Field Crew Member Positions in Forest and Fire Ecology (3-4 positions)
This 2023 recruitment has closed.
Employment period
Mid-June to late September 2023 (minimum), with potential for extension for additional fieldwork and/or to assist with data processing
Compensation
Approximately $17.00-17.50/hour.
Eligibility
This position is for current UC students (any UC campus) or spring 2023 UC graduates. If you already have a bachelor’s degree and directly relevant field experience, consider our non-student crew lead position.
Field location
Mountains of Northern California (including the Sierra Nevada and Southern Cascades)
Office location (duty station)
Davis, CA (UC Davis)
Job purpose
Serve on a three- or four-member field crew in performing plot surveys to collect forest vegetation data from burned and unburned forest sites. Most plot surveys will consist of revisits of plots established and surveyed in the previous year. The data will support research aiming to improve predictions of post-fire forest recovery. The work will also include surveys of overstory stand structure in burned and unburned forest to serve as validation data for efforts to use drone and satellite imagery to map forest structure.
The fieldwork will occur across the Mosquito, Caldor, Creek, and Dixie fires in northern California (Tahoe, Plumas, Lassen, and Sierra National Forests), as well as unburned stands on the Tahoe National Forest, and provide an opportunity to observe a diversity of California mountain landscapes and post-fire conditions.
Job description
The crew member is responsible for conducting field sampling. The crew member will be responsible for the following:
Field data collection (90%): Collect field data, including data on regenerating vegetation. Drive to and between field sites; navigate to sites on remote roads; locate remote field sites using mobile devices, topographic maps, compass.
Data and equipment management (10%): Ensure that equipment and data are managed properly; perform data entry at an office location.
Work location
The duty station will be in Davis, CA. During the work week, crews will primarily be car camping near the project study sites on National Forests. Camping will usually be “dispersed camping” (undeveloped areas that are adjacent to remote roads and have no facilities) but will occasionally be in campsites (with campsite fees paid by employer). Camping location will change frequently as the crew moves to different study areas.
Work schedule
The work schedule will primarily consist of eight 10-hour days, beginning and ending on Wednesdays, followed by six days off, with the potential for some hitches consisting of four 10-hour days followed by 3 days off. The supervisor will attempt to accommodate the scheduling preferences of the crew, but crew members must be flexible with respect to the work schedule. During fire season, smoke and fire hazard may necessitate rapid adjustments to work location or schedule (e.g., shifting departure and/or return dates to avoid hazardous weather conditions). In the event of extended periods of fire or smoke hazards that preclude fieldwork, the supervisor will attempt to arrange office work, but continuous full-time work during peak fire season cannot be guaranteed.
Transportation
Field campaigns will begin and end at the duty station in Davis, CA.
The crew will be provided a vehicle. Ability and willingness to contribute to the driving duties will be viewed favorably. Travel to field sites will require highway driving as well as driving on rough, remote, poorly-signed backcountry roads.
Equipment and gear
All necessary field equipment will be provided. Communal camping gear (e.g., water jugs and cooking gear) will also be provided. The crew members will be responsible for their own personal camping gear and field clothing.
Training
Training in field methods, equipment, and safety will be provided. Valid wilderness first aid (or more advanced) certification, or willingness to complete training prior to the start of the field season, is required (registration costs will be covered by the employer).
Work conditions/physical demands
Crew members must be in very good physical condition. Field conditions will often be hot with little shade, but can also be very cold and potentially wet. Work will require hiking up to 8 miles per day (though usually much less) with a pack through sometimes difficult and steep terrain, usually without trails, usually in areas burned by wildfire, and sometimes with dense and/or thorny shrub cover. Comfort working under these conditions is essential! Because work will focus on areas that burned recently, shrub cover will rarely be excessively dense, but some areas of dense vegetation will occur. Work will involve camping, often with no facilities (see Work location, above). Work requires careful, legible handwriting and careful attention to detail.
Minimum qualifications
- Progress toward a bachelor’s degree in ecology, natural resource management, or related natural science field
- Experience in scientific data collection through coursework and/or job experience
- Comfort with and ability to maintain a positive attitude in physically demanding and/or uncomfortable conditions (see Work conditions/physical demands, above)
- Experience camping in remote locations with no facilities
- CPR and Wilderness First Aid certified (certification may be accomplished after job offer is made, with registration cost paid by the employer)
Preferred qualifications
- Skilled in identifying California trees and shrubs
- Experience working with complex data recording equipment
- Valid driver’s license; willingness to share driving responsibilities
- Experience operating a vehicle on rough, remote roads
Application due date
Review of applications will begin on January 27, 2023.
To apply
Please submit a cover letter (including your interest in the position, relevant experience, and availability dates), CV/resume, and contact information for three references (including name, organization, email, and relationship to you) using this Google form. The form includes more detailed instructions. For questions about the position, contact Derek Young, djyoung@udavis.edu.