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Corpsmembers with the Placer 1 fire crew cut fire line with hand tools as flames from the Dixie Fire approach in 2021.

Casting a net

Josafat Ismael Alvarez III prepares to cast a net into the Delta, helping the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service monitor fish species of concern.

In 2017, Josafat Ismael Alvarez III was working on a Navy aircraft carrier stationed in Virginia. “I was a blue shirt,” he said. “When aircraft landed onto the ship, I would chock the wheels of the jets and chain them to the flight deck.” His job ensured that the planes would stay in place while out at sea.

After leaving the military service, Josafat searched for a new opportunity that would take him outdoors. Swapping out his blue shirt for a blue hat, he decided to join the California Conservation Corps.

Josafat Ismael Alvarez III holds a threadfin shad (top) and an american shad (bottom). These two fish are commonly found in the Delta region but are invasive, originally found in the rivers and streams flowing into the Gulf of Mexico.

After a few months responding to flood emergencies, Josafat transferred into the CCC-NOAA Veterans Corps Fisheries program where he’s monitoring fish populations living in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, close to his hometown of Stockton. “Other than being on a boat on the water, I had to learn everything from the ground up,” he said.

Josafat is learning a lot. Everything from how to measure water quality to identify numerous native and invasive fish species living in the Delta. The data he, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service team, collects will help state and federal agencies understand the status of fish species of concern.

Josafat and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service team measure the lengths of the fish they caught and log the data.

In 2017, Josafat Ismael Alvarez III was working on a Navy aircraft carrier stationed in Virginia. “I was a blue shirt,” he said. “When aircraft landed onto the ship, I would chock the wheels of the jets and chain them to the flight deck.” His job ensured that the planes would stay in place while out at sea.

After leaving the military service, Josafat searched for a new opportunity that would take him outdoors. Swapping out his blue shirt for a blue hat, he decided to join the California Conservation Corps.

Josafat Ismael Alvarez III holds a threadfin shad (top) and an american shad (bottom). These two fish are commonly found in the Delta region but are invasive, originally found in the rivers and streams flowing into the Gulf of Mexico.