This course is now led by Dr. Cyndi Carter.
Course Goals
This is a professional level course primarily designed to serve two core constituencies:
To accomplish these goals each student will …
- wildlife and ecological sciences majors interested in professional careers that may include research or management of amphibians and reptiles, and
- graduate students focused on wildlife or amphibian and reptile ecology and management.
To accomplish these goals each student will …
- learn the biological features that characterize the classes Amphibia and Reptilia and that make them distinctive from other vertebrates and from each other.
- learn the phylogenetic origins and relationships of major groups of herpetofauna.
- use a variety of approaches including lectures, student-centered instructional labs, field trips, and autonomous field activities to learn the taxonomy, systematic relationships, ecology, and geographic distributions of herpetofauna globally and in Georgia.
- use a variety of approaches including lectures, student-centered instructional labs, and field trips to evaluate patterns of convergent evolution among amphibians and reptiles, and learn morphological, physiological, life history, and behavioral traits associated with particular environments.
- use labs, field trips, and autonomous field activities to practice standard field and laboratory techniques used in herpetology, including field collecting and monitoring techniques, classic and contemporary voucher techniques, and the regulations and guidelines associated with capturing, handling, and conducting research on reptiles and amphibians.
- use lectures, case studies, and field trips to examine conservation issues related to herpetofauna on a regional, national, and global scale.
- use stories to explore lines of herpetological research, the people engaged in that research, and the process of conducting scientific research.
- engage the general public about the biology and importance of herpetofauna.
Course Structure
As you will come to learn, the treatment of amphibians and reptiles as a single taxonomic group is more an artifact of history than biology, and the diversity of both groups makes teaching them together in a single course a challenge. To address the breadth of diversity and issues related to herpetofauna and to provide detailed knowledge of regional fauna, the lecture and laboratory portions of this course are structured to address different objectives and demands. The lecture components focus on the ecological and evolutionary processes that regulate global and regional amphibian and reptile diversity, knowledge of the relationships between habitat and morphology, physiology, and life history and the use of amphibians and reptiles in research questions to illustrate broader scientific theories and approaches. Time is also dedicated in lecture periods to apply ecological knowledge to conservation and management case studies. The laboratory portion of the course focuses on practicing techniques to inventory, monitor, measure, and voucher herpetofauna, and knowledge about the natural history and key characteristics for the identification of species in Georgia.