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Plant
Biology Graduate Courses
201.
Plant Senescence: Cellular and Molecular Aspects (4) Lecture--4
hours. Prerequisite: Plant Biology 111, 112; Biological Sciences 102 and
103. Cellular and molecular phenomena associated with the senescence of
plants and plant parts. Emphasis on principles and mechanisms. Offered
in alternate years.--(II.)
202.
Advanced Physiology of Cultivated Plants (2) Lecture--1
hour; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: graduate standing, Plant Biology
111 or the equivalent. Physiological processes as they pertain to growth
and partitioning in higher plants. Background lectures on source-sink
concepts and current areas of investigation followed by weekly round-table
discussion led by students on focused sub-topics in the source-sink area.
Offered in alternate years. (S/U grading only.)--I. Matthews, DeJong
205B.
Advanced Plant Physiology (3) Lecture/discussion--3
hours. Prerequisite: Plant Biology 111, 112, and Biological Sciences 103.
Photosynthesis, photophosphorylation, chloroplast metabolism and biology.
Offered in alternate years.--II. Theg
205C.
Advanced Plant Physiology/Biochemistry (3) Lecture--3
hours. Prerequisite: Plant Biology 111, 112, Biological Sciences 103.
Integrative studies that combine physiological, biochemical and molecular
approaches to study of plant metabolism. Fundamentals of basic metabolic
pathways extending to use of mutants and genetic engineering to dissect
such pathways; how pathways are integrated and respond to signals. Offered
in alternate years.--III.
208.
Plant Hormones and Regulators (4) Lecture--3
hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: Plant Biology 112. Chemistry,
biochemistry and physiological activity of major classes of natural plant
growth regulators. Primary consideration given to concepts that are of
current research interest. Growth regulators in agriculture. Offered in
alternate years.--II. Labavitch
210.
Plant Ecophysiology (3) Lecture--3
hours. Prerequisite: Plant Biology 111, 112, 117. Study of the mechanisms
of physiological adaptation of plants to their environment. Offered in
alternate years.--(II.)
211.
Ecophysiological Methods (3) Lecture--1
hour; laboratory--4 hours; individual project; one Saturday field trip
to be arranged. Prerequisite: Plant Biology 111, 117, and consent of instructor.
A laboratory and lecture course covering basic concepts underlying the
research methods and instrumentation useful in plant ecophysiology.--III.
(III.) Pearcy
212.
Physiology of Herbicidal Action (3) Lecture--3
hours. Prerequisite: Plant Biology 112, 122. Study of the fundamental
processes involved in the physiological action of herbicides. Detailed
consideration of the fate of herbicides in plants. Offered in alternate
years.--III. Bayer, Falk
214.
Higher Plant Cell Walls (3) Lecture--2
hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: Plant Biology 112, and a course
in biochemistry. Lectures focus on the structure, analysis, synthesis,
and development-related metabolism of cell walls. Discussions center on
analysis of scientific papers related to lecture topics. Offered in alternate
years.--I. Labavitch, Delmer, Nevins
216.
Advanced Topics in Mineral Nutrition (4) Lecture--3
hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: Plant Biology 135 or consent
of instructor. Cellular compartmentation of mineral elements, new methods
and results; selected topics in absorption, translocation, metabolism
and function of mineral elements; nutrition and transport in plants adapted
to special nutrient environments. Offered in alternate years.--III. Lachli
217.
Membrane Biology of Plants (3) Lecture--2
hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: Plant Biology 112 and Biological
Sciences 103, or consent of instructor. Structure, biogenesis, and function
of plant cell membranes. Emphasis will be placed on the molecular basis
of plant membrane functions and on the role of membranes in selected physiological
processes. Offered in alternate years.--(III.) Lucas
218A.
Advanced Concepts in Plant Cell Biology: Cell Biogenesis (3) Lecture/discussion--3
hours. Prerequisite: Biological Sciences 102, 103. Survey of molecular
mechanisms underlying structural and functional differentiation of plant
cell subcellular compartments. Topics include membrane and protein biosynthesis,
protein targeting and turnover, and regulation of nuclear and organellar
gene expression as related to the biogenesis of plant cell organelles.
Offered in alternate years.--(II.) Bennet, Theg
218B.
Advanced Concepts in Plant Cell Biology: Signal Transduction and Intercellular
Communication (3) Lecture--3
hours. Prerequisite: Biological Sciences 102, 103 or consent of instructor.
Intracellular signal transduction pathways in the plant cells as well
as longer term, adaptive responses which involve signals transmitted between
plant cells. Weekly lectures and student-led discussions on current literature.
Offered in alternate years.--III. O'Neill, Lucas
219.
Reproductive Biology of Flowering Plants (3) Lecture--2
hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: Plant Biology 111 and Biological
Sciences 101. Fundamental mechanisms of reproductive biology of flowering
plants and their influence on genetic variation, evolution, and cultural
practices. Offered in alternate years. (Former course Plant Science 270.)--(I.)
