The Great Basin Institute is an interdisciplinary field studies organization that promotes environmental research, education, and service through the west. The Institute’s mission is to advance applied science and ecological literacy through community engagement and agency partnerships, supporting national parks, forest, open spaces and public lands. The Ecological Monitoring Program at GBI serves as an excellent professional development opportunity for natural resource professionals looking for experience in botanical, soil, rangeland and forest surveys. We are dedicated to providing college graduates and emerging professionals with hands-on survey, inventory, monitoring, and reporting experience in natural resource management. Extensive training and technical field skills development provides members a unique opportunity to obtain valuable experience in executing monitoring protocols that will increase their employment success. Description: Whitebark Pine (WBP) are experiencing extensive threats from white pine blister rust, mountain pine beetle, and climate change impacts on already weakened forest stands. Ongoing survival of the species across its range will require resistance and resilience within extant communities. Identification of areas where there is little whitebark pine mortality due to the interacting agents of blister rust, mountain pine beetle, and climate change is key for delineating core regions for treatments that promote the resilience of the whitebark pine ecosystem. Little is known about the status of whitebark pine populations on the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest (HTNF). Many of the whitebark pine populations on the HTNF occur in unique, isolated high-elevation patches, in the Eastern Sierra Nevada and in the Bridgeport area, Mountain City, Ruby Mountains, and Jarbidge Ranger District. Our goal is to set up a network of whitebark pine inventory and monitoring plots across the HTNF to determine baseline forest health and ecological status of whitebark pine ecosystems. By repeatedly visiting these sites in the future, we can determine how the isolated populations of whitebark pine on the Forest are changing through time and whether restoration or management activities could be helpful to promote ecosystem resilience. GBI is recruiting two Americorps Members to serve with GBI and U.S Forest Service staff to install long-term monitoring plots in whitebark pine ecosystems across the HTNF. Each Americorps Member will serve under the supervision of a USFS Field Lead to inventory, monitor, and survey whitebark pine populations and to implement forest health surveys. There may also be opportunities to assist with other field work on post-fire ecology, fuel treatment effectiveness, and rangeland and riparian health. Duties include following established field protocols to assess forest structure and composition, indicators of insect and disease damage to whitebark pine, identification of understory vascular plants, and enumeration of fuel loads. Overnight car camping or backpacking for 7 night “hitches'' in remote locations will typically be required.
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Career Level
Entry Level
Number of Employees
11-50 employees