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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Includes lecture and laboratory. Specific topics include a review of remote sensing fundamentals and methods for using high spatial resolution data, hyperspectral data, active remote sensing, advanced image processing, advanced classification techniques and statistical techniques specific to exploring remotely sensed data. Dual listed with BOT 4211; cross listed with GEOG 5211. Prerequisite: BOT/GEOG 4111 or GEOL 4113 and graduate standing.
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3.00 Credits
This course explores major topics of physical oceanography, marine biodiversity and ecology, and human impacts on the ocean. Emphasis is placed on reading, evaluating, and synthesizing primary literature. Dual listed with BOT 4235. Cross listed with ZOO 5235. Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
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4.00 Credits
An examination of the ecology and evolution of land plants throughout Earth history that emphasizes the profound impact plants have had on Earth's surface and atmosphere. Through a combination of lecture, discussion, and laboratory, the course will explore fossilized plant communities, their ecological properties, and effects of major environmental upheavals. Dual listed with BOT 4280. Cross listed with GEOL 5280. Prerequisite: graduate standing.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: graduate standing or consent of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
Designed to familiarize advanced students with techniques of collecting, identifying and curating higher fungi, and modern systematic methods used to evaluate relationships between taxa. A comparative organismal approach is taken with emphasis on saprophytic and ectomycorrhizal basidiomycetes and ascomycetes. Prerequisite: graduate standing, BOT 4300 or equivalent.
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4.00 Credits
Bayesian statistical methods for analyzing data, with emphasis on ecological and biological data. Includes Bayes rule, basic Bayesian formulation (Priors, posteriors, likelihoods), single and multiple-parapmeter models, hierarchicial models, generalized linear models, multivariate models, misture models, models for missing data, merging statisical and process models, and introduction to computation methods. Cross listed with STAT/ECOL 5380. Prerequisites: at least 2 semesters of calculus and one semester of statistics.
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3.00 Credits
A comprehensive lecture-seminar-discussion course designed to familiarize advanced students with physiological processes underlying fungal ecology, and modern methods used to study those processes. A comparative organismal approach is taken, involving both symbiotic and saprophytic fungi, with emphasis on ectomycorrhizal and decomposer modes of nutrition in forest ecosystems. Dual listed with BOT 4390. Prerequisites: BOT 4300 and one course in plant physiology or ecology.
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0.00 - 4.00 Credits
Symbiosis, the living together of unlike organisms, encompasses mutually beneficial to reciprocally detrimental interactions. The course examines conditions required for establishment and maintenance of important symbioses including mycorrhizae, lichens, endophytes, nitrogen-fixing and endosymbiotic bacteria, fungal/insect interactions, and fungal pathogens. Symbioses in forest ecosystems will be emphasized. Dual listed with BOT 4395. Prerequisites: LIFE 2022 or LIFE 2023, and LIFE 3400.
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4.00 Credits
Provides a basic understanding of plant growth and development. Covers water relations, general metabolism, nutrition, and hormonal and environmental controls. Dual listed with BOT 4400. Prerequisite: LIFE 2023, CHEM 1010, or 2300, or equivalents.
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1.00 - 6.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
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