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Natural Resources

Ecology and Conservation Biology (B.S.Ecol.-Cons.Biol.)

Natural Resources Minor

Restoration Ecology Academic Certificate

Natural Resources Graduate Degree Programs

Kurt Pregitzer, Dean; James R. Gosz, Associate Dean of Research; Steven J. Hollenhorst, Associate Dean for Outreach and Engagement (202 College of Natural Resources Bldg.; 208/885-6442).

With approximately 90 percent of its area in forest and range lands, together with its wealth of water resources, Idaho offers excellent opportunities for undergraduate and graduate study in all the disciplines related to management of renewable resources of wildlands. The college has its own research organization, the Forest, Wildlife and Range Experiment Station, including the Idaho Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit and the Cooperative Park Studies Unit. All faculty members have teaching responsibilities in the college as well as research responsibilities in the experiment station. Additional facilities include the Taylor Wilderness Research Station, in the Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness Area, the Experimental Forest near Moscow, the Lee A. Sharp Experimental Area near Burley, Idaho, the McCall Field Campus in central Idaho, and the USDA Rocky Mountain Research Station, Forestry Sciences Laboratory, in Moscow.

Admission for graduate study normally requires completion of course work equivalent to that required in one of the undergraduate curricula offered by the college. Students with differing backgrounds but substantial preparation in the sciences may also be admitted. The study plans developed will allow for differences in preparation while providing all students with comparable backgrounds by the time the graduate program is completed.

Courses

See the course description section for courses in Natural Resources (NR).