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Environmental Biology
Faculty
MSc Program
PhD Program
Interdepartmental Programs
Courses
Disclaimer
Chair Mark K. Sears (1106 Bovey, Ext. 3921) (E-mail: msears@evbhort.uoguelph.ca)
Associate Chair J. Chris Hall (2225 Bovey, Ext. 2740) (E-mail: jchall@evbhort.uoguelph.ca)
Graduate Co-ordinator Greg J. Boland (3234 Bovey, Ext. 2755) (E-mail: gboland@uoguelph.ca)
Graduate Secretary Joy Roberts (1102 Bovey, Ext. 3937) jroberts@evb.uoguelph.ca
Graduate Faculty
Gregory J. Boland BSc, MSc Acadia, PhD Guelph - Professor
Paul H. Goodwin BS Villanova, MSc Minnesota, PhD California (Davis) - Associate Professor
Andrew M. Gordon BScF New Brunswick, PhD Alaska - Associate Professor
J. Christopher Hall BSc, MSc Guelph, PhD Alberta - Professor
Robert Hall BAgrSc, PhD Melbourne - Professor
Rebecca Hallett BSc Toronto, MPM, PhD Simon Fraser - Assistant Professor
Thomas Hsiang BSc, MSc British Columbia, PhD Washington - Associate Professor
Peter G. Kevan BSc McGill, PhD Alberta - Professor
Hung Lee BSc British Columbia, PhD McGill - Professor
Steven A. Marshall BSc (Agr) Guelph, MSc Carleton, PhD Guelph - Professor
Gard W. Otis BS Duke, PhD Kansas - Associate Professor
Leonard Ritter BSc, MSc Montreal, PhD Queen's - Professor
Jonathan M. Schmidt BSc, PhD Toronto - Associate Professor
Cynthia D. Scott-Dupree BSc Brandon, MPM, PhD Simon Fraser - Associate Professor
Mark K. Sears BS, PhD California - Professor
Keith R. Solomon BSc, MSc Rhodes, PhD Illinois - Professor
Gerald R. Stephenson BS, MS, PhD Michigan State - Professor
Gordon A. Surgeoner BSc (Agr), MSc Guelph, PhD Michigan State - Professor
John C. Sutton BSc Nottingham, PhD Wisconsin - Professor
Jack T. Trevors BSc, MSc Acadia, PhD Waterloo - Professor
Associated Graduate FacultyJ. Stuart Bailey BSc, PhD Toronto - Ontario Ministry of Environment and Energy, Toronto
George L. Barron BSc Glasgow, MSc Toronto, PhD Iowa State, DSc Glasgow - Professor Emeritus
Kent B. Burnison BSc Montana State, MSc, PhD Oregon State - National Water Research Institute (CCIW), Burlington
Michael Cassidy BSc, PhD Guelph - Co-ordinator, Food Safety Science Unit, Food Safety System Development Branch, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs
John H. Carey BSc, MSc Windsor, PhD Carleton - National Water Research Institute (CCIW), Burlington
Ralph A. Chapman BSc, MSc Mount Allison, PhD Cornell - Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, London
Kristin E. Day BSc, MSc Waterloo, PhD Guelph - retired
Stephanie De Grandis BSc, MSc Toronto, PhD Guelph - Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs, Guelph
R. Austin Fletcher BSc Delhi, MSc British Columbia, PhD Alberta - Professor Emeritus
Richard Frank BSc Leeds, Dip. Agric. Cambridge, DTA Trinidad, MSA, PhD Guelph - retired
A.G. Gordon BSc New Brunswick, PhD London - Retired
Neil C.C. Gray BSc Guelph, MSc Warwick, PhD Western Ontario - ICI Biological Products, Mississauga
Bruce M. Greenberg BSc California (Berkley), PhD Colorado - University of Waterloo
Charles W. Greer BSc Memorial, PhD McGill - National Research Council of Canada
Stephen E. Hanson BScF Toronto, MSc Laurentian, PhD Guelph - Wilfrid Laurier
C. Ron Harris BA, MA UBC, PhD Wisconsin - retired
Ole Q. Hendrickson BS Wisconsin, PhD Georgia - Forestry Canada, Chalk River
Stephanie A. Hilton BA Western, MSc Guelph - Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, London
Peter V. Hodson BSc McGill, MSc UNB, PhD Guelph - National Water Research Institute (CCIW), Burlington
A. Hopkin BSc Winnipeg, MSc, PhD Manitoba - Forestry Canada, Sault Ste. Marie
A.H.G. Padman Jayaratne BSc Colombo (Sri Lanka); PhD Guelph --Assistant Professor, Dept. of Pathology and
Molecular Medicine, McMaster University
Derek C.G. Muir BSc, MSc, PhD McGill - National Water Research Institute (CCIW), Burlington
Kelly R. Munkittrick BSc, MSc Guelph, PhD Waterloo - Fisheries and Oceans, Burlington
