• Bumble Bee Conservation Technician (Southern Ontario)

    WIldlife Preservation Canada
    Cambridge
    $18.50/hr plus 4% vacation pay CAD
    On-site
    Full Time

    Posted 5 hours ago ▼
    • March 9, 2026
    Recent Graduate
  • Bumble Bee Conservation Technician (Sudbury Ontario)

    WIldlife Preservation Canada
    Sudbury, ON
    $18.50/hr plus 4% vacation pay CAD
    On-site
    Full Time

    Posted 5 hours ago ▼
    • March 9, 2026
  • Regional Field Biologist

    WIldlife Preservation Canada
    Sudbury, ON
    $20.50/hr plus 4% vacation pay CAD
    On-site
    Full Time

    Posted 6 hours ago ▼
    • March 9, 2026
  • Turtle Nest Monitoring Technician

    WIldlife Preservation Canada
    Deroche/Agassiz, Maple Ridge, Coquitlam, Burnaby, Chilliwack/Fraser Valley BC
    $22/hr plus 4% vacation pay CAD
    On-site
    Full Time

    Posted 7 hours ago ▼
    HIGHLIGHT: Wildlife Preservation Canada is seeking staff to assist with Western Painted turtle nest monitoring in multiple locations in Fraser Valley and the Sunshine Coast, BC. Staff will be largely working in pairs, with occasional independent work, doing surveys for nesting Western Painted Turtles.
    Recent Graduate
  • Bumble Bee Lab Technician

    WIldlife Preservation Canada
    Southern Ontario
    $18.50/hr plus 4% vacation pay CAD
    On-site
    Full Time

    Posted 7 hours ago ▼
    • March 16, 2026
    HIGHLIGHT: Based in Southern Ontario. The position will require regular commuting to WPC’s Bumble Bee Conservation Lab at African Lion Safari in Cambridge, ON
    Recent Graduate
  • Shrike Area Biologist (2 Positions)

    WIldlife Preservation Canada
    Carden Alvar/Napanee Limestone Plain
    20/hr plus 4% vacation pay CAD
    On-site
    Full Time

    Posted 1 day ago ▼
    HIGHLIGHT: Wildlife Preservation Canada is seeking two experienced biologists to implement 2025 field season activities for the Loggerhead Shrike (LOSH) Recovery Program. Two positions will be filled, one each in the Carden and Napanee Alvars. The Loggerhead Shrike is critically endangered with fewer than 50 birds found annually in Ontario in recent years.
    Supervisor