Our alumni work around the country and the world in a wide variety of jobs, from conservation science to education to urban planning. Linking them all is a deep commitment to helping the Earth's inhabitants — humans and other animals, plants, fungi, microbes — live together sustainably and in mutually beneficial ways. Click through career profiles with the gray arrow below to get an idea of where the Field Naturalist Program propels its graduates.

  • Dave holding a hawk

    David Campbell '93

    Dave is a Branch Chief for the New Mexico Ecological Services Field Office with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. He oversees the Large Rivers Recovery and Restoration Programs, focusing on the San Juan River and the Rio Grande, and supervises nine very talented biologists. The San Juan River has two federally endangered fish species, the razorback sucker and the Colorado pikeminnow; the Rio Grande has two bird species, the southwest willow flycatcher and the yellow-billed cuckoo, and one fish, the Rio Grande silvery minnow. Dave has also been a falconer for ten years and currently flies a pair of Harris's hawks.

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