Exposes graduate students to teaching skills, understanding the scientific method, searching and organizing literature, grant proposal and scientific writing, data management and presentation, and scientific speaking. Students are evaluated on their participation and the quality of a written research proposal.
Instructor
Suzanne Alonzo
Consists of lectures focusing on pivotal topics in ecology and evolution. Relevant background material is developed followed by a critical analysis of readings from the primary literature. Designed to give graduate (and advanced undergraduate) students direct contact with the major areas of research that are currently at the forefront of organismal biology.
Analysis of the ways in which evolution shapes the form and function of organisms including physiology, morphology, and behavior, as well as populations, species, and species interactions across landscapes. (Formerly BIOE 279, Evolutionary Ecology.)
Introduction to high-level analysis and discussion of published research papers in theoretical or applied ecology and evolutionary biology. Course consists of weekly meetings with extensive independent work outside of class. Course is required for all first-year graduate students and forms part of the graduate core curriculum. (Formerly offered as BIOE 293, Readings in Ecology and Evolution.)
Instructor
Erick Zavaleta
Paradigms and designs in marine ecology. A review of the paradigms that have shaped our understanding of marine ecology; analysis and discussion of experiments with these paradigms. Students cannot receive credit for this course and
BIOE 108.
Intensive exploration of an advanced topic in theoretical or applied evolutionary biology, ecology, physiology, behavior, or conservation biology. Course consists of weekly meetings with extensive independent work outside of class, resulting in mastery of an area of innovation in the field, or in a comprehensive familiarity with an important body of work. Independent work generally culminates in independent or group projects and products. Course is targeted at students who already have reached a professional level of expertise in their field and advanced master's students. (Formerly offered as BIOE 295, Advanced Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Seminar.)
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Introduces students to how mathematical models can be used to ask and answer evolutionary and ecological questions. Methods covered include optimality theory, population genetics, population dynamic models, game theory, and dynamic state-variable models. Students learn to develop their own mathematical models and to use models to make predictions. Statistical methods for combining theory and data are not covered. This class focuses on learning by doing, using in class activities, weekly problem sets and an independent project. Students cannot receive credit for this course and BIOE 138. Enrollment is restricted to graduate students. Enrollment is by permission of the instructor. (Formerly offered as BIOE 248B, Quantitative Methods in Ecology and Evolution.)
Instructor
Suzanne Alonzo
Teaches students how to build mathematical models and fit them to data to answer questions in ecology and evolution. Includes learning to write code in the R programming language to simulate models and perform statistical analyses. Topics include: population and evolutionary dynamics; species interactions; and behavior. Students cannot receive credit for this course and
BIOE 139. (Formerly BIOE 248A, Quantitative Ecology.)
Instructor
Auston Kilpatrick
An exploration of the ecology of plant form, function, distribution, abundance, and diversity. Topics include plant adaptations to environmental conditions, life history variation, competition, reproductive ecology, herbivory, and patterns of diversity. Lecture with discussions of original papers and independent field project. Students cannot receive credit for this course and BIOE 145.
Hands-on exploration of the concepts and techniques of plant ecology. A combination of lab, greenhouse, and field-based exercises (irrespective of weather conditions), statistical analysis, and scientific writing. One required weekend field trip. Students cannot receive credit for this course and BIOE 145L.
Develops the major themes of community ecology: structure, trophic dynamics, succession, complex interactions among species, herbivory, evolution, and coevolution. Uses case histories of well-studied marine and terrestrial systems. Students cannot receive credit for this course and
BIOE 147.
Supervised individual research projects in experimental marine biology. Students carry out a complete research project, including (1) the formation of hypotheses, (2) the design and implementation of experiments, (3) collection, analysis, and interpretation of data, and (4) the write-up of an oral presentation. Prerequisite(s):
BIOE 208; and interview to assess ability to carry out field project.
Instructor
Kristy Kroeker, Peter Raimondi
Skills-based course in effective leadership and communication, including stakeholder engagement, facilitation, conflict resolution, team building, and introduction to project management. Communication training includes identifying audiences and objectives (public, philanthropy, policymakers, managers, scientist practitioners) and leveraging non-traditional communication platforms. Enrollment is by application and restricted to graduate students.
