We are looking for a highly skilled research associate (RA) to work at the cutting edge of mitigating avian collisions with anthropogenic structures. The objective of the work is to provide risk assessment tools for guiding aviation managers in protecting public safety. The RA will collate data and develop predictive models to estimate bird strike probability with civil and military flights. This work will be further developed into interactive visualizations that airport managers will use to manage risk of bird collisions, protecting both avian populations and human safety. The predictive models could also be applied more broadly to decrease rates of avian mortality caused by collisions with other anthropogenic structures (e.g., buildings, wind turbines). The RA will work at the forefront of human-wildlife interactions with quantitative ecologists and wildlife biologists from USDA-APHIS and Colorado State University (CSU) as well as aviation stakeholders, natural resource economists, and specialists with other backgrounds. They will also work closely with a data scientist to transfer their modeling workflows into a pipeline and dashboard system for real-time risk assessment. The position is co-located at CSU and the National Wildlife Research Center of USDA-APHIS-Wildlife Services in Fort Collins, CO (in-person work is preferred but remote work may be allowed under some conditions).