Dear colleagues,
I am seeking graduate students for my lab at SUNY ESF. I’ve attached an outreach letter and copied it below. Please share widely. Thanks!
Best regards
Geoffrey M. Williams, Ph.D. (he/him/his)
Assistant Professor
Integrative Forest Pathology and Genecology Lab
Department of Environmental Biology
SUNY ESF
Illick Hall Rm. 126
1 Forestry Drive
Syracuse, NY 13210
Cell/WhatsApp: +1 (208) 874-7604
Multiple Grad Opportunities (MS/Ph.D.) in Forest Pathology, Genetics, and Fungal Ecology at SUNY ESF
The brand-new Integrative Forest Pathology and Genecology Lab at SUNY ESF seeks 2-3 highly-motivated and passionate MS and Ph.D. students to start in September (or May) 2026. Students will conduct basic and applied research on forest health issues regionally and worldwide. The lab’s research program will focus on multiple dimensions of forest health and plant pathology in managed, natural, and urban contexts, in the following research areas:
The Integrative Forest Pathology and Genecology Lab conducts research on forest health issues relevant to New York State, the Northeast, and globally. Graduate students in the lab can expect to apply and develop the above research areas across the following study systems:
Qualifications
Preferred Background and Expertise (prefer at least one and willingness to learn others)
Responsibilities
Compensation
Lab Culture and Values
The lab values work-life balance and is committed to supporting students from all backgrounds and abilities in their pursuit of graduate level education and future careers in forest health. This includes a) maintaining an open and welcoming space devoid of harassment and b) taking on accountability for equal and equitable representation of all forms of diversity in communities of practice and leadership in forestry and forest health disciplines as a graduate-level educator.
About SUNY ESF and the Graduate School (amended from the website)
ESF is the only U.S. institution of higher learning dedicated solely to the study of the environment, located in Syracuse, central New York state and one of two programs in the country with an undergraduate program in forest health. SUNY ESF has a long history of forest pathology research and counts some of the great names in the modern era of forest pathology among its prior faculty, including Paul Manion and James Worrall. ESF is also one of the oldest forestry schools in the country, having originated as the land-grant New York State College of Forestry at Cornell before splitting off and moving to Syracuse in 1911 (only twelve years after the Biltmore School). From the basic and applied sciences to engineering, design, and planning of both natural and human communities, ESF helps prepare leaders and collaborators.
The Graduate School at ESF advances environmental leadership by enabling graduate and professional students to create knowledge and develop skills to improve our world. The Graduate School at ESF is committed to sustained learning, action and accountability to continually improve our environment for equity, diversity, justice and access. Graduate academic programs at ESF share a foundation of rigorous science and dedication to wise use of natural resources. ESF offers graduate programs at several levels, from Certificates of Advanced Studies, to various types of Master's programs and a Doctor of Philosophy degree. Each program provides a unique opportunity for you to further your education with professors who are dedicated to both their teaching and research endeavors.
Ecosystems all over the world benefit from the professionalism and expertise of ESF graduates and the faculty members at the College of Environmental Science and Forestry. You will study with professors whose work improves and sustains the environment from the Yucatan Peninsula to Alaska and whose expertise is sought by government and corporations. That same faculty will be personally concerned with your progress. The professors' cutting-edge research will become part of your classes, and your classes will merge with the world beyond the College.
The Graduate School awards degrees of Master of Science (M.S., both thesis and non-thesis tracks) and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in Environmental Biology with Research Areas in Mycology and Forest Pathology, Molecular Biology & Ecology, Indigenous Peoples and the Environment, and Ecology and Evolution; as well as in Forest Resources Management and Natural Resources Management with Research Areas in Ecology and Ecosystems, Economics, Governance and Human Dimensions, Forest Management & Silviculture, and Monitoring, Analysis, and Modeling.
How to apply