ENT1909

ENT 1909 - Got Bees? Declines and Conservation of Honey bees and Native bees (3 Cr.) Environment, Freshman Seminar

Entomology (11022) TCOA - College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences

ENT 1909 - Got Bees? Declines and Conservation of Honey bees and Native bees (3 Cr.) Environment, Freshman Seminar

Course description

Humans are largely aware that bees are declining globally, due in large part to human land use, agricultural practices, and the changing climate. The loss of insect pollinators, including native and honeybees, presents a grand challenge that will have cascading effects throughout ecological systems and human food crop systems. Preservation of pollination services is not only an environmental issue, it is also an important challenge facing our society and world. How we, as a society, choose to address this problem will reflect on how we value the environment and the services it provides. This course is designed to reflect on the shared sense of responsibility for building a community that will address this issue. Intended audience: Undergraduates who may or may not be majoring within the sciences. Students interested in how humans interact with the environment and how the choices we make as a society impact environmental processes. No prerequisite courses required. This is a freshman seminar course/for freshman only.

Minimum credits

3

Maximum credits

3

Is this course repeatable?

No

Grading basis

A-F - A-F Grade Basis

Lecture

Requirements

001475

This course fulfills the following Liberal Education requirement(s)

The Environment

Fulfills the writing intensive requirement?

No

Typically offered term(s)

Periodic Fall