Vacancy Circular No:
Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute (CMFRI)
invites applications for recruitment of Junior Research Fellow, Field Assistant
Number of Vacancy: 4 Posts
| CMFRI Hiring For Junior Research Fellow, Field Assistant Vacancies - 31000 Salary - Check More Details Recruitment 2022 | Details |
|---|---|
| Job Role | Junior Research Fellow, Field Assistant |
| Education Requirement | M.Sc, MFSc |
| Total Vacancy | 4 Posts |
| Job Locations | |
| Age Limit | 35 years for Men and 40 years for Women |
| Experience | 2 - 5 years |
| Salary | 20000 - 31000(Per Month) |
| Posted on | 26 Mar, 2022 |
| Last Date To Apply | 30 Mar, 2022 |
Educational Qualification: M.Sc, MFSc
An online Interview is scheduled to be held on 04.04.2022 (10.30 AM) at ICAR-Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute for the recruitment of Junior Research Fellows and Field Assistants under the external funded project
1. Name of the post: Junior Research Fellow
2. No of Post: 02
3. Salary: 31000/- + 16% HRA
4. Qualifications: MSc in Physical Oceanography with NET qualification. Knowledge in FERRET/Fortran/R/Python and Marine bio-optical analysis. Desirable qualification: 2 years experience in relevant field
1. Name of the post: Field Assistant
2. No of Post: 02
3. Salary: 20000
4. Qualifications:
i. MSc in Marine biology/Zoology. Knowledge in Plankton identification. Cruise participation and experience in operating Oceanographic instruments. Swimming ability
ii. M.Sc. in Statistics/ Agricultural Statistics/ Biostatistics. Experience in data collection, DBMS and computer programming.
5. Place of work: ICAR-CMFRI, Kochi
Pay Scale:
INR
20000 - 31000(Per Month)
Age Limit: 35 years for Men and 40 years for Women
1. Shortlisted candidates will be intimated by e-mail and only those who receive communication may appear for the online-interview on the specified date and time.
2. Shortlisted candidates will be intimated by e- mail and only those who receive the short listed information need to attend the online interview.
1. The eligible candidates fulfilling all the requirements are advised to send their bio-data along with scanned copies of the original supporting documents to [email protected] on or before 30.03.2022
2. If any of his/her near or distant relative is an employee of the ICAR-CMFRI, the candidate intending to attend the interview has to declare his/her name, designation, nature of duties, relationship in writing as detailed in and communicate to the undersigned by post or through e‐mail at [email protected] on or before 30th March 2022.
3. All the original certificates from matriculation onwards must be sent in scanned form to [email protected] on or before 30th March 2022. Without these certificates, applicants would not be allowed to appear for interview. Candidates should produce one valid ID proof at the time of interview
Published on: 26 March 2022
For more details, please refer to official notification at Download Official Notification
| Job Details | Closing Date |
|---|---|
|
Field Staff
( 01 Posts) Posts • Vizhinjam, Thiruvananthapuram
|
17th April 2025 |
|
Young Professional-I
( 02 Posts) Posts • Vizhinjam, Thiruvananthapuram
|
15th April 2025 |
|
Skilled Staff
( 01 Posts) Posts • Mandapam Camp, Ramanathapuram
|
3rd April 2025 |
The ICAR-Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute was established by Government of India on February 3rd 1947 under the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare and later it joined the ICAR family in 1967. During the course of over 65 years the Institute has emerged as a leading tropical marine fisheries research institute in the world.
Since its inception, the CMFRI grew significantly in its size and stature and built up adequate research infrastructure and recruited qualified staff. During the first half of the five decades of its existence, the CMFRI devoted its research attention towards the estimation of marine fisheries landings and effort, taxonomy of marine organisms and the bio-economic characteristics of the exploited stocks of finfish and shellfish. This research effort contributed significantly to India’s marine fisheries development from a predominantly artisanal, sustenance fishery till the early sixties to that of a complex, multi-gear, multispecies fisheries.