Vertebrate Zoology Labs SUBJECT Ideas for labs in vertebrate zoology DATE 12/95 I am going to become more involved in the vertebrate zoology labs next semester and I would like some http://biowww.clemson.edu/biolab/vert.html
Vertebrate Zoology Commencing Students, myUNSW. Home Virtual Handbook. Printable Version. BIOS2061 vertebrate zoology. Faculty, Faculty of Science. School, Sch Biol, Earth Environ Sci. http://www.student.unsw.edu.au/handbook/courses/BIOS2061.shtml
Extractions: Printable Version Faculty Faculty of Science School Contact Banks,Peter Campus Kensington Campus Course Outline Comparative study of the Chordata, with particular reference to the vertebrates, including morphology, systematics, evolution and natural history, with reference to selected aspects of physiology and reproduction. Practical work to supplement lectures. Assumed knowledge: BIOS1101 and BIOS1201 Note: Students should consult the school of Biological, Earth and Enviromental Science website for laboratory registration details (www.bees.unsw.edu.au). Enrolment in this course may be subject to quota restrictions. Such restrictions will only apply to students taking this course as an elective. Field excursions are compulsory and will involve expense to individual students. Career Undergraduate Units of Credit Contact Hours per Week Offered Session One 2004 HECS Band Resources My Course (Online Library resources) Last Modified: Friday, 16-Jan-2004 12:07:16 EST
Yale Peabody Museum: Herpetology The herpetology collection is part of the Division of vertebrate zoology. Access to and use of the collections is available for http://www.peabody.yale.edu/collections/her/
Extractions: Collection History Search the Collection Catalog The Peabody's herpetological collection consists of approximately 18,000 specimens of amphibians and reptiles. The collection includes over 300 amphibian taxa and over 1300 reptilian taxa. The majority of the collection is wet (in alcohol), and there are approximately 1,000 osteological specimens. A total of 96 type specimens representing 8 taxa are represented. Although the collections are worldwide in scope, the emphasis has historically been on the herpetofauna of North America, Africa and Asia. The majority of specimens are from the United States, with most of those being from Connecticut and Florida. More specimens in the collection are from Egypt than from any other non-USA locality. Other significant localities include the West Indies and China. Much of the presently uncataloged material is from localities in Cameroon and the Philippines. The specimens in both the amphibian and reptile collections were obtained primarily after the 1930s. Recently, expeditions to El Salvador, Hong Kong, and Kenya have added significantly to the herpetology collection. Additionally, field collecting in New England and elsewhere in the United States has improved the taxonomic diversity of the North American holdings. New England collections include specimens from the Maine Amphibian and Reptile Atlas Project, as well as from the Connecticut Amphibian Monitoring Project (in which Peabody Museum is a partner institution). The herpetology collection is part of the Division of Vertebrate Zoology. Access to and use of the collections is available for scholarly use by legitimate researchers. Loans are issued to responsible individuals at established institutions. Loan requests should be directed to the Collections Manager. Loans are governed by the
Vertebrate Zoology Home vertebrate zoology (BIOL 332). College of Charleston Fall 2003 Dr. Joseph Bernardo, Professor. Welcome to the CofC vertebrate zoology Course Web Page. http://www.cofc.edu/~bernardoj/vert/verthome.cofc.html
Extractions: INTRODUCTION: Welcome to the CofC Vertebrate Zoology Course Web Page. This page will be used extensively in the course, and will be updated frequently with new links and information. I hope that it also serves a wider community as a resource for teaching and learning about vertebrates. This page would not be possible without the rich library of web resources already available, much of which comes from individual research laboratories. My goal is to bring these resources together in one place so that they can be profitably used to enhance a more traditional, book and specimen-based course in Vertebrate Zoology. I am interested in learning about links to other resources, particularly to research pages from individual labs. When you discover these, please tell me about them so I can check them out. Also, if you have suggestions about how to better organize this page and make it more efficient, please let me know. Also, if a link does not work, please tell me so I can fix it! Thanks, and enjoy.
