Career Opportunities in Forestry

Careers & Alumni

Near-endless career opportunities

Do you love the outdoors? Do you want to convert that passion into a rewarding career that lets you make a difference by conserving the natural world? Are you looking for a career in a rewarding, high-growth field? If so, forestry might be right for you.

Where can you work with a forestry degree? The possibilities are nearly endless:

  • Be a forest manager restoring and conserving woodlands and watersheds.
  • Work as an urban forester or arborist in a major U.S. city.
  • Become a park ranger for state or federal parks and recreation areas.
  • Work as a wildlife manager in a federal or state wildlife refuge.
  • Be a game warden.
  • Work to prevent or manage wildfires and rehabilitate damaged watersheds.
  • Manage conservation projects with a nonprofit organization.
  • Work as a restoration ecologist creating forest, habitat, and watershed management plans.
  • Help private landowners manage their forests sustainably.

Why study forestry?

Forestry jobs are everywhere, from vast national parks to tree-lined urban centers to nonprofit organizations and private corporations. Foresters protect the environment by managing all aspects of natural resources including forests, wildlife, soils and water. They also educate the public, respond to natural disasters and conduct valuable research.

Need another reason to consider a career in forestry? Jobs. SFA’s forestry program has 100% job placement, which means that all of our graduates find jobs in their chosen fields. Check out our job board to learn about employment and internship opportunities in forestry.

What kind of jobs can I get with a forestry degree?

What kind of job do you want? Students majoring in forestry can pursue various forestry concentrations that align with their interests and career goals, including:

Agroforestry

The agroforestry concentration provides students with the skills and knowledge they need for careers in agroforestry and range management. Typical jobs for agroforestry include agroforester, forest and range conservationist, forester and extension specialist.

To learn more about career paths and research areas associated with agroforestry, visit the United States Department of Agriculture National Agroforestry Center or the Society for Range Management.

Fire management

Students who choose this concentration typically find rewarding careers in a variety of public and private settings. Typical careers for graduates of this program include:

  • Fire management specialist
  • Forester
  • Prescribed burn manager
  • Wildland fire fighter
  • Wildland/urban interface specialist

Forest management

The forest management concentration blends several disciplines and provide a deep understanding of the scientific, economic and social aspects of forestry. This concentration is ideal for students interested in careers such as forester, conservationist, consultant forester or silviculturalist.

Forest wildlife management

  • Conservation scientist
  • Ecologist
  • Endangered species biologist
  • Forester
  • Game warden
  • Natural resource specialist
  • Wildlife biologist
  • Wildlife refuge manager

This program also provides you with the academic credentials you’ll need to apply for career-specific certifications, such as the Certified Wildlife Biologist designation from The Wildlife Society or the Certified Forester designation from the Society of American Foresters.  

Human dimensions in natural resources

Typical careers for graduates of this program include:

  • Forester
  • Interpretive Guide
  • Park Ranger
  • Recreation Area Manager

Urban forestry

Career opportunities include:

  • City forester or arborist
  • Environmental consulting
  • Environmental planning
  • Landscape and park planning and design
  • Private industry tree care
  • Sales arborist
  • Soil and water conservation
  • Urban forestry coordinator
  • Utilities industry

Great forestry careers start at SFA

SFA’s forestry majors go on to do great things. Our graduates work for federal and state agencies, the U.S. military and private corporations. They are college professors and researchers. They are Nobel Prize-winning climate scientists and award-winning educators.

Most importantly, though, all of our graduates are passionate about what they do, and they are changing the world for the better, every day.

Wondering what you can do with a forestry degree from SFA? Check out some of the amazing things our graduates have accomplished.

Eric Anderson, Class of '98 and '00
BS in environmental science, MS in forestry

Dr. Eric Anderson

For nearly two decades, Dr. Eric Anderson has worked for nearly two decadest, first as an award-winning reclamation specialist and environmental manager with North American Coal and now as the president of Mitigation Resources of North America.

Founded in 2017, Mitigation Resources of North America is part of NACCO Natural Resources' family of companies that specializes in everything from full-service mining operations to land reclamation and wetland and stream mitigation.

"The industry is regulated by the U.S. Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act, and the standards say we have to leave the land as good as or better than it was before it was mined," Anderson explained. "Once we've mined, the land is leveled back to its approximate original contours. From there, it becomes a big farm — either in forestry, native grasses, improved grasses for livestock, or fish and wildlife habitat."

Fall 2022 Sawdust Magazine feature story

Dr. Rolonda Teal, Class of '18
PhD in forestry with concentration in human dimensions

Dr. Rolonda Teal

Teal has been researching the African diaspora and migratory pathways of fugitive people in Texas and Louisiana for more than a decade — much of it springing from a singular paper she wrote during her master's program on the Cane River Insurrection of 1804. This event saw a mass escape attempt of enslaved people from Natchitoches Parish, the magnitude of which "points to the ability of community to provide the framework for large-scale attempts at freedom and resistance against servitude," according to the Cane River National Heritage Area website.

With assistance from other archaeologists, ethnographers, GIS specialists and the like, Teal has discovered and published conclusive evidence that there was significant movement of enslaved people traveling south to Spanish-owned Mexico in 19th-century Texas, including along the famous El Camino Real de los Tejas.

