Unit convenor and teaching staff |
Unit convenor and teaching staff
Unit Convenor
Melanie Bishop
Contact via 98504075
14EaR 205
Email for an appointment
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Credit points |
Credit points
10
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Prerequisites |
Prerequisites
(50cp including [20cp from ((BIOL1310 or BIOL114) or (BIOL1110 or BIOL115) or BIOL121)] or [10cp from ((BIOL1310 or BIOL114) or (BIOL1110 or BIOL115) or BIOL121) and 10cp from (ENVE117 or (ENVS1017 or ENVS117) or GEOS117)] and [10cp from ((STAT1170 or STAT170) or (STAT1371 or STAT171) or FOSE1015)])
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Corequisites |
Corequisites
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Co-badged status |
Co-badged status
BIOL6410
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Unit description |
Unit description
Ecology is the study of the distribution and abundance of organisms and of the processes that generate these patterns. This unit covers basic ecological concepts at the level of organisms, populations, communities, and ecosystems. We study how interactions among organisms - and between organisms and their physical environment - shape the natural world. This unit also addresses how ecological concepts can be applied to current issues such as climate change, conservation, fisheries and agriculture. A first year Statistics unit is a prerequisite for this unit because we use both descriptive statistics and statistical tests to investigate community structure, population dynamics and how organisms interact with the environment. Many students find that the skills they gain taking BIOL2610 and or BIOL235 complements the skills needed in this Ecology unit. This unit contains a compulsory 3 day/2 night fieldtrip with an additional cost of approximately $200 |
Information about important academic dates including deadlines for withdrawing from units are available at https://www.mq.edu.au/study/calendar-of-dates
On successful completion of this unit, you will be able to:
This unit cannot be completed entirely online. All students must participate in some face-to-face classes.
To pass this unit you must
Students scoring a final exam mark of <40% but that would otherwise meet all unit requirements will be offered a supplementary exam.
Assignment submission
The Powerpoint slides for the oral presentation are to be uploaded to iLearn via the assignment submission box and the Practical Report via the TURNITIN link by 11:55 pm on the due date. TURNITIN is a powerful online tool for the detection of plagiarism. It works by comparing the text of a submitted document (i.e., your assignment) with the work of your current classmates, past students in Ecology and other courses at Macquarie, as well as published material in books, journals and on the web.
Late Assessment Submission Penalty
Unless a Special Consideration request has been submitted and approved, a 5% penalty (of the total possible mark of the task) will be applied for each day a written report or presentation assessment is not submitted, up until the 7th day (including weekends). After the 7th day, a grade of ‘0’ will be awarded even if the assessment is submitted. The submission time for all uploaded assessments is 11:55 pm. A 1-hour grace period will be provided to students who experience a technical concern.
For any late submission or missed attendance of time-sensitive tasks, such as scheduled tests/exams, assessments/presentations, and/or scheduled field trips, students need to submit an application for Special Consideration.
Special Consideration
The Special Consideration Policy aims to support students who have been impacted by short-term circumstances or events that are serious, unavoidable and significantly disruptive, and which may affect their performance in assessment. If you experience circumstances or events that affect your ability to complete the assessments in this unit on time, please inform the convenor and submit a Special Consideration request through ask.mq.edu.au.
Presentation (15%)
You will prepare a 6 minute presentation on a topic of your choosing, related to the application of ecology to real-world issues. The purpose of this is to demonstrate your understanding of how ecological concepts can be applied to understand and solve real-world problems, and your ability to communicate scientific issues to a lay audience. You can choose a topic from the list provided in ilearn, or come up with your own based on the guidelines provided above the list. You will deliver your presentation in the week 4 and 5 labs (or, if you have enrolled in the infrequent attendance offering, the on-campus session). All students must upload Powerpoint slides to ilearn by 11:55 pm Fri 9 Aug. Late submission of slides without approved Special Consideration will attract a penalty as per the assessment policy. A marking rubric is provided on iLearn. Please consult this when developing your presentation.