220.
Plant Developmental Biology (4) Lecture--3
hours; discussion--1 hour; term paper. Prerequisite: plant anatomy, physiology,
and biochemistry. A survey of the concepts of plant development and organization.
Examines plant cells, tissues, and organs with special emphasis on experimental
evidence for mechanisms regulating developmental processes. Offered in
alternate years.--III. Bowman, Sinha
223.
Special Topics in Scientific Method (2) Discussion--2
hours. Examine the historical and philosophical background of the scientific
method. Analyze the rational, perceptual, causal, creative and social
aspects of scientific knowledge. Clarify the roles of reason, experimentation
and creativity in scientific research. (S/U grading only.)--I. Bradford
224.
Water in Physiology and Ecology of Plants (4) Lecture--3
hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: Hydrologic Science 124, or Plant
Biology 111 and 117, or consent of instructor. Evapotranspiration and
energy balance; water and component potentials; water transport to, within,
and from plants; dynamics and regulation of water status; drought resistance;
responses to water deficits and salinity; water use efficiency; adaptation
to aridity; productivity in relation to water. Offered every fourth quarter.
(Former course Plant Science 224.)--(I.)
225.
Methods and Instrumentation for Crop and Soil Science (3) Lecture--1
hour; laboratory--3 hours; discussion--1 hour. Prerequisite: basic knowledge
of plant physiology, soil science, chemistry and physics. Theory and practice
of in situ sampling and instrumentation methods for crop science (broadly
defined to include tree crops) and related aspects of soil science (e.g.,
moisture and fertility) and laboratory analysis. Offered in alternate
years.--III. (III.)
227.
Plant Molecular Biology (4) Lecture/discussion--4
hours. Prerequisite: Molecular and Cellular Biology 121 or 161. Molecular
aspects of higher plant biology with emphasis on gene expression. Plant
nuclear and organelle genome organization, gene structure, mechanisms
of gene regulation, gene transfer, and special topics related to development
and response to biological and environmental stimuli.--II. Britt, Sinha
229.
Molecular Biology of Plant Reproduction (3) Lecture--3
hours. Molecular genetic basis of plant reproduction. Emphasis on understanding
developmentally regulated gene expression as it relates to the major changes
that occur during plant reproduction and on the genetic control of flowering.
Offered in alternate years.
290A.
Faculty Seminar (1) Seminar--1
hour. Seminars presented by members of Plant Biology faculty describing
their areas of research. Required of all beginning students in the Plant
Biology Graduate Group. (S/U grading only.)--I. (I.)
290B.
Seminar (1) Seminar--1
hour. Seminars presented by visiting scientists on research topics of
current interest. (S/U grading only.)--I, II, III. (I, II, III.)
290C.
Research Conference in Botany (1) Discussion--1
hour. Prerequisite: graduate standing and/or consent of instructor. Presentation
and discussion by faculty and graduate students of research projects in
botany. May be repeated for credit. (S/U grading only.)--I, II, III. (I,
II, III.)
291.
Graduate Student Seminar in Plant Biology (1) Seminar--1
hour. Prerequisite: graduate student standing. Student-given seminars
on topics in plant biology, with critiques by instructor and peers. How
to give a seminar, including preparation of visual and other teaching
aids. Topic determined by instructor in charge. May be repeated for credit.
(S/U grading only.)--II, III. (II, III.)
292.
Seminars in Plant Biology (1) Seminar--1
hour. Prerequisite: consent of instructor. Review of current literature
in botanical disciplines. Disciplines and special subjects to be announced
quarterly. Students present and analyze assigned topics. May be repeated
for credit. (S/U grading only.)--II. (II.)
293.
Seminar in Postharvest Biology (1) Discussion--1
hour. Prerequisite: consent of instructor; open to advanced undergraduates.
Intensive study of selected topics in the postharvest biology of fruits,
vegetables, and ornamentals. May be repeated for credit. (S/U grading
only.)--I, II, III. (I, II, III.) Saltveit
297T.
Tutoring in Plant Biology (1-5) Tutorial--3-15
hours. Offers graduate students, particularly those not serving as teaching
assistants, the opportunity to gain teaching experience. (S/U grading
only.)
298.
Group Study (1-5) Prerequisite:
graduate standing.
299.
Research (1-12) Prerequisite:
graduate standing. (S/U grading only.)
Professional
Course
390.
The Teaching of Plant Biology (2) Discussion--2 hours. Prerequisite: graduate standing; concurrent appointment as a teaching assistant in Plant Biology. Consideration of the problems of teaching botany, especially of preparing for and conducting discussions, guiding student laboratory work, and the formulation of questions and topics for examinations. (S/U grading only.)--I, II, III. (I, II, III.) |
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This page last modified on October 25, 2001