Ross J. Norstrom BSc, PhD Alberta; PhD Stockholm --Head, Research, Wildlife Toxicology Division, National Wildlife Research Centre, Environment Canada, Hull, Quebec
John T. O’Donovan BSc, Higher Dipl. in Education, MSc, PhD University College (National Univ. of Ireland, Cork) --Research Scientist, Cropping Systems Agronony, Agriculture & Agri-Food Canada, Beaverlodge, Alberta
James E. O'Hara BSc Carleton, MSc, PhD Alberta - Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Ottawa
Ron E. Pitblado BSc, MSc, PhD Guelph - Ridgetown College of Agricultural Technology
Brian D. Ripley BSc Waterloo, MSc, PhD Guelph - Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs, Guelph
Mark R. Servos BSc, MSc Guelph, PhD Manitoba - National Water Research Institute (CCIW), Burlington
James P. Sherry PhD Ireland - National Water Research Institute (CCIW), Burlington
J. Leslie Shipp BSc, MSc, Guelph, PhD Iowa - Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Harrow
Dean G. Thompson BSc Wilfrid Laurier, MSc, PhD Guelph - Canadian Forestry Service, Sault Ste. Marie
Victor Timmer BScF, MScF New Brunswick, PhD Cornell - University of Toronto
Alan D. Tomlin BA, MSc Western, PhD Rutgers - Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, London
D. Monty Wood BA, MA Toronto, PhD McMaster - retired
Christopher D. Wren BSc, PhD Guelph - Ecological Services for Planning, Guelph
Special Graduate Faculty
Mehran Alaee BSc Concordia, PhD Guelph - National Water Research Institute (CCIW), Burlington
A. Bruce Broadbent BSc McGill, BSc Victoria, MSc McGill, PhD Guelph - Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, London
C. Kenneth Carey BSc, PhD British Columbia - University of Guelph
Malcolm D. Devine BSc Glasgow, MSc, PhD Guelph - University of Saskatchewan
Laura S. England BSc Wilfrid Laurier; MSc Waterloo; PhD Guelph — Research Associate
K. Helen Fisher BSc, MSc Guelph, PhD Cornell - Horticultural Research Institute of Ontario, Vineland Station
Brenda Harris BSc Waterloo, MSc Trent - Dow AgroSciences Canada Inc., Calgary
Donna L. Houghton BSc(Agr.), PhD Guelph - Novartis Crop Protection Inc., Canada, Guelph
Stephen B. Holmes BSc Guelph; MSc Queen’s --Research Scientist, Environmental Research & Assessment, Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Great Lakes Forestry Centre, Sault Ste. Marie
David M. Hunter BSc Nottingham, MSc Brock, PhD Guelph - Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Vineland Station
Magdalena Kostrzynski MSc, PhD Poland - Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Guelph
Scott A. Mabury BS Northland, PhD California (Davis) - University of Toronto
Wendy McFadden-Smith BSc, MSc Guelph, PhD Saskatchewan - Horticultural Research Institute of Ontario, Vineland Station
W. Lense Meyer BScF, MScF New Brunswick, PhD Laval - Lakehead University
Medhat Nasr BSc, MSc Cairo, PhD California (Davis) - Ontario Beekeepers' Association
Danny Lee Rinker BSc Philadelphia, MEd Millersville, PhD Penn State - Horticultural Research Institute of Ontario, Vineland Station
Raoul Robinson BSc Reading, Dip Ag Sc Cambridge, Dip Trop Ag Trinidad, Doctorate Mexico - retired
Alan G. Seech BSc, MSc, PhD Guelph - Grace Bioremediation Technologies, Mississauga
Paul Sibley BSc, MSc Guelph, PhD Waterloo - Centre for Toxicology, Guelph
Srinivasan Sithanantham BSc, MSc, PhD India - ICIPE, Nairobi, Kenya
Jeff H. Tolman BSc, PhD Western - Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, London
James A. Traquair BSc Western, PhD Alberta - Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, London
Laird Van Damme BScF, MScF Lakehead - KBM Forestry Consultants Inc., Thunder Bay
  The Department of Environmental Biology offers programs of study leading to MSc and PhD degrees. Graduate studies in this department are designed to train people to work independently and imaginatively with a high level of technical skill and scientific acumen in various areas of environmental biology.
