Skip to main content

Population and Community Ecology RENR 8001

Renewable Resources Course

International Fees

International fees are typically 3.12 times the domestic tuition. Exact cost will be calculated upon completion of registration.

Course details

Population ecology is concerned with the structure and dynamics of populations. Community ecology is concerned with the interactions of populations with each other and their abiotic environment. Both are crucial for understanding ecosystems and to provide a scientific basis for ecological restoration projects. The course covers population and community-level ecology for terrestrial and aquatic plants and animals that are pertinent to ecological restoration. Topics include the concept of individual fitness, individual behaviour, population dynamics, competition within and among species, predation, parasitism, symbiosis and trophic processes. The use of appropriate sampling methods and application of theories of population and community dynamics are practiced and discussed, using a variety of case studies. Field sessions outside of scheduled class time will be required.

Prerequisite(s)

  • Acceptance into the Ecological Restoration degree program or by departmental approval.

Credits

3.0

Not offered this term
This course is not offered this term. Please check back next term or subscribe to receive notifications of future course offerings and other opportunities to learn more about this course and related programs.

Learning Outcomes

At the end of this course the student will be able to:

  • Assess how biotic and abiotic factors affect community and landscape diversity.
  • Explain how interactions among species affect populations and species distribution.
  • Evaluate factors that affect population growth and how they differ among various kinds of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.
  • Analyze how interactions between species affect population growth and species distribution.
  • Apply various population growth models to real populations.
  • Compare and contrast organism life histories, such as generalists vs. specialists and r vs. k selection.
  • Apply the concept of niche to competition.
  • Explain the concept of keystone species and how it relates to biodiversity conservation.
  • Apply a variety of techniques for sampling in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.
  • Explain how theories such as autogenic and allogenic succession, community assembly theory and other aspects of disturbance ecology relate to ecological restoration practices.

Effective as of Fall 2009

Subscribe

Interested in being notified about future offerings of Population and Community Ecology (RENR 8001)? If so, fill out the information below and we'll notify you by email when courses for each new term are displayed here.

  • Privacy Notice: The information you provide will be used to respond your request for BCIT course information and is collected under Section 26(c) of the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). For more information about BCIT’s privacy practices contact: Associate Director, Privacy, Information Access & Policy Management, British Columbia Institute of Technology, 3700 Willingdon Ave. Burnaby, BC V5A 3H2, email: privacy@bcit.ca.