James Cook University Subject Handbook - 2010

BZ2605 - Plant Diversity and Adaptations

Credit points: 03
Year: 2010
Student Contribution Band: Band 4
Administered by: School of Marine & Tropical Biology

Plants are the planet's primary producers, and are the foundation of ecosystems. They provide food and shelter for animals, fungi and microorganisms. In this subject we will examine the diversity of ways in which plants function and have adapted to their environments. Students will learn to recognise taxonomic diversity, mechanisms plants use to gather energy, limiting factors to plant growth, interactions between plants and animals (including humans), and the role different plants have in communities. This subject takes a practical approach to developing skills through both field activities and laboratory practice. Skills developed in this subject are fundamental to ecological, environmental, physiological and evolutionary disciplines.

Learning Outcomes

Graduate Qualities

Assumed
Knowledge:
Students enrolling in this subject should have completed 12 credit points of level 1 science subjects including chemistry (CH1001, BM1000 or CH1011), fundamentals of biology (BZ1001) and introductory plant science (BT1001 or BZ1003 or AG1003), or equivalents.
Prerequisites:(BT1001 OR BZ1003 OR AG1003 OR BZ2610) AND (CH1001 OR BM1000 OR CH1011)
Inadmissible
Subject
Combinations:
BT2400 BZ2470 BZ5605

Availabilities

Townsville, Internal, Study Period 1
Census Date 25-Mar-2010
Coordinator: Assoc. Professor Michelle Waycott
Lecturers: Dr Joseph Holtum, Mr Ashley Field, Dr Kamaljit Kaur, Dr Kor-Jent Van Dijk, Dr Susan Laurance, Assoc. Professor Michelle Waycott.
Contact hours:
  • 26 hours lectures
  • 30 hours practicals
  • 16 hours fieldwork
Assessment:end of semester exam (50%); laboratory reports (50%).

Cairns, Internal, Study Period 1
Census Date 25-Mar-2010
Coordinator: Assoc. Professor Michelle Waycott
Lecturers: Dr Joseph Holtum, Mr Ashley Field, Dr Kamaljit Kaur, Dr Kor-Jent Van Dijk, Dr Susan Laurance, Assoc. Professor Michelle Waycott.
Contact hours:
  • 26 hours lectures
  • 30 hours practicals
  • 16 hours fieldwork
Assessment:end of semester exam (50%); laboratory reports (50%).

Note: Minor variations might occur due to the continuous Subject quality improvement process, and in case of minor variation(s) in assessment details, the Subject Outline represents the latest official information.