MSc Program
The MSc program emphasizes two major areas of specialization: plant protection and environmental management.
Plant protection includes:
- Entomology, which emphasizes applied aspects of insect pest management plus systematics, ecology, physiology, and toxicology
- Plant pathology, which includes diseases of agronomic and horticultural crops, and emphasizes the ecology and genetics of plant pathogens, the epidemiology of disease, and methods for disease management such as chemical and biological controls.
- Weed science, which encompasses the study of weed biology and management, and the modes of
action and environmental impact of herbicides, while emphasizing the underlying biological, physical and chemical factors involved in plant growth and interactions among weedy plants, insects, pesticides and other environmental factors.
Environmental management comprises studies on the impact of anthropogenic substances and practices on the biological components of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. It encompasses several substantial research programs and areas for graduate education including apiculture, pollination biology, forestry, pesticide chemistry and toxicology, biological control, environmental microbiology, and aquatic biology. These areas are distinctive in their interdisciplinary approach to studying the impact of agricultural and manufacturing practices on both agricultural and non-agricultural systems.
Admission Requirements
Normally, applicants must hold a bachelor's degree with high second-class honours standing or better in a field appropriate to their proposed area of study. Interested students from other disciplines may also be acceptable, subject to the decision of the department graduate admissions committee.
Degree Requirements
A candidate for the MSc degree is expected to have a general knowledge of fundamental aspects of biology and detailed knowledge of the specialty area. The specialty area will normally be one of the areas in which the Department of Environmental Biology is prepared to offer a graduate degree. In addition, students are encouraged to obtain a knowledge of both theoretical and applied aspects of their specialty area.
Before the end of the student's first semester, the advisory committee will meet informally with the student to discuss the student's background, interests and knowledge in the proposed research area. The advisory committee will then establish a program of prescribed courses (at least 1.5 credits of 400- and 600-level courses) and, if required, additional courses.
All MSc candidates must complete a thesis. A statement of the objectives of the thesis research program should be prepared as early as possible.
A normal MSc program requires six semesters. Programs involving field work may require seven or eight semesters. The number of courses per semester should not normally exceed four. Among these would be courses that are core requirements of the undergraduate specialty and represent the candidate's deficiencies.
Graduate students must take both the Introductory Seminar, ENVB*6710, and the Advanced Seminar, ENVB*6720, unless exempted from taking the Introductory Seminar by the advisory committee.
PhD Program
The PhD program emphasizes the same major areas of specialization as the MSc program.
Admission Requirements
Normally applicants should have attained a master's degree with high second-class honours standing or better in a field appropriate to their proposed area of study. Under exceptional circumstances, as noted in the Graduate Calendar, students may be permitted to transfer from an MSc to a PhD program without completing the master's degree. Interested students from other disciplines may also be acceptable subject to the decision of the department graduate admissions committee.
Degree Requirements
A candidate for the PhD degree is expected to have a general knowledge of fundamental aspects of biology and detailed knowledge of the specialty area. The specialty area will normally be one of the areas in which the Department of Environmental Biology is prepared to offer a graduate degree. In addition, students are encouraged to obtain a knowledge of both the theoretical and applied aspects of their specialty area.
     Before the end of the student's first semester the advisory committee will meet informally with the student to discuss the student's background, interests and knowledge in the proposed research area. The advisory committee will then establish a program of prescribed courses and, if necessary, additional courses.
     All PhD candidates must complete a thesis. A statement of the objectives of the thesis research program should be prepared as early as possible.
A PhD program normally requires 9 to 11 semesters. The number of courses per semester should not normally exceed four. Graduate students must take the Advanced Seminar, ENVB*6720, and may be required by their advisory committee to take the Introductory Seminar, ENVB*6710.
Interdepartmental Programs
Toxicology MSc/PhD Collaborative Program
The Department of Environmental Biology participates in the MSc/PhD program in toxicology. Professors C. Hall, Harris, Ritter, Solomon, and Stephenson are members of the Toxicology Interdepartmental Group. The faculty members' research and teaching expertise includes aspects of toxicology; they may serve as advisers for MSc and PhD students. Please consult the Toxicology listing for a detailed description of the MSc/PhD collaborative program.
