I have always found how communities change and evolve to be extremely interesting. I even like making mini ecosystems with terrariums filled with Plants and insects to see if they can survive and populate. Are there very many jobs in biology fields that deal with studying/managing population, ecosystems or evolution?
/sci/ is filled with Mathfags and engineering homosexuals, not very many bio majors for some reason.
Mathfag and engineering double major here. Get out nigger
>>9115652
Just kidding. In all seriousness, what you're talking about is a beautiful subject that unfortunately I have limited experience with. My experience with this has been limited to using R to model ecological and epidemiological systems, but from what I've seen there are algorithms/programs out there used to model ecosystems as diverse as what was in the OP. Not sure how you feel about coding, but it certainly wouldn't hurt.
tl;dr Interesting subject. Not sure about job market. Learn code (R to begin with).
>>9115394
There are jobs like that. They do not pay well nor are incredibly numerous. So they're usually held by people just like you. Look for national organizations and associations dedicated to specific types of fauna, like amphibians, birds, insects, fish, whatever. That'll get you the info you need, no doubt.
>>9115642
Gee I wonder with all the 12 year old /pol/ kiddies coming and spamming the place up with "is evolution real?" and race threads.