NIGK22002U Tropical Botany
Tropical Botany has focus on plant knowledge in a broad sense covering recognition /identification, geographical distribution, ecology and human use of plants. It covers important crop plants, timber trees, non-timber forest products, medicinal plants, pasture grasses, ornamentals as well as ecological important plants. During a series of lectures and exercises, the students will become familiar with taxonomic principles, botanical terminology, plant morphology, occurrence of plant families around the world as related to climate, evolution and continental drift, plant ecology, pollination, fruit and seed dispersal. Students will be introduced to various web-based information sources, floras and Apps.
Parallel with these overall principles, the course will go through a large number of selected plant families with highlight on characters, genera and species. Some of these will be presented by students. Dry material, and to the extent fresh plant-material is available from the Botanical Garden, these materials will be integrated parts of presentations and exercises.
Students will elaborate a report on an in-depth study of a selected topic, plant family or group of families during the progression of the course. The selected topic should include several elements of the course curriculum.
After this course, students will be able to:
Knowledge:
- Identify important tropical plant families through analysis of morphological characters
- Describe a plant using the proper morphological terms
- List the most important usages and ecological requirements of a selection of tropical plants
- Research characteristics, properties, and use of a plant from online resources
- Correctly classify a species taxonomically based on systematics
- Apply the correct scientific and English names of tropical plants
- Relate species morphology and characters to ecological adaptations such as habitat, pollination or regeneration
Skills
- Gather, analyze, critically evaluate, and communicate knowledge on plants families, species, and use
- Identify species by the aid of appropriate floras, Apps or on-line sources
- Assess a species’ potential as e.g. crop, medicinal, timber, toxic etc. based on knowledge of its taxonomic affiliation
Competences
- Recommend species for evaluation e.g. as future crops or ornamentals
- Advise about plant biodiversity and sustainable production
- Provide an inventory of a species in an area
- Make recommendations about protective measures for local flora
Please see absalon page.
Academic qualifications equivalent to a BSc degree is recommended.
- Category
- Hours
- Lectures
- 20
- Class Instruction
- 12
- Preparation
- 60
- Theory exercises
- 15
- Practical exercises
- 27
- Project work
- 50
- Guidance
- 20
- Exam
- 2
- Total
- 206
- Credit
- 7,5 ECTS
- Type of assessment
- Written assignment, Prepared during courseOral examination, 30 minutes
- Type of assessment details
- Written assignment followed by 30 minutes oral exam without preperation. The oral exam accounts for 50% and the written course assignment (prepared during the course) 50% towards to the total mark. An overall assessment is made after the oral exam.
- Exam registration requirements
Student presentation of chosen families, genera and 'crop(s)'
- Aid
- Without aids
- Marking scale
- 7-point grading scale
- Censorship form
- No external censorship
One internal examiner
- Re-exam
Indetical to the ordinary exam.
If the requirements are not met, the student must do the presentation of chosen 'crop(s)' to the course coordinator two weeks before the reexamination at the latest.
Criteria for exam assesment
Please see learning outcome
Course information
- Language
- English
- Course code
- NIGK22002U
- Credit
- 7,5 ECTS
- Level
- Full Degree Master
- Duration
- 1 block
- Placement
- Block 3
- Schedule
- B
- Course capacity
- 25
The number of places might be reduced if you register in the late-registration period (BSc and MSc) or as a credit or single subject student.
Study board
- Study Board of Natural Resources, Environment and Animal Science
Contracting departments
- Department of Geoscience and Natural Resource Management
- The Natural History Museum of Denmark
Contracting faculty
- Faculty of Science
Course Coordinators
- Lars Schmidt (lsc@ign.ku.dk)