Courses
Course/(Credit Value) |
Term |
Course Description |
Plant Protection Entomology |
ENVB*6340 Colloquium in Insect Systematics (0.25) |
W |
Weekly discussions and seminars dealing with current topics in systematic entomology. |
ENVB*6370 Physiology of Insects (0.5) |
F |
Students will be assigned a library exercise and will select a laboratory project in their own area of interest. Emphasis will be placed on techniques and familiarity with current literature. |
ENVB*6540 Insect Pest Management (0.5) |
W |
The course will examine the various methods of controlling insects and the development of pest
management programs. Students will prepare research papers and participate in seminars on the
application of control methods to the management of pests of agriculture, forestry and the urban
environment. |
Plant Pathology |
ENVB*6040 Molecular Basis of Plant-Microbe Interactions (0.5) |
F |
A lecture and seminar course on recent advances in the study of plant-microbe interactions. Topics included are the biochemical, physiological and genetic aspects of plant defenses and the interaction of plants with pathogenic and mutualistic bacteria, fungi and viruses. |
ENVB*6060 Topics in Phytopathology (0.5) |
W |
Current topics and emerging issues in phytopathology and plant health will be examined through presentations, discussions and group projects. Emphasis will be placed on ecology, population biology and genetics of plant pathogens and other microorganisms, and their application to current practices in plant health. |
ENVB*6080 Plant Disease Epidemiology and Management (0.5) |
W |
Epidemiology and management of plant diseases caused by fungi, viruses, and bacteria. (Offered in alternate years.) |
Weed Science |
ENVB*6180 Physiology and Biochemistry of Herbicides (0.5) |
W |
Chemical and biological fate of herbicides in soil. Physical, morphological and physiological factors influencing herbicidal selectivity and modes of action. (Offered in alternate years.) |
Environmental Management Apiculture/Pollination Biology |
ENVB*6520 Pollination Biology (0.5) |
F |
Pollination biology is discussed from both entomological and botanical viewpoints, stressing
fundamental and applied aspects. (Offered in the fall semester or by arrangement with the professor.) |
ENVB*6620 Management and Biology of the Honey Bee (0.5) |
F |
An in-depth treatment of advanced topics related to honey bees, including management techniques such as wintering bees, queen rearing and instrumental insemination, comb-honey production, genetics and breeding of honey bees, caste determination, and social behaviour of honey bees. Discussion sections will focus on recent research. |
Microbiology |
ENVB*6190 Environmental Microbial Technology (0.5) |
W |
Current topics in selected areas of environmental microbial technology. An emphasis will be placed on the physiology and genetics of microorganisms useful in environmental biotechnology. The course involves extensive use of current journal articles. |
Other |
ENVB*6451 Topics in Environmental Biology (0.25) |
F, W, S |
This course provides graduate students, either individually or in groups, with the opportunity to pursue topics in the major areas of departmental specialization: plant protection and environmental management. This course may be offered in any of lecture, reading/seminar, or individual project formats. |
ENVB*6452 Topics in Environmental Biology (0.5) |
F, W, S |
See ENVB*6451 above. |
ENVB*6530 Ecotoxicological-Risk Characterization (0.5) |
W |
A biologically based, advanced course that will give students working knowledge of current procedures and techniques for ecotoxicological-risk characterization. The course material will cover the following topics: problem definition, dose-response characterization, exposure characterization, and risk assessment and risk-management decision making. |
ENVB*6550 Bioactivity and Metabolism of Pesticides (0.5) |
W |
The basis of pesticide bioactivity will be examined, with emphasis on mode of action, structure-activity relationships and analytical methods. Students will participate in seminars and prepare a research paper and/or conduct a laboratory research project in consultation with the instructor(s). |
ENVB*6560 Forest Ecosystem Dynamics (0.5) |
F |
An exploration of energy flow and distribution in forest ecosystems. Both components will be examined in the context of biomass and productivity, perturbations and resilience. Some aspects of modelling will be covered. |
ENVB*6570 Pesticide Toxicology Colloquium (0.25) |
F |
A literature review and open discussion course designed to critically analyze issues of pesticide
toxicology and their relevance to human health and the environment. |
ENVB*6710 Introductory Seminar (0.25) |
F |
Graduate students will be provided with information and training in seminar presentation styles, abstract and precis preparation, and computer generation of both slides and posters. Students must present a seminar and poster presentation on a topic of their choice, as well as participate in the presentations of colleagues and selected faculty. |
ENVB*6720 Advanced Seminar (0.25) |
W |
Graduate students will prepare either an oral or a poster presentation on their thesis research. They will also be responsible for participating in the organization of a departmental graduate student symposium during which their presentations will be given and evaluated. Students must also attend weekly departmental seminars and prepare 5 precis for evaluation. |
The Office of Graduate Studies has attempted to ensure the accuracy of this
on-line Graduate Calendar. However, the publication of information in this document does not
bind the university to the provision of courses, programs, schedules of studies, fees, or facilities as
listed herein. Other limitations apply.
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