[Question] Career advice for Australian science undergrad interested in welfare biology

Hi there everyone!
I’ve also posted this to a couple of relevant subreddits but this forum seems much more active. You can find the Reddit post here.

I’m a science undergrad in Australia and I am trying to narrow down my major options. I’ve been interested in Effective Altruism and animal welfare for a while, specifically wild-animal welfare. I’ve done my best to digest as much research as possible from sources like 80,000 Hours, Brian Tomasik, organisations like Wild Animal Intiative, and online communities like this and the EA forums. I’ve also recently contacted Animal Ethics for specific career advice (I’ll update you when I hear back).

I was hoping for a perspective from this sub and if anyone is open to sharing their thoughts and specific career advice, that would be fantastic! I’m currently considering bioengineering, bioinformatics (makes it a bit easier to transition into AI at a later stage too if I decide to work there instead), ecology, and genetics as my main options. I’m also giving consideration to other fields like neuroscience and biotechnology, but the need for people in the former seems relatively lower, and I’m unsure about both my impact and interest in the latter. Overall I’m still not terribly well-informed about my options and I’m struggling to tease out specific directions for my career.

There’s a lot of inevitable uncertainty in this field, it seems, and it’s hard to predict how I can be of the most use in the future, but it would be great to have some contribution to the area and the field of welfare biology in general. Apart from work in obviously cause-aligned organisations like WAI, I’ve also considered work in artificial meat, but I’m still uncertain about whether this is a negelcted or promising area. I’ve also considered AI and climate change work but again, not sure how much these fields need new people compared to WAS, and if I’d be a good fit.

Would also like to add another consideration that is very important for me: whether or not I’ll be able to find high-impact work in these fields if I can’t find a job working directly with WAS-oriented organisations (which is unfortunately quite likely).

I would really appreciate any feedback whatsoever on the careers I’ve listed, and the field I’m thinking of overall, as I’m a bit lost at the moment. If you think I’m heading down a dead-end path, please don’t refrain from telling me. As I tried to make clear in the Reddit post, I’m also not interested solely in wild-animal welfare, so I’m open to considering other paths and would ideally like to graduate with a degree that makes it possible to also do effective work in other high-impact areas.

Thanks for taking the time to read my post :)