Biology 2483a, Ecology 

(Summer session 2008)

Shallow boreal lake

General theme:
Humanity’s fingerprint on Earth has become substantial during the last 100 years, due in large part to an increasing population (currently at 6.5 billion people) and its corresponding use of resources.  Impact of humans can be seen in both regional and global scales (for example, pollution and global climate change), but the level of fundamental change is at the level of “ecology”.  Ecology is the science whose study focus is the relationships between organisms and their living (biotic) and non-living (abiotic) environment. 

In this course, we will answer questions such as: What determines the abundance of species in nature? How important are the interactions in establishing who is in the environment? What causes some communities to be stable and others to undergo wide oscillations in their numbers? Throughout the course we will emphasize two important facts: that humans are just like any other organism in terms of being controlled by biotic and abiotic factors BUT also the fact that they are unlike any other organism in that they are agents of change at global scales.

Lectures and tutorials will emphasize ecological principles, ideas, examples, and theory. The purpose is to get you to think about the links between the living and non-living systems of this world in as many ways as possible.  Ecology should lead you to see the integrated nature of this world.

Topics to be covered:
•    The physical environment
•    Organisms and their environment
•    Population ecology
•    Community ecology
•    Landscape ecology
•    Global change and biodiversity

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