Cross Listed Courses
CSP 245
Instructor
Kristy Kroeker
Writing-intensive course focusing on developing skills in scientific communication, with an emphasis on communicating issues relevant to ecologists and evolutionary biologists. This courses presents the norms and standards of scientific communication spanning multiple genres. Students cannot receive credit for this course and BIOE 171.
Basic population genetics and selected topics are covered including genetics of speciation, tempo and mode of evolution, genetics of social behavior, natural selection in human populations, and the impact of molecular studies on evolutionary theory. Students cannot receive credit for this course and BIOL 172.
Seminar focusing on concepts in basic and applied ecology. Structure rotates quarterly between graduate student research and readings of journal articles and textbooks.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
A discussion of current research and literature review on the subject of molecular evolution. Primary focus on recent results on molecular phylogenetics and molecular population genetics.
Instructor
Giacomo Bernardi
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
An intensive seminar focusing on the interaction between physiological constraint and life history options and solutions employed by animals. Topics vary from comparative physiology to ecological theory. Participants are required to present results of their own research or review papers of interest.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Focuses on fundamental concepts in global-change ecology, with emphasis on coastal and marine ecosystems and issues of sustainability. The seminar is devoted to reading and evaluating current and classic literature and discussing graduate student research.
Instructor
Kristy Kroeker
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Current topics in freshwater ecology, eco-evolutionary dynamics, fisheries, and fish ecology.
Instructor
Eric Palkovacs
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Intensive research and discussions on plant-animal interactions. All students undertake a research project and meet weekly with the faculty sponsor to monitor progress. The group meets weekly to discuss experimental design and analysis, specific problems related to the students' research, relevant research papers, or manuscripts that the group members are writing. Each student gives a formal presentation of research plans or progress each quarter.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Discussion of current topics, research, and methods in sexual selection and social behavior focusing on theoretical and empirical research and links between evolution and ecology. Students present and discuss their research, read and discuss current and classic literature, or read and discuss methods used in the field.
Instructor
Suzanne Alonzo
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Intensive seminar on selected topics in marine physiology. Students present results from their own research and discuss recent advances from the literature.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Selected topics in population biology and disease ecology. Students present results from their own research and discuss recent advances from the literature.
Instructor
Auston Kilpatrick
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Weekly seminar course centered on reading and discussing selected publications along with peer review of research plans, grant proposals, manuscripts, lectures, and conference presentations. The overarching goal is to support the development and progress of graduate students in the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department whose thesis work and interests align with the course topic.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Intensive seminar on selected topics in plant evolution. Students present results from their own research and discuss recent advances from the literature.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
An intensive seminar on selected topics in behavioral and evolutionary ecology. Students are expected to discuss the current literature and present literature reviews, research proposals, and preliminary results from their ongoing research.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Centers on reading and discussion of selected publications along with peer review of research plans, grant proposals, manuscripts, lectures, and conference presentations. The overarching goal is to support the development and progress of graduate students in the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology department whose thesis work and interests align with the course topics. Topics include: Reviewing innovative approaches to the study of host-microbiome interactions; Implementation of novel methods for the study of evolutionary demographics in populations using genomic data; Identifying signatures of selection mediated by pathogens and the environment.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Seminar on the ecology of marine vertebrates. Topics vary from the factors that explain the distribution of marine predators to island biogeography and the ecosystem effects of introduced vertebrates on islands.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Intensive seminar focusing on fundamental and evolutionary concepts in plant-water relations. Students present results from their own research and discuss recent advances from the literature.
Instructor
Jarmila Pittermann
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
An intensive seminar on selected topics in plant ecology and population biology. Students present results from their own research and discuss recent advances from the literature.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
An intensive seminar on selected topics in molecular evolutionary genetics. Students are required to present results from their own research projects, present a critical review paper at least once during the quarter, and submit a written research proposal.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
An intensive seminar series focusing on fundamental concepts in marine ecology. Emphasis changes quarter to quarter. At least one quarter per year is devoted to discussion of graduate student research. Other quarters involve reading and evaluating current and classic literature on marine ecology and evolutionary biology.
