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Course Criteria
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1.00 - 6.00 Credits
(287) Either semester or summer. One to six credits. Hours by arrangement. Open only to Junior - Senior students with consent of advisor and department head. This course may be repeated provided that the sum total of credits earned does not exceed six. Students taking this course will be assigned a final grade of S (satisfactory) or U (unsatisfactory). Designed to acquaint students through actual work experience with research and management activities not available on campus. Students will work with professionals in an area of concentration. Student evaluation will be based upon the recommendation of the field supervisor and a detailed written report submitted by the student.
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3.00 Credits
(299) Either or both semesters. Credits and hours by arrangement. May be repeated for credit. Open only with consent of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
(239W) Second semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: Senior standing; ENGL 1010 or 1011 or 3800. Clausen Concepts and methods of planning for the allocation, management and utilization of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Techniques and methods of managerial decision making. Written technical reports required.
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1.00 Credits
(295) Second semester. One credit. May be repeated for credit. Open only with consent of instructor.
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4.00 Credits
(234C) (Also offered as GEOL 4735C.) First semester. Four credits. Three class periods and one 2-hour laboratory for which occasional field trips will be substituted. Prerequisite: MATH 1122 or 1132 and GEOL 1001 or 1050, or instructor consent. Robbins Basic hydrologic principles with emphasis on ground water flow and quality, geologic relationships, quantitative analysis and field methods.
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3.00 Credits
(260) Second semester, alternate years (odd). Three credits. Recommended preparation: NRME 3125 or CE 4820. Warner Floodplain management, erosion and erosion control, reservoir management, storm water control, watershed management, and on-site sewage treatment systems. Written technical reports, use of spreadsheets and field work required. Some field trips required.
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3.00 Credits
(271) Second semester, even numbered years. Three credits. Recommended preparation: NRME 3145. Yang Applied meteorology in environmental science and engineering. Solar energy, winds and air pollution, atmospheric-hydrologic interactions, agricultural and forest meteorology, and biometeorology.
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4.00 Credits
(235) First semester. Four credits. Three class periods and one 3-hour laboratory period. Prerequisite: STAT 1000QC or higher. Vokoun Introduction to fisheries management principles with application to the biotic, habitat, and human components of fisheries. Selected topics include sampling gears, harvest regulations, stocking, population dynamics, and habitat management practices in ponds, lake, reservoir, river, and stream fisheries.
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3.00 Credits
(285) First semester. Three credits. Two class periods and one 3-hour laboratory. Prerequisite: NRME 2415, may be taken concurrently. Rudnicki Ecological basis of forest management. Ecological diversity and relationships to the physical environment (light, temperature, soil, etc.); the influence of time (succession, disturbance, stand dynamics) and space (landscape ecology, ecosystem management) on forest ecosystem dynamics; forest production ecology and nutrient cycling. Laboratory will be in the field or in computer lab.
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3.00 Credits
(238C) Second semester. Three credits. Two class periods and one 2-hour laboratory period. Prerequisite: NRME 2000 or 3535. Open only with consent of instructor. Civco The principles of quantitative remote sensing, image processing and pattern recognition will be studied. Computer-assisted data analysis techniques will be used.
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