Courses
Fisheries Management (WMAN445) introduces the principles and techniques for protecting, conserving, enhancing, and managing all aspects of fisheries. The course introduces the theories and tools of management and their applications in multiple scales and geographic regions with the goal to border to broader students’ perceptions of fisheries conservation problems and potential solutions.
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Fisheries Management (WMAN445) Fish management is offered every Fall semester. If you wish, reach me out and I can share the syllabus. Check out more information at the Wildlife and Fisheries resources program at WVU.
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Freshwater Ecology (BIOL/WMAN446)Freshwater Ecology is offered every Spring semester. If you wish, reach me out and I can share the syllabus. Check out more information at the Wildlife and Fisheries resources program at WVU.
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Freshwater ecology provides understanding on the physical, chemical, and biological attributes of freshwaters as well as on processes influencing the structure and function of these ecosystems.
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Applied Community Ecology (ACE) is based on a combination of discussions and data analyses applied to community ecology, management, and conservation issues. The course covers topics such as the theory of community ecology, taxonomic and functional diversity, diversity partitioning, community assembly and assembly rules, food webs and stable isotope ecology, metacommunities, and meta-analysis and macroecology.
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Applied Community EcologyApplied Community Ecology is a graduate course at WVU. I offer this course each other fall semester. Feel free to reach me out if you want learn more about it.
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Stable Isotope Ecology
Stable Isotope Ecology is a short course aimed at exposing students to theory and analytical tools and applications of Stable Isotopes in ecology.
Stable Isotope Ecology has been offered at the AFS WV chapter, at the Universidade Federal do Oeste do Para (UFOPA), and at the Universidade Federal de Rondonia (UNIR).