SDSU: Zool 365 Vertebrate Zoology Click to view SDSU s Hyperlink Policy Homepage not available. Click Here For SDSU Home Page,Zool 365 vertebrate zoology. Course http://www3.sdstate.edu/Academics/CollegeOfAgricultureAndBiologicalSciences/Biol
OSSM: Vertebrate Zoology OSSM vertebrate zoology Home Page. Announcements; Syllabus for spring semester 1997; Firstday assignment; Lecture notes; Lab notes. Return http://www.ossm.edu/biology/vertzool.htm
OSSM: Vertebrate Zoology vertebrate zoology Lecture Notes. Return to the vertebrate zoology Home Page. Return to the Biology Department Page. Return to the Academics Page. http://www.ossm.edu/biology/vzln.htm
GVZ 2004 Syllabus General vertebrate zoology Biology 386. Spring 2004. If you are enrolled in BIOL 386, you are required to enroll in vertebrate zoology Laboratory (BIOL 386L). http://biology.unm.edu/biology/fishes/people/gvz/gvzsyl.htm
Extractions: General Vertebrate Zoology Biology 386 Spring 2004 Room: Biology 100 Instructor Dr. Thomas F. Turner Office: 278 Castetter Hall Email: turnert@unm.edu Web: http://biology.unm.edu/Biology/fishes/people/turner.htm Phone: 277-7541 (voice) Office Hours: MW 2:30 3:30 pm , or by appointment* *E-mail contact is encouraged Course description: Through a combination of lectures, laboratory exercises, and independent research project, field trips, and readings, this course will provide a general overview of species diversity, natural history, and ecological and evolutionary relationships of vertebrates. Fundamental concepts of the course are highlighted through comparisons within and among vertebrate groups. We will emphasize evolutionary relationships among vertebrates as a framework for comparison, and use evolutionary relationships to keep track of morphological, physiological, and ecological innovations that have contributed to the remarkable diversity and abundance of vertebrates. Requirements: 1) Textbook: Pough, F.H., C.M. Janis, and J.B. Heiser. 2002.
NatureServe Jobs JOB TITLE Curator, vertebrate zoology LOCATION Victoria, British Columbia DATE POSTED January 9, 2004 CLOSING DATE February 3, 2004. http://www.natureserve.org/job/jobRBCMCurator.jsp
COMPARATIVE VERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY Comparative vertebrate zoology. BIOLOGY 313 spring SEMESTER 2003. LECTURE SCHEDULE. 1. T Jan. 7 Introduction to Chordates. 2. TH Jan. 9 Basic Body Plan I. http://www.utc.edu/Faculty/Timothy-Gaudin/gaudin_BIOL313.html
Extractions: Comparative Vertebrate Zoology BIOLOGY 313 spring SEMESTER 2003 T Jan. 7 Introduction to Chordates. TH Jan. 9 Basic Body Plan I. T Jan. 14 Basic Body Plan II. TH Jan. 16 Basic Body Plan III. T Jan. 21 Basic Body Plan IV. TH Jan. 23 Systematics and the fossil record. T Jan. 28 Systematics exercise 25 pts TH Jan. 30 Examination - 100 pts. T Feb. 4 Origin of Chordates I. TH Feb. 6 Origin of Chordates II. T Feb. 11 Aquatic Locomotion. TH Feb. 13 Structure of Fishes: Locomotion. T Feb. 18 Structure of Fishes: Feeding and Respiration. TH Feb. 20 Diversity of Fishes. T Feb. 25 From Fish to Tetrapod, Tetrapod Structure. TH Feb. 27 Tetrapod Structure II. T Mar. 4 Examination - 100 pts. TH Mar. 6 Amniote Egg, Amniote Structure. Spring Break T Mar. 18 Amniote Diversity. TH Mar. 20 Dinosaurs and the Evolution of Endothermy. T Mar. 25 Evolution of Flight. TH Mar. 27 Synapsids and the Origin of Mammals. T Apr. 1 Examination - 100 pts. TH Apr. 3 Structure of Mammals I. T Apr. 8 Structure of Mammals II. TH Apr. 10 Diversity of Mammals. T Apr. 15 Mammalian Locomotion. TH Apr. 17
Vertebrate Zoology By 307 vertebrate zoology. http://www.stetson.edu/~pmay/307.htm
Vertebrate Zoology vertebrate zoology. BIOS 386 Fall 2001. Instructor Guillermo Ortí, 314 Manter Hall, tel 472-3433, email gorti@biocomp.unl.edu. http://www-class.unl.edu/bios386/
Vertebrate Zoology Vertebrate Evolution Course 1 Contributor Edward Arata These two pages were put up by a biology professor at the University of Miami by the name of T http://www.teachnet.k12.ca.us/Subdisciplines/Biological Science/vertebrate_zoolo
Extractions: The American Museum of Natural History possesses one of the largest mammal collections in the world, and it is distinguished by both its representativeness and comprehensiveness. There are 273,390 catalogued specimens including 1078 name-bearing entities. All 26 orders of mammals are represented, 96% of 136 families, approximately 50% of 1135 genera, and about 60% of the 4629 species (taxon benchmark numbers from Wilson and Reeder, 1993). Collections from Australia/New Guinea, North Asia, parts of Africa and South America are among the most comprehensive available. The collections of bats, whales, marsupials, primates, rodents, and ungulates are recognized as being among the best in the world. The Mammalogy collections are heavily used by both domestic and foreign professional mammalogists and students.
