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Course Criteria
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0.50 Credits
Lab component of BIO1009 Introduction to Biology.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: High School Biology Three hours lecture, three hours laboratory. General Biology is a foundation course dealing with cellular and molecular biology, with emphasis on structure and function of cells as the basic unit of life, including cellular metabolism, enzyme energetics, molecular genetics, Mendelian genetics, and concepts of speciation and evolution. Laboratory introduces basic laboratory techniques, light microscopy, enzyme kinetics, calorimetry, and population genetics.
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1.00 Credits
Lab component of BIO1101 General Biology I.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: High School Biology Three hours lecture, three hours laboratory. Focuses on the study of microorganisms, fungi, higher plants and animals, their diversity and unity, structure, development, physiology, and classification. Laboratory develops observational skills using prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
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1.00 Credits
Lab component of BIO1103 General Biology II.
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1.00 Credits
Offers presentations and discussions of selected topics in natural sciences. Speakers are scientists from other institutions and from the NDNU faculty and student body. May be repeated for credit.
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4.00 Credits
IIntroduces the essentials of GIS and the fundamentals of epidemiotology. Lectures and laboratories use GIS software to develop skills in database management, graphical display, and mapping, incorporating epidemiological methods to develop maps exemplifying a range of public health issues including infectious and vector-borne disease patterns, epidemic iinvestigation, environmental hazards, and health serices access.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: Math Placement Level 2 and permission of instructor Three hours lecture, one hour laboratory. Surveys Earth's biomes and gives an overview of where humans live, with a concentration on how human activities affect biomes. Major themes are population growth and concomitant demands on energy and resources. Addresses pollution and consumer society links with the crisis of biodiversity loss. Optional laboratory exemplifies the dominant issues in the course topics by means of field studies and selected site visits.
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1.00 Credits
Lab component of BIO2108 Contemporary Environmental Issues.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: BIO1101, BIO1101L, BIO1103, BIO1103L This course is an introduction to plant systematics including vascular plant classification, diversity and evolutionary relationships. Discussion entails the structural components of vascular plants and how plant structure relates to function, development, environment, evolution, and human use of plants. The course briefly encompasses the major physiological and metabolic processes of plants with a survey of photosynthesis and plant metabolism, mineral nutrition and ion uptake, water relations, transport processes, and regulation of plant growth and development.
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