Mid-semester test (25%)
There will be a mid-semester test held in Week 8. This will be 50 minutes in length, and will be an open book, online quiz (that can be completed on or off campus) that may cover all work from Weeks 1-7, including lectures, practicals and reading material. For weekday attendance students, this will run during the scheduled lecture session on Wed 6 Sept. For infrequent attendance students, the test will be open on the evening of Wed 6 Sept, from 7-9 pm (your 50 min will count down from the time you start the test). Students who cannot make this time are required to the convenor at email biol2410@mq.edu.au to make alternative arrangements. The tests will be multiple choice and will include numerical exercises similar to those taught in lectures. Questions will be randomly allocated to students. Note that if you are unwell and cannot undertake the test during your scheduled time, a special consideration will need to be submitted to organise a new time to sit the test. Some example questions will be provided in ilearn in the weeks prior to the assessment.
Fieldtrip Practical Report (25%)
At the Stanwell Tops fieldtrip, you will undertake a group-based project. Students will individually write this up in the style of a scientific paper for the journal Austral Ecology. This task is designed to assess your understanding of ecological concepts, limitations associated with fieldwork, how to source and utilise appropriate scientific literature to craft an argument, and scientific communication conventions. The word limit for this report is 1500 words (excluding Abstract, Acknowledgement and References). Any text beyond 1500 words will not be read by the markers; shorter submissions are acceptable. Further details can be found in the Field Trip practical notes (on iLearn). A marking rubric is provided on iLearn, as well as a template for completing your report and examples of previous studies. Please consult these when preparing your report.
Examination (35%)
The final exam will be held during the Semester 2 Exam Period and will be 2 hr (plus 10 min reading time). This will be an in-person, invigilated exam. Please consult the University Handbook to determine the commencement and finishing dates of the compulsory exam period. You will be permitted to take a non-programmable calculator and/or English language dictionary into the exam. Notes will not be permitted. While most of the material will focus on Weeks 9-13, some questions will also require knowledge of subject matter from Weeks 1-8.
The exam questions have been carefully written to test understanding, not rote learning:
Specifically, the exam (out of 70) will be comprised of three sections:
(A) a multiple choice section where you will be asked to interpret figures and tables and synthesise information (20 questions, 1 mark each; to give 20 possible marks);
(B) a short answer section where you will be asked to solve problems by integrating ecological concepts you have learnt during the unit (6 questions, 5 marks each, to give 30 possible marks);
(C) longer response questions where you will use your ecological knowledge to address applied (conservation/health/management) problems (2 questions, 10 marks each, to give 20 possible marks)
Name | Weighting | Hurdle | Due |
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Oral-based presentation | 15% | No | Slides due Fri 9 Aug; presentations 10-11 Aug during prac |
Mid-semester test | 25% | No | 2024-09-11 |
Practical Report | 25% | No | 2024-10-20 |
Final Exam | 35% | Yes | Exam Period |
Assessment Type 1: Presentation
Indicative Time on Task 2: 10 hours
Due: Slides due Fri 9 Aug; presentations 10-11 Aug during prac
Weighting: 15%
You will give a short presentation on a key topic in ecology
Assessment Type 1: Quiz/Test
Indicative Time on Task 2: 13 hours
Due: 2024-09-11
Weighting: 25%
There will be an online quiz. The questions may be based on lectures, reading materials and practicals, and will test your knowledge of ecological concepts and your understanding of equations used in different subfields of ecology.
Assessment Type 1: Practice-based task
Indicative Time on Task 2: 13 hours
Due: 2024-10-20
Weighting: 25%
You will write a scientific report, in the format of a paper for the journal Austral Ecology, describing one of the practical experiments, and discussing principles of fieldwork. The report will be uploaded to Turnitin.
