from other GBI Ecological Monitoring positions as the primary monitoring goal is to conduct long-term vegetation monitoring, excluding soil indicators.
During the first month of training, the typical schedule is five days on (Monday-Friday) and two days off. During field work, car camping for eight day “hitches” (Wednesday-Wednesday) in remote locations will be required, followed by six days off (Thursday-Tuesday). At the end of the field season, there are three weeks of office work, primarily focused on data QC.
Field work will include:
- Maintaining safety awareness and practices;
- Extensive 4x4 driving on unmaintained roads;
- Navigating off-trail to sampling sites;
- Establishing sampling plots and transects;
- Collecting vegetation data (including species inventory, forb diversity, species abundance, sagebrush shape, foliar cover, canopy gap, and herbaceous and woody heights);
- Making qualitative treatment assessments; and
- Taking photo-points.
Additional duties include:
- Regular communication with GBI support staff and agency staff;
- Participation in GBI and agency trainings;
- Using Field Maps and Survey 123 software to collect field data;
- Managing ArcGIS Online databases;
- Identifying plants to species using dichotomous keys; and
- Employing and managing extensive QA/QC data checks.
Timeline and Location:
- 4-person vegetation monitoring crew
- Based out of NDOW Field Office in Reno, Nevada
- Crews will travel across Northern Nevada to monitoring sites on private, BLM, and/or USFS land, depending on the project.
- Duration: 21 weeks from early April – August
- Tentative start date: April 14th, 2025
Compensation:
- $19-21 per hour, depending on qualifications
- $150 bi-weekly housing stipend; untaxed, used at applicant’s discretion as housing is not provided
- $32.30 monthly cell phone stipend
- $41 camping per diem for every night in the field (up to 7 units in an 8-day work week)
- Affordable Care Act Compliant Health insurance including vision and dental provided at no cost to the employee starting the first day of the month following employment start date.
- Paid state holidays
- Paid personal leave, amount dependent on contract length
Minimum approximate Bi-weekly Compensation before taxes –
Office: $1,670 (~$20.87 per hour)
Average Field: $1,957 (~$24.46 per hour)