Job opening: Supervisory Research Fish Biologist
Salary: $105 666 - 178 531 per year
Published at: Aug 31 2023
Employment Type: Full-time
This is a Direct Hire Public Notice. Please read this Public Notice in its entirety prior to submitting your application for consideration.
This position is located in the Northwest Fisheries Science Center, Fish Ecology Division, in Newport, OR or Seattle, WA or Hammond, OR.
Salary: $105,666 (Step 01) to $178,531 (Step 10); NOTE: First time hires to the Federal Government are typically hired at the Step 01.
Duties
As a Supervisory Research Fish Biologist, within the Northwest Fisheries Science Center, Fish Ecology Division, some of your specific duties will include:
Qualifications
Qualification requirements in the vacancy announcements are based on the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) Qualification Standards Handbook, which contains federal qualification standards. This handbook is available on the Office of Personnel Management's website located at: https://www.opm.gov/policy.
EDUCATION: A degree with major study in biology, zoology, or biological oceanography that includes at least 30 semester hours in biological and aquatic science and 15 semester hours in the physical and mathematical sciences. This course work must have included at least 15 semester hours of preparatory training in zoology beyond introductory biology or zoology in such courses as invertebrate zoology, comparative anatomy, histology, physiology, embryology, advanced vertebrate zoology, genetics, entomology, and parasitology; and at least 6 semester hours of training applicable to fishery biology in such subjects as fishery biology, ichthyology, limnology, oceanography, aIgology, planktonology, marine or fresh water ecology, invertebrate ecology, principles of fishery population dynamics, or related course work in the field of fishery biology; and at least 15 semester hours of training in any combination of two or more of the following: chemistry, physics, mathematics, or statistics.
SPECIALIZED EXPERIENCE: Applicants must possess one year of specialized experience equivalent in difficulty and responsibility to the next lower grade level in the Federal Service. Specialized experience is experience that has equipped the applicant with the particular competencies/knowledge, skills and abilities to successfully perform the duties of the position. This experience need not have been in the federal government.
Experience refers to paid and unpaid experience, including volunteer work done through National Service programs (e.g., Peace Corps, AmeriCorps) and other organizations e.g., professional; philanthropic, religious; spiritual; community, student, social). Volunteer work helps build critical competencies; knowledge, and skills and can provide valuable training and experience that translates directly to paid employment. You will receive credit for all qualifying experience, including volunteer experience.
To qualify at the ZP-4 level:
SPECIALIZED EXPERIENCE: One year (52 weeks) of specialized experience equivalent to at least the next lower (ZP-3) pay band or GS-12 grade level in the federal service:
Overseeing or leading interdisciplinary science teams to meet science mission objectives including team leadership skills, identification of research priorities connected to science mission, and record of building collaborative research with internal and external partners such as state, federal, or tribal entities.
Integrating climate and oceanographic information into research programs regarding ocean and estuarine Pacific salmonid habitats or responses of salmonids in relation to their ecology, behavior, and life histories.
Developing research proposals for complex ocean, nearshore, or estuarine scientific projects including development and execution of budgets, articulating research hypotheses and objectives, applying advanced and emerging scientific methods, and a strong record of publishing results in peer-reviewed scientific literature.
Education
College Transcript: If you are qualifying based on education, submit a copy of your college transcript that lists college courses detailing each course by the number and department (i.e., Bio 101, Math 210, etc.), course title, number of credit hours and grade earned. You must submit evidence that any education completed in a foreign institution is equivalent to U.S. education standards with your resume. You may submit an unofficial copy of the transcript at the initial phase of the application process. If course content cannot be easily identified from the title of the course as listed on your transcript, you must submit an official course description from the college/university that reflects the content at the time the course was taken.
Note: Your college transcript is used to verify successful completion of degree, or college course work. An official college transcript will be required before you can report to duty.
Special Instructions for Foreign Education: Education completed in foreign colleges or universities must be evaluated in terms of equivalency to that acquired in U.S. colleges and universities. Applicants educated in whole or in part in foreign countries must submit sufficient evidence, including transcripts, to an accredited private organization for an equivalency evaluation of course work and degree. A listing of these accredited organizations can be found on the Department of Education's website. You
MUST provide a copy of the letter containing the results of the equivalency evaluation with a course by course listing along with your application. Failure to provide such documentation by the closing date of the announcement will result in lost consideration. For more information on how foreign education is evaluated visit:
OPM Foreign Education Evaluation.
Contacts
- Address NOAA Office of Human Capital Services (OHCS)
1315 East West Hwy
SSMC4
Silver Spring, MD 20910
US
- Name: Michele Davis
- Email: [email protected]