Assessment Type 1: Examination
Indicative Time on Task 2: 23 hours
Due: Exam Period
Weighting: 35%
This is a hurdle assessment task (see assessment policy for more information on hurdle assessment tasks)
The final exam will be held during the Semester 2 Exam Period. Please consult the University Handbook to determine the commencement and finishing dates of the compulsory exam period. This exam will assess your understanding and interpretation of ecological patterns, processes and concepts, and your ability to use these to suggest solutions to contemporary environmental issues
1 If you need help with your assignment, please contact:
2 Indicative time-on-task is an estimate of the time required for completion of the assessment task and is subject to individual variation
Lectures start in week 1 and practicals in week 2.
The unit consists of 2 lectures per week (available to infrequent attendance students via Echo360) and either
There is a compulsory field trip to Stanwell Tops in the September mid-semester break that all students enrolled in this unit must attend. Students who cannot attend the fieldtrip should NOT enrol in this unit.
There is no prescribed text book for this course. Instead, I have compiled a collection of media (papers, videos, websites) that directly complement the lectures. These are available via the iLearn site for this unit. It is expected that you review these materials before coming to each lecture.
If you would also like to consult a textbook (this is not compulsory), I suggest:
Begon M, Howarth RW, Townsend CR (2014) Essentials of Ecology. 4th edition. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Cambridge. The 3rd (2008) edition is also acceptable, if you can come by it second hand.
Unit web page
PowerPoint slides, lecture recordings, unit readings, copies of all unit hand-outs and helpful resources for completion of assessments will be available through iLearn. Consequently, it is strongly recommended that you interact with the BIOL2410/6410 online unit regularly. To access the online unit, go to https://iLearn.mq.edu.au/login/MQ/ and type in your Macquarie OneID Username and password.
New to iLearn? You can find out more at: https://students.mq.edu.au/support/technology/systems/ilearn
Experiencing difficulties? contact the IT Service Desk at help@mq.edu.au.
We will communicate with you via your university email and through announcements on iLearn. Queries to convenors can either be placed on the iLearn discussion board or sent to the unit convenor via the contact email on iLearn.
For the latest information on the University’s response to COVID-19, please refer to the Coronavirus infection page on the Macquarie website: https://www.mq.edu.au/about/coronavirus-faqs. Remember to check this page regularly in case the information and requirements change during semester. If there are any changes to this unit in relation to COVID, these will be communicated via iLearn.
Part 1. Organisms and their environment
WEEK 1
22nd July 1. What is ecology, and why does it matter?
24th July 2. Conditions, resources and the niche concept
WEEK 2
29th July 3. Distributions
31st July 4. Global patterns of productivity
WEEK 3
5th August 5. Ecological strategies and their evolution
7th August 6. Population growth and intraspecific competition
Part 2. Interactions among species
WEEK 4
12th August 7. Interspecific competition
14th August 8. Predation and herbivory
WEEK 5
19th August 9. Parasitism and disease
21st August 10. Facilitation and mutualism
Part 4. Communities and ecosystems
WEEK 6
26th August 11. Community structure
28th August 12. Community function
WEEK 7
2nd September 13. Disturbance and succession
4th September 14. Island biogeography \
WEEK 8
9th September 15. Preparing for the field trip
11th September MID-SEMESTER TEST
MID SEMESTER BREAK
WEEK 9
30th September 16. The flux of energy through food webs
2nd October 17. The flux of matter through food webs
WEEK 10
7th October PUBLIC HOLIDAY – NO LECTURE
9th October 18. Spatial subsidies
5. Applied ecological issues
WEEK 11
14th October 19. One Health: healthy ecosystems, healthy people
16th October 20. Pest species: invasion biology, biosecurity and management
WEEK 12
21st October 21. Future Ecosystems: meeting the challenges of climate change and urbansiation
23rd October 22. Ecological impacts and their assessment
WEEK 13
28th October 23. Nature repair: restoration, reconciliation and Nature based Soultions
30th October 24. Managed ecosystems: fisheries and aquaculture, forestry, agriculture
For all practical sessions (including Oral Presentations in weeks 4 and 5) you must be wearing covered shoes to be allowed entry to the labs and there is strictly no eating or drinking.
