Job announcement: translator Spanish-English for non-commercial taxonomic field guide project (marine benthic fauna of Chilean Patagonia)

Job announcement: (marine) biologist as translator of Spanish chapters into English
 for a taxonomic field guide in Chilean fjords, start: asap

We are a private Foundation (www.huinay.cl) that is operating a biological field station
 in Chilean Patagonia. Huinay Scientific Field Station was inaugurated in 2001
 and is situated 100 km south of Puerto Montt, in the fjord Comau; it is the
only biological station in a Chilean fjord. The surroundings are characterized
 by steep mountains and volcanoes. Almost 6000 mm annual precipitation gives
rise to extremely lush vegetation characterized by extra-tropical rain forests.

The small village Huinay with its approx. 25 inhabitants can only be accessed by a 1 hour boat-trip (speed boat) from Hornopiren. Most infrastructure - except some small shops and a rural hospital in Hornopiren - is located in Puerto Montt, a 3 to 4h drive or bus trip from Hornopiren.

 We have started working on a non-profit taxonomic field guide project in 1997
 ("Benthic fauna of the Chilean fjord region"), and have collected
 thousands of specimens from all over the fjord region which have all been
photographed in their habitat. We are working in cooperation with more than 40 renowned taxonomic specialists from 13 countries who have been identifying the
 material and writing the chapters. The book will be published in English and
 Spanish. The first edition of the book will include the 500 most common
shallow-water species. Most chapters have already been submitted, the rest will
 be submitted by the end of this year. More than half of the English chapters
 have already been revised.

 Due to the sudden and unexpected death of our translator, we are at
 short notice looking for:
a (marine) biologist with experience in taxonomy who can translate our Spanish chapters
 into English (presence in Huinay not needed).

 The following
 chapters have to be translated:

 a) general: oceanography, geology,
 geography (approx. 10-15 pages each)

 b) species descriptions: Sipunculida,
 Echiura, Polychaeta, Platyhelminthes, Bivalvia, Gastropoda, Ascidia, fish
 (altogether approx. 150 species plus introductions)

 We can offer:
 6000 Pesos per page (13 US $), or 10 Pesos (2,1c) per word.

 When: now to end of July

 Contact: please send your CV and cover
letter to Vreni Häussermann, [EMAIL PROTECTED], and cc to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 Some background of the field guide project

 Of all South American countries, Chile,
 with 4200 km of straight measured coastline, has the longest coast with the
 South East Pacific Ocean. More than one third of its geographical length is
 taken up by the highly structured Patagonian fjord region; stretched out this
 would translate into more than 80,000 km of coastline. For technical and
 historical reasons, and the difficulty of access in the past, this region
possesses some of the least studied marine environments in the world; even the Antarctic shelf and many deep-sea areas are better known. Only recently studies
 revealed that the Patagonian fjord region is a biodiversity hot spot and is
 inhabited by very unique and fragile marine benthic communities such as the
 cold-water coral banks found in shallow waters.

 Valuable natural resources and favourable
 conditions for aquaculture provided an incentive to 'open-up' the region for
 development resulting in an unparalleled economic boom during the last 15
 years. Fish farming is still increasing exponentially, with last years
 production of Chilean farmed salmon surpassing 400.000 t. Lately, authorities
have recognized that this development requires coastal management plans, legal
 regulations and compensatory conservation efforts. But data on marine
 environments in the fjord region are so poor that these goals can't be
accomplished satisfactorily with the available information. For example, due to
 the lack of biological information, a recent project for a coastal management
 plan in the 11 th region was solely developed to "harmonize" economic
 interests.

 It is obvious, and increasingly accepted,
that there is an urgent need for biological inventories and ecological studies
 to bring zoning projects, management plans, environmental laws and protection
 efforts on a sound base. But these basic studies often fail because expertise
 and the literature are too fragmentary. Patagonian species of many taxonomic
 groups, especially those of minor or no commercial interest, are practically
not identifiable in the field. This depressing situation goes hand in hand with the false belief held by a large proportion of the Chilean population; that the
 marine life along their coast is poor and of no interest.

 The existing environmental laws demand that
the benthic communities close to fish farms are monitored. Biological inventory
 studies are necessary for coastal zoning and management plans. The design and
management of marine protected areas requires knowledge of the distribution and
 function of benthic communities. All these applications are not possible
 without reliable and practical (field-) identification tools for marine
 organisms.

 At the moment in Southern Chile, there is
only one marine multi-taxa field guide (bilingual), which includes 123 species
 of the exposed coast of Valdivia.
  Although illustrated with 1 colour image for each species, the short
 descriptions generally do not allow reliable identifications. And, for the
 entire fjord region (more than ¾ of the southern Chilean coastline), no
 multi-taxa field guide currently exists! Only 3 illustrated field guides
 include species from the fjord region (all are molluscs), and only 2 of them
 are available in English language.

 An illustrated, bilingual (English and Spanish), scientifically rigorous, and
 multi-taxa identification field guide, will definitely improve the taxonomic
 knowledge and expertise of the marine diversity in the Patagonian fjords. It
 will promote sustainable management and conservation efforts and stimulate
 research interest and effort in this scientifically neglected region. The
 publication will also raise the awareness of the rich, unique, and fragile
 marine life of Patagonia amongst the Chilean
 and International public.

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