Programs of Study
Systematics is the scientific study of the diversity of living things and of the relationships among them. As such the field spans a broad range of related areas, including phylogeny, evolution, and classification. Systematics involves studies of all kinds of living organisms, including bacteria, fungi, plants, and animals, as well as long-extinct species known only from fossils. Human uses of plants and animals are also investigated by systematists. Research in systematics is performed in the field, from tropical rain forests to the arctic, as well as in the laboratory, where traditional tools as well as those of molecular biology are used.
The Program of Study in Systematics and Biotic Diversity is designed to introduce students interested in the diversity of the living world to several facets of this eclectic field. The course requirements of the Program are drawn from two different complementary areas. The numerous courses identified as Group A deal with taxonomic diversity. These courses provide opportunities to learn about the variation that exists within particular groups of organisms, and about the history of diversification in those groups, as reflected in phylogenies that link their species. Courses in Group B build upon the basic ideas presented in many of the Group A courses, and explore the various theoretical and technical underpinnings of systematics. These courses cover such topics as evolution, the fossil record, molecular approaches to studying variation, and phylogenetic theory. Because hands-on familiarity with organisms is an essential part of systematics, participation in two courses that include a laboratory is expected.
Faculty teaching these courses belong to several different departments in the College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. All are involved in original research, and many include undergraduates as well as graduate students in their research programs. The organisms they study encompass the entire tree of life, and the topics on which their research focuses are comparably broad: taxonomy, paleontology/paleobotany, DNA sequence evolution, development, comparative and functional morphology, chemical ecology, population genetics, and bacterial physiology, to list a few.
The range of career choices for students who specialize in systematics is also broad. Many students go on to graduate school, where they specialize in studies of a particular group of organisms, and continue their research from a university base. Others are based in the world's botanical gardens, zoological parks, and museums, as on-site curators or as collectors stationed in often exotic locales. With the increased public awareness of vanishing biodiversity, still others find employment as scientific or popular writers, consultants assessing taxonomic diversity for ecological impact statements, or biological prospectors searching for plants and animals of economic or medical significance.
Required Classes for Program of Study in Systematics and Biotic Diversity:
A minimum of 13 credits from the following two groups, including at least 7 credits from group A, and 3 from group B, and at least 2 laboratory courses (marked with *). BIOG 4990 (Undergraduate Research in Biology), with approval of the advisor, can be used in fulfillment of up to 4 credits in Group A, and can count as 1 laboratory course if it has a laboratory component of 2 or more credits.
Group A
- *BIOEE 2640, Tropical Field Ornithology
- *BIOEE 2740, The Vertebrates: Structure, Function, and Evolution
- BIOEE 3710, Human Paleontology
- *BIOEE 3730, Biology of the Marine Invertebrates
- BIOEE 4050, Biology of the Neotropics
- *BIOEE 4500, Mammalogy, Lecture
- *BIOEE 4501, Mammalogy, Lab
- BIOEE 4700, Herpetology, Lecture
- *BIOEE 4701, Herpetology, Lab
- *BIOEE 4750, Ornithology
- *BIOEE 4760, Biology of Fishes
- BIOEE 4770, Marine Invertebrates Seminar
- BIOMI 2900, General Microbiology, Lectures
- *BIOMI 2910, General Microbiology, Lab
- *BIOMI 2911, General Microbiology, Lab
- BIOMI 3310, General Parasitology
- BIOMI 4140, Prokaryotic Diversity
- *BIOPL 2410, Introductory Botany
- *BIOPL 2430, Taxonomy of Cultivated Plants
- *BIOPL 2450, Plant Biology
- BIOPL 2470, Ethnobiology
- *BIOPL 2480, Taxonomy of Vascular Plants
- BIOPL 3480, The Healing Forest
- BIOPL 3590, Biology of Grasses
- BIOPL 4520, Systemitcs of Tropical Plants
- *BIOPL 4521, Systematics of Tropical Plants; Field Lab
- *ENTOM 2120, Insect Biology
- ENTOM 2150, Spider Biology: Life on a Silken Thread
- ENTOM 3150, Spider Biology
- ENTOM 3310, Introductory Insect Systematics
- *ENTOM 3311, Insect Phylogeny and Evolution, Lab
- *ENTOM 3330, Maggots, Grubs, and Cutworms: Larval Insect Biology
- PLPA 3090, Fungi
- *PLPA 3190, Mushrooms of Field and Forest
Group B
- BIOEE 4530, Speciation
- BIOEE 4640, Macroevolution
- BIOEE 4790, Paleobiology
- *BIOPL 4400, Phylogenetic Systematics
- BIOPL 4470, Molecular Systematics
- *BIOPL 4480, Plant Evolution and the Fossil Record
- *BIOPL 4530, Principles and Practices of Historical Biogeography
