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LEARNING OUTCOMES:

               Upon completion of the course, the students should be able to:
                     Demonstrate an understanding of the basic concepts of the subject
                     Explain the characteristics, dynamics, and growth of populations
                     Understand  the  characteristics  of  the  community,  ecosystem  development  and  climax
                       theories
                     Gain  knowledge  about  the  relationship  of  the  evolution  of  various  species  and  the
                       environment they live in.
                     Design basic field studies, collect data and interpret it
                     Carry out population and community studies

               THEORY (45 Hours)

               UNIT- I                                                                            (15 Hours)

               Autecology and Synecology, Laws of limiting factors, Study of physical factors: Temperature and
               Light.Unitary  and  Modular  populations;  Unique  and  group  attributes  of  population:  density,
               natality,
               mortality,  life  tables,  fecundity  tables,  survivorship  curves,  age  ratio,  sex  ratio,  dispersal,  and
               dispersion;  Exponential  and  logistic  growth,  equations  and  patterns,  r  and  k  strategies;
               Intraspecific population regulation: density-dependent and independent factors.

               UNIT- II                                                                           (15 Hours)
               Types  of  species  interactions,  Interspecific  competition:  Lotka-Volterra  model  of  competition,
               Gause‘s Principle with laboratory and field examples, Niche concept; Predation: Lotka-Volterra
               equations,  Functional  and  numerical  responses;  Predation:  Predator-Prey  interaction,  Role  of
               predation  in  nature,  predator  defense  mechanisms,  Resource  partitioning.  Community
               characteristics: species richness, dominance, diversityconcepts and levels, role of biodiversity in
               ecosystem  functions  and  stability,  speciation  and  categories  of  threat,  distribution,  and  global
               patterns, Terrestial biodiversity hot spots, abundance, guilds, ecotone and edge effect; Ecological
               succession with examples and types.

               UNIT- III                                                                          (15 Hours)
               Types of Ecosystems: Terrestrial ecosystem, vertical stratification in tropical forest; Food chain:
               detritus and grazing food chains, linear and Y-shaped food chains, food web; Energy flowthrough
               the ecosystem; Ecological  pyramids  and Ecological  efficiencies;  global  biogeochemical  cycles,
               mineral  cycles  in  terrestrial  and  aquatic  ecosystems.  Ecology  in  wildlife  conservation  and
               management,  Protected  areas:  National  Parks,  Biospherereserves  and  Sanctuaries;  Restoration
               ecology, Principles of Environmental impact assessment.

               PRACTICAL (30 Hours)

                 1.  Determination of population density in  a natural or a hypothetical  community by quadrate
                    method and calculation of Shannon-Weiner diversity index.
                 2.  Study of an aquatic ecosystem:
                     a) Phytoplankton and zooplankton
                     b) Measurement of temperature, turbidity/penetration of light, determination of pH
                     c) Dissolved oxygen content (Winkler‘s method), chemical oxygen demand
                     d) Free carbon dioxide and alkalinity
                 3.  Study of ten endemic animals of India with slides/pictures/videos.



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