Adaptation or Extinction: Animals and Climate Change

BIO4222.01
Course System Home Terms Spring 2015 Adaptation or Extinction: Animals and Climate Change

Course Description

Summary

Global climate change has been implicated in the extinction of some animal species, changes in the geographic ranges of others, and many species appear to be increasingly vulnerable to both biotic (e.g. disease, competitors) and abiotic (e.g. temperature, acidification, pollutants, drought) stressors. Will different animal species adapt to global climate change or disappear? What influences their survival? Is variation among individuals in a population a substrate for adapting to changes in the environment or are these changes occurring too rapidly? We will examine these questions in discussions of papers from the primary literature. Students will design and conduct research projects informed by the questions we discuss. 

Prerequisites

Prior lab work in biology (Comparative Animal Physiology recommended)

Please contact the faculty member :

Instructor

  • Elizabeth Sherman

Day and Time

Academic Term

Spring 2015

Credits

4

Course Level

4000

Maximum Enrollment

16