Timetable for weekday attendance students (infrequent attendance students will do on 10-11 Aug)
Week 1 22-23 July No prac
Week 2 29-30 July Practical induction/censusing deep sea life
Week 3 5-6 August Carbon accounting (fieldwork)
Week 4 12-13 August Oral presentations 1
Week 5 19-20 August Oral presentations 2
Week 6 26-27 August Herbivory and enemy release hypothesis (fieldwork)
Week 7 2-3 September Species richness (fieldwork)
All students are required to participate in a field trip at Stanwell Tops. You may attend one of two sessions: A: 23-25 September OR B: 25-27 September. Students who have genuine clashes (e.g. other field trips, work or carer responsibilities) will be given first preference of fieldtrip. Others are invited to indicate their preferred trip, with remaining places filled on a first-come first-served basis (it is important that we have equal numbers of students on each). Places on specific fieldtrips are not confirmed until full payment has been made. Sign-ups for field-trips will be done electronically via Google docs. The web link for sign-up will be made available on iLearn from Mon 29 July. Please sign up by the end of week 4 (Fri 16 August).
Macquarie University policies and procedures are accessible from Policy Central (https://policies.mq.edu.au). Students should be aware of the following policies in particular with regard to Learning and Teaching:
Students seeking more policy resources can visit Student Policies (https://students.mq.edu.au/support/study/policies). It is your one-stop-shop for the key policies you need to know about throughout your undergraduate student journey.
To find other policies relating to Teaching and Learning, visit Policy Central (https://policies.mq.edu.au) and use the search tool.
Macquarie University students have a responsibility to be familiar with the Student Code of Conduct: https://students.mq.edu.au/admin/other-resources/student-conduct
Results published on platform other than eStudent, (eg. iLearn, Coursera etc.) or released directly by your Unit Convenor, are not confirmed as they are subject to final approval by the University. Once approved, final results will be sent to your student email address and will be made available in eStudent. For more information visit connect.mq.edu.au or if you are a Global MBA student contact globalmba.support@mq.edu.au
At Macquarie, we believe academic integrity – honesty, respect, trust, responsibility, fairness and courage – is at the core of learning, teaching and research. We recognise that meeting the expectations required to complete your assessments can be challenging. So, we offer you a range of resources and services to help you reach your potential, including free online writing and maths support, academic skills development and wellbeing consultations.
Macquarie University provides a range of support services for students. For details, visit http://students.mq.edu.au/support/
The Writing Centre provides resources to develop your English language proficiency, academic writing, and communication skills.
The Library provides online and face to face support to help you find and use relevant information resources.
Macquarie University offers a range of Student Support Services including:
Got a question? Ask us via the Service Connect Portal, or contact Service Connect.
For help with University computer systems and technology, visit http://www.mq.edu.au/about_us/offices_and_units/information_technology/help/.
When using the University's IT, you must adhere to the Acceptable Use of IT Resources Policy. The policy applies to all who connect to the MQ network including students.
We value student feedback to be able to continually improve the way we offer our units. As such we encourage students to provide constructive feedback via student surveys, to the teaching staff directly, or via the FSE Student Experience & Feedback link in the iLearn page.
Student feedback from the previous offering of this unit was very positive overall, with students pleased with the clarity around assessment requirements and the level of support from teaching staff. However, students noted that release of some marks was delayed. The technical issues that caused this delay have now been rectified and marking support enhanced to facilitate a shorter turn-around in marking of assessments. Also, this year the examples of how ecological knowledge can be applied to solve medical and biosecurity problems have also been increased, to accommodate students in the Bachelor of Medical Science.
Unit information based on version 2024.02 of the Handbook