American Conservation Experience, a nonprofit Conservation Corps, in partnership with the National Park Service, is seeking FOUR Fisheries Monitoring Members to assist with backpack electrofishing on 70 or more sites throughout the park to monitor fish populations and take various habitat measurements alongside Shenandoah National Park staff. For more information about ACE, please visit our website. Start Date: May 18, 2026 Estimated End Date: August 6, 2026 (or 12 weeks after start date) a 12-week minimum commitment is required Location Details/Description: Shenandoah National Park Headquarters, Luray, Virginia Shenandoah National Park contains 196,000 forested acres along the crest of the Blue Ridge Mountains in northern Virginia. The Park's backcountry of steep rugged terrain contains 500 miles of trails, including 95 miles of the Appalachian National Scenic Trail, and nearly 80,000 acres of federally designated wilderness. Skyline Drive, the famous scenic tour road through the Park, follows the ridge crest for 105 miles and connects to the Blue Ridge Parkway. Nearly two million people visit the Park each year to enjoy views from the Skyline Drive, hike trails, rock climb, enjoy nature study, camp, or stay overnight in one of the Park's rustic lodges or backcountry cabins. The Park supports approximately 1,400 vascular plant species, numerous state-rare plant species, and a variety of forest community types. The mountain streams are inhabited by 40 species of fish, over 230 taxa of aquatic invertebrates. For more information about Shenandoah National Park, please visit the NPS website. Position Overview: The members will assist in backpack electrofishing roughly 70 sites on 30 or more streams throughout Shenandoah National Park assessing coldwater fish populations as part of a ten-person crew. All members of the crew will be hiking 2-6 miles with 40 pound packs daily. The members will take various water quality and stream habitat measurements as a component of the NPS "vital signs" program. The members may also be removing exotic fish from park streams to benefit native species within the park. Any additional free time will likely be spent patrolling the developed areas of the park for nuisance black bears, educating visitors about bear conflicts, conducting peregrine falcon cliff nesting surveys, and other natural resource monitoring activities. This individual placement is meant to facilitate professional development and promotes exposure to land management agencies and networking with professionals. This could include gaining experience in different conservation fields and shadowing different work groups. Schedule: Monday-Thursday 6:30am-5:00pm
Stand Out From the Crowd
Upload your resume and get instant feedback on how well it matches this job.
Career Level
Entry Level