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Department of Forest Science


Sustainable Forestry and Agroforestry Option

Both agroforestry and sustainable forestry are integrative fields, relying on concepts and principles from the disciplines of biology, ecology, economics, sociology, and ethics. Although the components of these two specialty areas are present at OSU, they are not embodied in the curricula of any single educational unit of the University. Students select courses in consultation with their graduate committee from various departments in the Colleges of Forestry, Agriculture, Science, Liberal Arts, and Business. A course of study in these specialty areas is constructed from existing course offerings designed to fit individual student needs and meeting the approval of the student’s Graduate Advisory Committee.

In addition to core courses, students choose classes from within each of two general areas of emphasis: (1)Biology, Ecology, and Production, and (2) Social Values, Policy, and Ethics.

Although there is no fixed set of courses for this option, the following are frequently selected and illustrate the broad range of options available.

Core Courses: FS/SOC/PHL 591, Sustainable Forestry (3 credits) is an integrative course that exposes students to ethical, social, and ecological issues of natural resource development. Students are challenged to look at systems of natural resource use and to design programs or policies that meet local, regional, or global needs.

In addition, students specializing in Agroforestry take RNG 577 Agroforestry (3 credits), which explores the breadth of agroforestry systems worldwide.

(1) Biology, Ecology, and Production
Students will further their understanding of the structure and function of ecosystems, the responses of such systems to management and to natural and human-caused disturbances, and the role of such disturbance in local, regional, and global phenomena. Studies might include plant and animal species interactions, physical or biological processes in soil, water or air, remote sensing, or landscape-level processes in relation to human-imposed systems. In addition, this emphasis adds the dimension of production and management both for commodity and ecological processes–elements considered separately in other Forest Science specialty areas.

Examples of possible courses include the following (18-24 credits required):

Course No. Course Title Credits
FS 543Advanced Silviculture3
FS 545Advanced Forest Community Ecology4
FS 548Biology of Invasive Plants3
FS 553Forest Wildlife Habitat Management4
FS 646Ecosystems Analysis and Application4
BOT 515Forest Insect and Disease Management5
BOT 542Plant Population Ecology3
BOT 543Plant Community Ecology3
CSS 535Physics of Soil Ecosystems3
FE 530Watershed Processes4
FOR 543Silviculture Practices4
FW 581Wildlife Ecology3
GEO 544Remote Sensing3
GEO 546Advanced Landscape Ecology3
MB 548Microbial Ecology3
RNG 521Wildland Restoration and Ecology4
RNG 550Landscape Ecology and Analysis3
RNG 555Riparian Ecology and Management3
Z 593Behavioral Ecology5
Z 594Community Ecology5
  Other courses may be substituted with approval of the student's academic committee.

(2) Social Values, Policy, and Ethics
Students will further their understanding of the values and the cultural, economic, political, and social forces that affect forest systems and shape forestry and agroforestry policies. Within this area of emphasis, students take classes selected from two groups of courses: (a) Policy and Values, and (b) Economics, Politics, and Management.

At least two courses must be selected from each group (15 credits minimum).

(a) Policy and Values. Policy and Values classes focus on human values and world views about nature, the environment, and natural resources in western and non-western cultures, as well as on the institutional, cultural, and ethical systems that embody such values. Examples of courses include the following (6-12 credits):

Course No. Course Title Credits
ANTH 581Natural Resources and Community Values3
ANTH 582World Food & Cultural Implications of3
 International Agricultural Development 
COMM 542Bargaining and Negotiation Process 3
GEO 521Humans and Their Wildlife Environment3
GEO 526Third World Resource Development3
HSTS 521Technology and Change3
HSTS 525History of the Life Sciences3
HST 581Environmental History of the United States3
PHL 540Environmental Ethics3
PHL 543Worldviews and Environmental Values3
SOC 566International Development: Gender Issues3
SOC 581Society and Natural Resources3
SOC 585Consensus and Natural Resources3

Other courses may be substituted with approval of the student’s academic committee.

(b) Economics, Politics, and Management. Economics, Politics, and Management classes examine the economic, legal, and political factors that affect land use and resource management in forest and agroforestry systems. Examples of courses include the following (6-12 credits):

Course No.Course TitleCredits
AREC 551Natural Resource Economics3
AREC 532Environmental Law4
ECON 535The Public Economy4
FOR 532Economics of Recreation Resources4
FOR 534Economics of the Forest Resource3
FOR 561Forest Policy Analysis3
GEO 523Land Use3
GEO 551Environmental Site Planning3
PS 574Natural Resource Policy and Bureaucratic Politics4
PS 575Environmental Politics and Policy4
PS 576Science and Politic4
  Other courses may be substituted with approval of the student's academic committee.

Thesis (6 units)
The thesis will consists of an original work that is comprised of (1) a characterization of a forestry or agroforesty system, and (2) an ecological, economic, or social analysis or synthesis of that system, including methodology.