FRS 002 — Sec. 007 —
(2 unit) — CRN 26014 — F 10:00-11:50am — 203 Wellman
Pollution and Population Dynamics
Instructor: Tim Ginn, Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering,
College of Engineering
Description: The proposed course would introduce students to
the effects of pollution or contamination occurrence on the health, fitness, and
changes (both short- and long-term) of populations. To this end the course content
would include:
1. An introduction to a basic catalogue of environmental contaminants,
2. A primer on the dynamics of populations both wildlife and human, including:
growth, reproduction, mortality, predation, motion, and health, and
3. Cases where the former affects the latter, including for instance the effect
of contaminants on disease outbreaks in human populations, of organic chemicals
on marine fishes and mammals such as orca, of stormflow runoff on shellfish, and
of temperature on coral reefs.
The Goals of the class for student learning are a basic grasp
of the ways that environmental stressors impact ecosystems, and conceptual models
of how the resulting dynamics behave. By integrating these items the student is
exposed to coupled, often nonlinear, dynamics in environmental biotic/abiotic
"mixtures." This is intended to bring an awareness that encourages quantitative
thinking about challenging societal problems that are both relevant and topical,
including the societal impacts of contaminant placement, the effects of anthropogenic
pollutants on wildlife populations and ecosystem dynamics, and environmental consequences
of global warming.
Format: The seminar will consist of 9 meetings. In meeting 1,
four separate topical focal problems will be chosen for study. The remaining 8
meetings will focus on each of the four topics in series, two meetings per topic.
The first of the pair of meetings will involve lecture and dialogue with students
as we introduce the problem, and will close with assignment of students to three
groups responsible respectively for: a. physics/chemistry of stressor occurrence,
b. (micro)biology of affected population within an ecosystem context, and c. coupled
dynamics and implications for human management. The second of the pair of meetings
will consist of short reports (~5-10 pages typed single space, plus oral presentation)
from groups responsible for items a., b., and c. respectively. This approach requires
reading and short report generation in four installments during the quarter. Grading:
will be distributed uniformly over the student's performance on each of the four
projects, 25% each. Performance measures include contribution to report preparation,
and classroom participation and discussion.
About the Instructor: Professor Ginn received his undergraduate
degrees in Classics and Hydrology from the University of Virginia and his graduate
degrees in hydrogeology from Purdue University Civil Engineering. Before joining
the UCD faculty in 1996, Dr. Ginn was employed as a senior research scientist
at Battelle's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory PNNL in Richland, Washington.
He develops models of reactive transport of multicomponent environmental mixtures
with abiotic and biotic components in natural and engineered environments.