Biology 267L/Environ 257L Biodiversity Science and Application
Lecture Tu Th 2:50-4:05 PM LSRC 155
Lab Fri 8:30
With Justin Wright
Biodiversity deals with patterns of biotic distribution and abundance. Why do we observe the diversity of organisms, how did it get there, and what maintains that diversity? These questions lead us to analyze how organisms interact within populations, how populations interact in communities, and how those interactions are regulated by the physical environment. Understanding the controls on populations is critical for developing sustainable harvest strategies, for anticipating exotic invasions, for biological control of pest species, for managing rare and endangered species and their habitats, and for preserving biodiversity in the face of rapid global change. In this course we will examine the "state-of-the-art", including goals of biodiversity science, how those goals are approached, what we have learned, and how they are applied in management and conservation. We will see many examples where poor understanding of science stands in the way of progress on pressing environmental problems. The course will consist of lecture meetings and a lab section that will be used for field trips.
Environ 298 Spatio-temporal environmental models
Tu 1:30 PM-4:35 PM
Special topics in spatial environmental models drawn from thesis research of participants. Theory, modeling and computation.
UPE 301 Population/Community/Behavioral Ecology
Th 1:30 4:00 PM
With Justin Wright
An overview of how organisms interact within populations and among species. Focus on current concepts of population growth and its limits, stability of population numbers, interactions among species including competition, predation, and behavioral adaptations to these processes, determinants and maintenance of species diversity, community structure, distribution, and disturbance.
STA 294 Sensor networks for Environmental Monitoring
Tu 4:25 7:00
With Pankaj Agarwal, Carla Ellis, Alan Gelfand, Kamesh Munagala, Jun Yang