Versata - Customer Success University of California Museum of vertebrate zoology. Industry Education. Application IntraBusiness Commerce. Website URL gizmo.lbl.gov/jopmDemo/mvz.html. http://www.versata.com/customersuccess/highlighted/cp-ucberkeleymuseum.html
Extractions: Home Online Library Contact Customer Overview Highlighted Customer Profiles Highlighted ISV Customers Versata for the Insurance Industry ... Versata for the Financial Services Industry Highlighted Customer Profiles Highlighted Customer Profiles Customer Profile List AMS ANZDL Aspecta Insurance ... U.S. Department of Labor University of California Museum of Vertebrate Zoology Industry: Education Application: Intra-Business Commerce Website URL: gizmo.lbl.gov/jopmDemo/mvz.html Most of the following content is from the article "Museum Café" published in Internet Design. Do not copy and use without attribution. Follow this link to see the entire article: http://idm.internet.com/rweb/mvz.shtml Summary Information about the 610,000 catalogued specimens in the University of California Museum of Vertebrate Zoology (MVZ) is fundamental to both its own research and that of other research institutions around the world.
Department Of Vertebrate Zoology Department of vertebrate zoology 87100 Torun, Gagarina 9, phone +48 (56) 611-44-57. Head of the Department dr hab. Andrzej Przystalski http://www.biol.uni.torun.pl/ochr_sr_en/zool_kr.html
Extractions: Staff: dr Krzysztof Kasprzyk tutor phone +48 (56) 611-44-57 e-mail: kasprzyk@uni.torun.pl dr Tomasz Brauze assistant phone +48 (56) 611-44-57 e-mail: brauze@biol.uni.torun.pl mgr Roman Pawlak assistant phone +48 (56) 611-44-57 e-mail: pawlak@biol.uni.torun.pl dr Alicja Francois-Krassowska senior lecturer phone +48 (56) 611-44-57 e-mail: afkrass@biol.uni.torun.pl mgr Joanna Kujawska technical assistant phone +48 (56) 611-44-57 e-mail: kujawsk@biol.uni.torun.pl mgr Grzegorz Neubauer PhD student phone +48 (56) 611-44-57 Research projects: Morfogeneza, morfologia, anatomia i histologia porównawcza przewodu pokarmowego krêgowców (zoologia, anatomia i histologia porównawcza), rozmiary komórek krêgowców (zoologia, anatomia i histologia porównawcza, ontogeneza, filogeneza). Rozmiary komórek krêgowców (zoologia, anatomia i histologia porównawcza, ontogeneza, filogeneza).
Extractions: BIOL 121, Vertebrate Zoology Comparative anatomy and physiology of vertebrates, with emphasis on comparison with human systems. Laboratory focuses on dissection of representatives from different vertebrate classes Instructor comments: Vertebrate survey with multiple dissections and correlation to human structure and function. Blackboard access: http://blackboard.hvcc.edu Online center for Miller (this years) text book (password required): http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0070294119/ Online student center for Hickman (last years) text book (no password): http://www.mhhe.com/biosci/pae/zoology/hickman11/student_index.mhtml main page background BIOL 220: Anatomy ... POLS 222: Global Seminar Please send comments and questions to: cronewil@hvcc.edu HVCC home page External and unofficial links are not endorsed by Hudson Valley Community College This web site was last updated on May 28, 2003