9506 (v.5) Resource Management 302


 

Area:Department of Environmental Biology
Credits:25.0
Contact Hours:5.0
Lecture:1 x 2 Hours Weekly
Practical:1 x 3 Hours Weekly
Fieldwork:6 x 0.5 Days Yearly
Prerequisite(s):    8974 (v.7) Flowering Plants 201 or any previous version
    OR
    8977 (v.7) Vertebrate Animals 202 or any previous version
AND
8975 (v.8) Algology and Mycology 202 or any previous version
AND
8976 (v.7) Invertebrate Animals 201 or any previous version
Syllabus:Roadside Conservation. State of the environment and conservation strategies. Environmental management Systems. Environmental protection - volunteering. Biodiversity an conservation. Threatening processes, determining conservation, priorities & ecologicaltriage. Pythium diseases of carrot. Finding full-time work in biology. Threatened WA biota Nematodes - the definitive can of worms. Visit vertebrate pest research section. Coastal Ecology of Andros Islands. Australian Energy. Protected areas, reserve design, off-reserve conservation. Inventorying biodiversity in WA. Recent fossil discoveries of W.A. Great moments in Evolution from fish to mammals. Management of urban bushland. The Politics of the Environment. The role of the environmental consultant. How many species are there on earth? Forest management.Translocations and captive breeding. Are bird brains inferior to those of mammals? Environmental monitoring of terrestrial environments. Environmental monitoring of terrestrial environments. Living Landscapes. Nature Conservation in the WA Central Wheatbelt. Environmental monitoring of aquatic environments. Are isolated trees worth conserving? The case of ants in the seasonally dry tropics of Mexico.
 
Unit Outcomes: On successful completion of this unit students will have gained an insight into a variety of applications of biology that are useful to humans and developed an understanding and opinion of how biologists undertake particular types of work, through an active participation in biology applications.
Text and references listed above are for your information only and current as of September 30, 2003. Please check with the unit coordinator for up-to-date information.
Unit References: No prescribed references.
Unit Texts: Burgman, M.A. & Lindenmayer, D.B., 1998, 'Conservation Biology for the Australian Environment', Surrey Beatty, Sydney.
 
Unit Assessment Breakdown: Attendance 10%. Participation 5%. Seminar 5%. Reports 40%. Examination 40%.
YearLocationPeriodInternalArea ExternalCentral External
2004Bentley CampusSemester 2Y  

 

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