Instructors Josh Tewksbury & Ben Kerr
Teaching Assistants Karen Reagan & Kelsey Byers
Lecture: 2:30pm - 3:50pm, Tuesdays and Thursdays, Fisheries 107
Lab: 8:30 - 10:20am or 10:30 - 12:20pm, Tuesdays, Hitchcock 343
Course Content
This course is designed to give upper division
undergraduates and beginning graduate students hands-on experience in the field
of experimental evolutionary ecology. The
course is composed of lectures and labs.
The lectures will introduce some of the current "big questions" in ecology and
evolution that are experimentally tractable. The labs will be devoted to designing, running
and analyzing various experiments. Students
will read the primary scientific literature in order to gain a better
understanding of how experimental approaches have been used to explore
ecological and evolutionary phenomena. In
the labs, students (in groups of four) will conduct experiments in the laboratory to investigate wide-ranging issues (such as the evolution of bacterial antibiotic
resistance, bacterial tradeoffs and competition, and coevolution of pathogens and their hosts). Grades will be based on weekly quizzes, lab reports,
and a single final group presentation.
Update: December 2009: Submit your review of your fellow group members.