Fall 2022 Sawdust Magazine feature story

Neal Wilkins, Class of '84
BS in forestry

Dr. Neal Wilkins

As president and CEO of the East Foundation, Dr. Neal Wilkins leads the mission of one of the largest native rangeland holdings in Texas. The foundation, comprising six separate working ranches totaling more than 217,000 acres, promotes the advancement of land stewardship through ranching, science and education. The foundation's properties operate as a working beef cattle ranch while also serving as a living laboratory where scientists tackle vital questions related to wildlife management, rangeland health and ranch productivity.

Because more than half of the remaining U.S. ocelots are found on East Foundation properties, the recovery of this endangered species is a key research and conservation initiative.The East Foundation also is working with scientists at the Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute and partners at the Cincinnati Zoo to ultimately develop a breeding program utilizing semen obtained from male ocelots on the foundation's properties. Their plan is to establish a captive breeding program with resulting ocelots to be reintroduced to suitable habitats elsewhere in the wild.

Winter 2021 Sawdust Magazine feature story

David Smith, Class of '05
MS in resource interpretation

David Smith

David Smith is the superintendent at Joshua Tree National Park. He has spent two decades working in national parks across the western United States. He has worked as a law enforcement ranger and as an interpretive park ranger. In 2010, David was one of two people chosen to serve as a Bevinetto Congressional Fellow. Under this distinguished fellowship, he served as a congressional aid to the House Subcommittee for National Parks, Forests and Public Lands.

Vickie Mates, Class of '06
MS in resource communication

Vickie Mates

SFA graduate Vickie Mates earned a Master of Science in resource communication in 2006. In her current role as chief of interpretation and partnerships at Grand Teton National Park, she connects with park visitors and helps them learn about the park’s history, ecology and scientific and cultural significance.

Dr. Virginia Burkett, Class of ‘97
PhD in forestry

Dr. Virginia Burkett

Dr. Virginia Burkett earned her doctoral degree in forestry from SFA in 1997. Ten years later, in 2007, she was among the authors of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's Nobel Peace Prize-winning fourth assessment report. Many scientists and policymakers credit this report with being the catalyst for environmental change worldwide. 

Burkett's impressive career includes serving as the United States Geological Survey's chief scientist for the climate and land use change mission area and as co-chair of the strategic science planning team responsible for developing the mission area's 10-year science strategy. She formerly served as chief of the Wetlands Research Center in Lafayette, Louisiana; associate regional chief biologist for the United States Geological Survey Central Region; deputy secretary, director and secretary of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries and director of the Louisiana Coastal Zone Management.

Robert (“Rob”) Hughes, Class of '96
BS in forestry

Robert (“Rob”) Hughes

As executive director of the Texas Forestry Association, Rob Hughes is at the forefront of promoting economic, social and political climates that advance forestry in Texas through education, political action and public relations. Drawing on his more than two decades in the forest industry, he serves the broad needs of the forest resources of landowners, producers and consumers and enhances and perpetuates the Texas forest resource.

Dr. Roel Lopez, Class of '93
BS in forestry

Dr. Roel Lopez

Dr. Roel Lopez earned a Bachelor of Science in forestry with a concentration in forest wildlife management from SFA. From there, he went on to attend Texas A&M University at College Station, where he earned a master's degree and a doctorate. He is currently a professor of wildlife at Texas A&M University and the director of the Texas A&M Institute of Renewable Natural Resources. His teaching and research interests include habitat management, population ecology and military land management.

Dr. Zhu H. Ning, Class of '92
DF in forestry

Dr. Zhu H. Ning

Dr. Zhu H. Ning is nationally recognized for her support of education, research and student professional development. During her career, she has obtained more than $20 million in competitive grants to support these efforts, which have resulted in 190 publications. She also fills diverse leadership roles in the Society of American Foresters and the International Society of Arboriculture. Ning has received the James and Ruth Smith Endowed Professor Award, Chancellor’s Award for Teaching Excellence, Chancellor’s Award for Most Outstanding Researcher, College Faculty Excellence in Research Awards, Department Excellence through Faculty Excellence Award from the Louisiana State Board of Regents of Higher Education and awards from the Louisiana state governor.

Victor Cordova, Class of '88
BS in forestry

Victor Cordova

Victor Cordova has served three decades as urban forester for the City of Houston.  As Houston's city forester, Cordova was responsible for trees located across an area totaling 600 square miles. One of the highlights of his career was when his team and volunteers planted 20,000 trees on Will Clayton Parkway for Arbor Day in 2009. Prior to the planting, the approximately 40-acre lot was simply a grassy median that required constant mowing. They narrowed that 40 acres down to 12 and planted the rest with trees. Cordova took great care to ensure species diversity, which benefits urban wildlife and aesthetics and strengthens against forest disease and tree mortality. Currently, the Houston Parks and Recreation Department comprises 380 developed parks and more than 167 greenspaces totaling more than 39,501 acres. Cordova and his team of employees were one component of the city's larger Greenspace Management Division.

Fall 2021 Sawdust Magazine feature story

Clayton Wolf, Class of '86
BS in forestry

Clayton Wolf

Clayton Wolf earned his Bachelor of Science degree at SFA, where he majored in forestry with a concentration in forest wildlife management. After leaving SFA, he went on to attend Texas A&M University at College Station, where he earned a Master of Agriculture in wildlife science. In his role as director of the Wildlife Davison of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, he makes a difference by improving wildlife habitat and increasing public appreciation of wildlife. Outside the office, he works with stakeholders to resolve conflicts involving wildlife management.