- Student Experience
-
Academics
- Academics Overview
-
Undergraduate Majors
- Undergraduate Majors Overview
- Agribusiness
- Agricultural Education
- Agricultural Mechanization & Business
- Animal & Veterinary Sciences
- Environmental & Natural Resources
- Food Science & Human Nutrition
- Forest Resources Management
- Horticulture
- Packaging Science
- Plant and Environmental Sciences
- Turfgrass
- Wildlife & Fisheries Biology
-
Graduate Programs
- Graduate Programs Overview
- Request for Information
- Agricultural and Applied Economics (MS)
- Agricultural Education (MAgEd)
- Agriculture (MS, PhD)
- Animal & Veterinary Sciences (MS, PhD)
- Entomology (MS, PhD)
- Food, Nutrition and Culinary Sciences (MS)
- Food, Nutrition, and Packaging Sciences (PhD)
- Forest Resources (MFR, MS, PHD)
- Packaging Science (MS)
- Plant and Environmental Sciences (MS, PhD)
- Wildlife and Fisheries Biology (MWFR, MS, PhD)
- Certificate Programs
- Scholarships
- Academic Departments
- Academic Advising
- Extension
- Research
- Alumni Connection
- About
Mack Granger
Extension Associate
Water Resources Program Team, Agricultural Sciences Department
Office: 144B McAdams Hall
Phone: 864-656-0428
Email: grange2@clemson.edu
Educational Background
M.S. Biology
Western Carolina University 2018
B.S. Environmental Science
Roanoke College 2014
Profile
Mack Granger received his M.S. in Biology from Western Carolina University and his B.S. in Environmental Science from Roanoke College. He is currently an Extension Associate in the Department of Agricultural Sciences at Clemson University. Prior to joining the CEPSCI team in 2024, he served as a level II regulatory inspector for the State of North Carolina where he conducted compliance inspections under four regulated programs: erosion & sediment control, industrial stormwater, dam safety, and mining. He has also served as the lead field consultant for stormwater, erosion and sediment control for the Mid-eastern region, providing clientele work for residential and commercial construction throughout the area. He actively holds seven professional licenses related to stormwater and inspection. His research has focused on the effects that forest fragmentation and timber removal have on available foraging habitat for wildlife. Additionally, he has taught undergraduate coursework in human biology and genetics.