Careers in Fish and Wildlife

Req 8 — Career Opportunities

8.
Identify three career opportunities that would use skills and knowledge by fish and wildlife professionals. Pick one and research the training, education, certification requirements, experience, and expenses associated with entering the field. Research the prospects for employment, starting salary, advancement opportunities and career goals associated with this career. Discuss what you learned with your counselor and whether you might be interested in this career.

The skills you’ve been building throughout this badge — field observation, data collection, habitat assessment, ecological analysis — are exactly the skills that fish and wildlife professionals use every day. These careers range from outdoor fieldwork to laboratory science to policy writing to education, and they exist at local, state, federal, tribal, and nonprofit levels. There may be more options than you expect.

Three Career Areas to Consider

1. Wildlife Biologist / Wildlife Manager

What they do: Wildlife biologists conduct population surveys, analyze data, design and implement management programs, write and enforce regulations, and work with landowners and the public. A state wildlife biologist might spend half the year in the field running spotlight deer counts, turkey gobbler surveys, and trapping sessions — and half in the office analyzing data and writing reports.

Where they work: State fish and wildlife agencies, federal agencies (USFWS, USDA Wildlife Services, National Park Service), tribal wildlife departments, land trusts, and conservation nonprofits.

Education: A bachelor’s degree in wildlife biology, natural resources, or ecology is the standard entry point. Field experience during college (internships, research assistant positions, conservation corps) is often as important as the degree. Advanced positions typically require a master’s degree.

Certification: The Wildlife Society offers the Certified Wildlife Biologist (CWB) credential, which requires a combination of education, experience, and demonstrated professional competency. Many employers prefer or require it.

Salary range: Entry-level state wildlife biologist positions typically start at $35,000–$50,000 depending on the state. Federal positions start somewhat higher under the General Schedule pay system ($45,000–$65,000 at GS-7 or GS-9). Senior biologists and managers can earn $70,000–$100,000+.

Job outlook: Employment of zoologists and wildlife biologists is projected to grow about 5% over the next decade (Bureau of Labor Statistics). Competition for state positions can be intense, and field experience differentiates candidates.

2. Fisheries Biologist

What they do: Fisheries biologists specialize in fish and aquatic ecosystems. They conduct creel surveys, electrofishing population assessments, fish stocking programs, stream habitat assessments, and water quality monitoring. In hatcheries, they manage fish health, breeding programs, and production.

Where they work: State fish and wildlife agencies (fisheries divisions), federal agencies (USFWS, Bureau of Reclamation, Army Corps of Engineers), tribal fisheries departments, and private consulting firms.

Education: Bachelor’s degree in fisheries biology, aquatic sciences, or related field. The American Fisheries Society (AFS) is the professional organization; the AFS Certified Fisheries Professional (CFP) credential is the career standard.

Unique pathways: Aquaculture (fish farming for food production) is a rapidly growing field that applies many of the same skills. Marine fisheries offers opportunities in coastal states. Water quality consulting combines fisheries and environmental science.

Salary range: Entry-level state fisheries biologist positions: $35,000–$52,000. Federal positions: $45,000–$70,000. Private sector aquaculture and consulting roles vary widely.

3. Conservation Officer / Game Warden

What they do: Conservation officers (called game wardens, wildlife officers, or conservation police in various states) enforce fish and wildlife laws, investigate poaching, check licenses and bag limits, respond to human-wildlife conflicts, and conduct public education. They work independently in large geographic territories and are classified as law enforcement officers.

Where they work: Every state employs conservation officers; federal equivalents include USFWS Special Agents and National Park Service law enforcement rangers.

Education: Requirements vary by state, but most require at least a two-year degree (some require a four-year degree in criminal justice, law enforcement, or natural resources). All states require completion of a law enforcement academy after hire.

Physical requirements: Conservation officer positions have physical fitness standards that are typically more rigorous than other fish and wildlife positions. Background investigations, polygraph examinations, and psychological evaluations are standard.

Salary range: Starting salaries vary significantly by state: $35,000–$55,000 is typical, with full law enforcement benefits (pension, health care). Many states offer premium pay for working irregular hours and remote locations.

Other Careers to Explore

More Fish and Wildlife Career Options

One of these might be a better fit for your interests
  • Wildlife educator / naturalist: Teaches wildlife biology at nature centers, zoos, state parks, and conservation organizations. Requires strong communication skills alongside science knowledge.
  • Wildlife photographer / filmmaker: Documents wildlife for publications, documentaries, and conservation advocacy. Competitive field combining technical photography and field biology skills.
  • Environmental consultant: Works for private firms assessing wildlife impacts of development projects (required by environmental law). Good salaries; less outdoors time than agency work.
  • Wildlife veterinarian: Provides medical care for wild and captive wildlife. Requires veterinary degree (DVM) plus specialized training in wildlife medicine.
  • Ornithologist / herpetologist / ichthyologist: Specializes in a specific animal group; primarily in academia and research institutions.
  • Aquatic ecologist: Studies freshwater or marine ecosystems; often works in research universities or government agencies.
  • Conservation policy analyst: Develops and advocates for wildlife policy at state, federal, or international levels. Combines biological knowledge with policy and communications skills.
  • Wildlife damage specialist: Works for USDA Wildlife Services or state agencies managing human-wildlife conflict — crop damage, livestock predation, airport bird strikes. Combines field biology with problem-solving.

Researching Your Chosen Career

For the career you pick, your research should answer all of the following:

Finding Career Information

The Wildlife Society — Careers in Wildlife Professional organization for wildlife biologists. Their careers section includes job listings, salary surveys, student membership, and guidance on entering the profession. American Fisheries Society — Careers The primary professional organization for fisheries scientists. Job listings, student resources, and a searchable directory of fisheries professionals you could contact for informational interviews. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Occupational Outlook Handbook: Zoologists and Wildlife Biologists Official U.S. government salary data, employment projections, and work environment descriptions for wildlife and fisheries careers.
Wildlife Management - Careers in Action — Oregon State University Ecampus
Careers in Fish & Wildlife Law Enforcement — Kentucky Department of Fish & Wildlife Resources

Congratulations — you’ve worked through every requirement of the Fish and Wildlife Management merit badge. One more step: exploring what lies beyond the badge.