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Environment
If you are interested in the environment, programs of the College of
Forestry and Conservation
might be right for you. There are BS, MS, MEM and PhD degree possibilities
in many environmental fields. Undergraduate curricula in Wildlife
Biology emphasize wildlife and fish and their habitat, and topics
such as endangered species and conservation biology. Students in Resource
Conservation develop an environmental curriculum that specifically
fits their intellectual goals. Recreation
Management students emphasize either management of wildland recreation
or tourism. The Forestry
curriculum prepares graduates to sustain forests and grasslands through
management activities.
Graduate opportunities
cover the same fields and more specializations such as remote sensing
and spatial analysis, environmental policy and economics, environmental
sociology, protected area management, watershed management, insects and
disease, and fire ecology and management, with an Ecosystem
Management masters as an added attraction.
Students and faculty of the College are actively engaged in environmental
research and outreach activities. We work on issues of endangered
species, environmental restoration, analysis of environmental policies,
community collaboration, wilderness management, and many other issues.
Since many environmental organizations and government agencies have offices
in Missoula, our students and faculty are engaged in the most pressing
environmental problems of the Rocky Mountain Region. UM is the Host for
the Rocky Mountain Cooperative Ecosystem
Studies Unit, a federal-university partnership, and the College hosts
the Numerical Terradynamics Simulation
Group which is heavily engaged in climate change and other global
research. Other programs of the Montana
Forest and Conservation Experiment Station also are engaged in environmental
research.
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