Instructor
Peter Raimondi
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Topics in population genetics and genomics, focusing on work involving paleontological and archaeological material. Students present weekly written and oral reports of their research projects. Once each term, students critique a recent publication.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Centers on reading and discussion of selected publications along with peer review of research plans, grant proposals, manuscripts, lectures, and conference presentations. The overarching goal is to support the development and progress of graduate students in the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department whose thesis work and interests align with the course topics. Topics include: reviewing advances in the field of regeneration; applications of novel techniques in functional genomics; and comparative genomics in evolution, development, and regeneration. (Formerly Species Interactions and Coevolution.)
An intensive study about concepts, theory, and techniques for graduate students conducting research on the ecology, genetics, evolution, systematics, or biodiversity of marine invertebrates.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
A discussion of current topics in behavioral ecology including social information use, conceptual advances in understanding the evolution of animal signaling, and using a mechanistic approach to infer ecological processes from soundscapes.
A weekly seminar discussion on current research and techniques in mammalian exercise and environmental physiology. Areas covered include locomotor physiology, exercise testing and cardiovascular monitoring, and biomechanics. Oral presentation of ongoing research or current literature required from each student.
Instructor
Terrie Williams
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Weekly seminar course centering on reading and discussion of selected publications along with peer review of research plans, grant proposals, manuscripts, lectures, and conference presentations. The overarching goal is to support the development and progress of graduate students in the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department whose thesis work and interests align with the course topic (reviewing innovative approaches in marine mammal science, coupling physiological with ecological concepts using integrative tools, identifying ecological and evolutionary context of large marine vertebrate research).
Instructor
Roxanne Beltran
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
This weekly seminar course centers on reading and discussing of selected publications along with peer review of research plans, grant proposals, manuscripts, lectures, and conference presentations. Students support the development and progress of graduate students in the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department whose thesis work and interests align with the course topics including: reviewing impacts of extreme climate events, inferring microevolutionary processes from genomic time series, and understanding community composition change in marine ecosystems.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Selected readings and guest speakers in conservation, climate science and the ecology of environmental change coupled with peer review of participants' research proposals, grant proposals, manuscripts and scientific presentations.
Instructor
Erika Zavaleta
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Focuses on problems and designs in ecology and population biology. Topics include experimental design; exploratory data analysis; hands-on statistics; and graphical theory. Structured around a statistical analysis and graphics program to teach students to design surveys and experiments and analyze data. Previous work in statistics strongly recommended.
Cross Listed Courses
CSP 241
Instructor
Marm Kilpatrick, Roxanne Beltran
Lab will focuses on hands-on statistical problem solving, graphical presentations and experimental design issues.
Cross Listed Courses
CSP 241L
Instructor
Marm Kilpatrick, Roxanne Beltran
Selected topics of current interest to ecologists and evolutionary biologists presented by weekly guest speakers.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Independent study for graduate students who have not yet settled on a research area for their thesis. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Independent study for graduatestudents who have not yet settled on a research area for their thesis. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Independent study for graduate students who have not yet settled on a research area for their thesis. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Independent study for graduate students who have not yet settled on a research area for their thesis. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency. Enrollment is restricted to graduate students.
Instructor
Depends on the faculty sponsor Depends on the faculty sponsor
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer
Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.
Quarter offered
Fall, Winter, Spring
Cross-listed Courses
Reviews static equilibrium concepts, games of incomplete information, and the traditional theory of dynamic games in discrete time. Develops recent evolutionary game models, including replicator and best reply dynamics, and applications to economics, computer science, and biology. Prerequisite(s): upper-division math courses in probability theory are strongly recommended. Cannot receive credit for this course and
ECON 166B or CSE 166B.
Cross Listed Courses
BIOE 274, CSE 209
Explores the role, if any, that Darwinian theory and evolutionary biology should have on ethical theory. Topics range from classic work, including Darwin and classic expositors, to influential contemporary work on natural selection, in light of the best philosophical literature.
Cross Listed Courses
BIOE 287
A rigorous examination and practice of the skills involved in writing articles about science, health, technology, and the environment for the general public. Covers the essential elements of news writing and explanatory journalism, including developing a story idea, interviewing scientists, fact checking, composition, and editing of multiple drafts about scientific research.
Cross Listed Courses
BIOE 188