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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
4, 3/3 Prerequisites: BIO 212 and BIO 213. Study of the biology of fishes: structure and function (anatomy and physiology), systematics, evolution, diversity, zoogeography, and ecology.
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4.00 Credits
4, 3/3 Prerequisites: BIO 211, BIO 213, CHE 111, CHE 112, and upper-division status. Processes that cause populations to change over time; mutation, natural selection, genetic drift, and gene flow. Application of population genetic principles to problems in conservation biology and forensic genetic analysis.
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4.00 Credits
4, 3/3 Prerequisites: BIO 211, BIO 212, CHE 201. Study of hormonal control, neural processing, sensory mechanisms, circulation, gas exchange, digestion, muscles, energetics, and thermoregulation using vertebrate and invertebrate examples.
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3.00 Credits
3, 3/0 Prerequisites: BIO 212, BIO 213, BIO 303. Empirical foundation of evolutionary theory. Emphasizes the dynamics of the process of evolution, especially as it relates to individual variation within an interbreeding population, to the variation pattern on the population level, and to the origin of species; more recent trends, such as introgressive hybridization, polyploidy, apomixis, and genetic homeostasis are developed.
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4.00 Credits
4, 3/3 Prerequisites: BIO 211, BIO 212, CHE 201. Physiological processes in plants, including photosynthesis, respiration, osmosis, translocation, transpiration, effects of hormones, soil nutrients, and tropisms.
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3.00 Credits
3, 2/3 Prerequisites: BIO 212 and BIO 213. Introduction to the study of mammals, living and extinct, including a survey of the diversity of mammalian life history strategies, behavior, ecology, morphology, and physiology. Required field trips, collection techniques, and preparation of study materials.
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4.00 Credits
4, 3/3 Prerequisites: BIO 212, BIO 213, CHE 111, and CHE 112. Physical, chemical, and biological factors that influence freshwater life and the ecological interactions in freshwater communities. Lectures, demonstrations, and field trips.
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3.00 Credits
3, 2/3 Prerequisites: BIO 212 and BIO 213. Functional approach to the morphology, physiology, adaptation, ecology, reproduction, and evolution of invertebrates.
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4.00 Credits
4, 3/3 Prerequisites: BIO 212 and BIO 213. Comparative study of vertebrates with emphasis on their anatomy, adaptations, ecology, and phylogenetic relationships.
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4.00 Credits
4, 3/3 Prerequisites: BIO 212 and BIO 213. Ecology and management of fish populations. Sampling techniques and fisheries-management techniques (including stocking, hatcheries, and aquaculture programs). Feeding, behavior, and life history of fishes.
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