Gracias a mi amiga Tercita :P
The British Antarctic Survey are recruiting Zoological Field Assistants to work  at Bird Island, South Georgia.
Apply before May 31st, 2009
Bird Island  is home to:
700,000 nocturnal petrels
65,000 breeding fur seals
50,000  pairs of penguins
14,000 pairs of albatrosses
With room for 2 more  Zoological Field Assistants on 32 month contracts!
Take your career to  the extreme and work in one of the most challenging and amazing places on earth.  Antarctica is where cutting edge scientific investigation - on issues such as  global warming and environmental change - is happening right now.
It's  where your curiosity, ambition and sense of adventure will surely lead you and  we're the team to take you there.You will need to be physically capable and  medically fit to work in Antarctic conditions.
At Bird Island, South  Georgia, two field assistants will be recruited by BAS to help carry out  fieldwork on seabirds and seals. Bird Island is small (just 6 Km long) and forms  part of the South Georgia archipelago where it is buffeted by prevailing  westerlies and cold winds from Antarctica to the South. It has a high annual  rainfall and variable snow cover during winter. In summer tens of thousands of  seals and hundreds of thousands of seabirds breed there (including 3 species of  penguins and 4 species of albatrosses). Up to 10 staff (ferried in and out by  ship) live in a modern research station. There is a satellite link to the  outside world and comfortable accommodation.
The successful candidates  will work and live on Bird Island continuously between October or November 2009  and April 2012. They will each be partly responsible for one element of a  monitoring program (seals, penguins or flying birds). The learning curve is very  steep and so all candidates must have previous experience of handling  appropriate wild animals. BAS will provide a finishing school (at Bird Island)  to hone these skills.
Fieldwork in the breeding season at Bird Island  will be very intensive with long hours of data preparation afterwards, so it is  important to be organised. The data will be finalised using databases and by  submitting reports, observing strict deadlines at frequent intervals. These, the  assistant's finished products, will underpin key research into regional and  global change processes based on seabird and seal life histories, reproductive  success, behaviour and diet.
The successful applicants will remain on  Bird Island continuously for 30 months, where they will live with 2 other  residents and up to 6 summer only visitors. Whilst everyone will be assigned  duties to keep the research station running (including cooking and cleaning),  the residents will have extra responsibilities (after essential pre-deployment  training), such as helping to provide medical cover.
The position of  zoological field assistant offers a unique opportunity for highly motivated and  disciplined individuals with relevant fieldwork skills and a keen interest in  wildlife that will adapt well to small island living in a challenging  sub-Antarctic environment.
Qualifications and  experience:
Minimum of a science degree in biology or zoology, experience  of remote, unsupervised fieldwork and animal handling skills (i.e. of  appropriate wild animals in their natural habitat).
Applicants must be  competent and efficient managing, analysing and reporting large data  sets.
Meticulous time management, attention to detail and effective  communication are important attributes.
Candidates should also be able to  mix well in a small and vibrant science  community.
Applying:
Appointments will be for a period of  approximately 32 months.
Salary will be in the range of £ 20,424 -  £28,091 pa pro-rata (depending on qualifications and experience).
Please  quote reference: BAS 30/09
Closing date for receipt of application forms:  31st May 2009.
Interviews are to be held on 16th June  2009.
On-line application forms and further information are available on  our website at
www.antarctica.ac.uk/employment
These are also available from  the Personnel Section, British Antarctic Survey, High
Cross, Madingley Road,  Cambridge, CB3 0ET.  Tel: +44 (0)1223 221508.
We welcome applications  from all sections of the community.  People from ethnic minorities are currently  under-represented and their applications are particularly welcome.
Dirk  Briggs
British Antarctic Survey
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
