Dates
November 25 to December 6, 2013
Fees
Location
Gault Nature Reserve, Mont St-Hilaire, Québec
The intensive course
Offered by McGill University- Quebec centre for biodiversity science
Accessible to McGill students and non-McGill students as well as auditors
Course number: BIOL645
Credits: 3
Responsible instructors
- Jonathan Davies (McGill)
- Pedro Peres-Neto (UQAM)
- Dr. Jean-Philippe Lessard (Quebec Center for Biodiversity Science Postdoctoral Fellow, McGill)
Course Description
This intensive two week course offers a high level overview of concepts, methods and questions related to different aspects of biodiversity science. The course covers a variety of current topics including:
- Patterns and drivers of biological diversity in space and time
- Genetic and genomic applications in biodiversity sciences
- Phylogenetic and functional community ecology
- Ecological networks
- Numerical ecology
- Evolutionary extinctions and rarity
- Biological invasions
- Ecosystem function and services
- Biodiversity, conservation and economics
- Participants
This course targets science professionals at a high level (particularly graduate students and post-docs) and focuses on scientific aspects of biodiversity science. We encourage applications from those with interests in systematics, ecology, environment and other aspects of biodiversity. The course is open to students from all Québec universities, and internationally; a maximum of 25 students will be selected. For the duration of the course, students will be expected to commit full time (approximately 90 hours, including theory and practicals) and participate in all aspects of the course.
Course location
The intensive course will be given at the Gault Nature Reserve of McGill University, a private reserve which protects 1000 hectares of natural primeval forests of the St. Lawrence Valley. Situated at Mont-Saint-Hilaire approximately 40 km from Montreal, this panoramic natural landscape is ideal for discovering nature, teaching and academic research.
Program
Preliminary outline.
BIOL645_2013_outline
Course Material
Course booklet and recommended reading in pdf format.
Assignments & Evaluation
Assignments & Evaluation are available here
Typical Day
Lectures in the morning, course practical in the afternoon, time to work on the project that will serve to link the diverse aspects of biodiversity science presented during the entire course, and seminar or discussion animated by an invited speaker in the evening. Daily schedules may vary.
Language
The course welcomes both French and English speaking participants, but most lectures will be given in English. Students can submit their work in French or English.
How to Apply