Lecturer(s)
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Hajer Jaromír, doc. RNDr. CSc.
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Kubát Karel, doc. RNDr. CSc.
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Course content
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Course description: This lecture-based course will provide students with a foundation in biogeographical concepts as they apply to these issues and to others in ressource management, land-use planning, and environmental policy. Although biogeography spans a range of subfields, this course is focused on the components of biogeography most relevant to an applied understanding of recent and historic human-environment interaction. Biogeography is an integrative discipline that unites concepts and informations from ecology, physical geography, plant and animal biology as well as evolutionary biology. The course of biogeography will acquaint students with the distribution patterns of wild animals and plants and the factors that determine these patterns. Students by the end of this course, will be able to use ecological and biogeographical terminology; be able to map the distribution and describe the nature of earth´s major terrestrial biomes and be able to explain the variety of the geographic ranges and areas of living organisms. Course programme: Status the main principles of biogeohraphy Objectives of zoogeography and phytogeography Basic data elements of phytogeography, phytogeographic provinces (floristic provinces) and elements. Questions and approaches i phytogeography shared with zoogeography. Phytogeography, distribution of genetic variation and , historical biogeography, and general plant distribution patterns. Branches of Zoogeography, Branches of Biology relevant to Zoogeography Animal distribution. Faunistics as a study of fauna of some territory or area.
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Learning activities and teaching methods
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unspecified
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Learning outcomes
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Biogeography is an integrative discipline that unites concepts and information from ecology, physical geography, plant and animal biology as well as evolutionary biology. The course of biogeography will acquaint students with the distribution patterns of wild animals and plants and the factors that determine these patterns. Students by the end of this course, will be able to use ecological and biogeographical terminology; be able to map the distribution and describe the nature of earth´s major terrestrial biomes and be able to explain the variety and ever-changing nature of the geographic ranges and areas of living organisms.
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Prerequisites
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unspecified
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Assessment methods and criteria
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unspecified
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Recommended literature
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Buchar J. Základy zoogeografie. SPN. Praha. 1983.
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Cox C.B. et Moore P.D. Biogeography. An ecological and evolutionary approach. Blackwell Science, Cambridge.. 1993.
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Hendrych R. Fytogeografie. SPN, Praha. 1984.
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Ložek V. Příroda ve čtvrtohorách. Academia Praha.. 1973.
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Opatrný E. Zoogeografie. SPN Praha.. 1983.
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Walter H. Obščaja geobotanika. Mir, Moskva.. 1982.
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