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BIO3122 - Freshwater ecology

6 points, SCA Band 0 (NATIONAL PRIORITY), 0.125 EFTSL

Undergraduate Faculty of Science

Leader(s): Dr Ross Thompson

Offered

Clayton Second semester 2009 (Day)

Synopsis

The ecology of the abiotic and biotic components of freshwater ecosystems, especially the dynamics of energy and nutrients, the trophic structure and interspecific interactions, and the patterns and regulation of diversity in the aquatic ecosystems. The effects of disturbances, both natural and human-generated. Management problems, especially restoration and conservation strategies. The practical component includes a weekend field excursion (fee payable).

Objectives

On completion of this unit students will have a grounding in the physico-chemical attributes of freshwater systems and an understanding of how these attributes influence the ecological structure and function of these systems. Students will come to understand the nature of important ecological components in freshwater systems, such trophic structures and subsidies, types and strengths of interspecific interactions, and the role of disturbance. Students will also understand how ecological knowledge can be applied to help resolve resource management problems such as restoration and the impacts of invading species.

Assessment

Examination (2 hours): 60%
Practical work/field excursion: 40%

Contact hours

Two 1-hour lectures, equivalent of 3 hours laboratory plus field work per week

Prerequisites

BIO2011 or BIO2051, and either BIO2231 or BIO2181.

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