Difference between revisions of "Marine Ecology"

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(Created page with "{{Baby CTY Courses}} Bay Ecology is a Baby CTY course where students are exposed to the beauty of the Chesapeake bay and its surroundings. This course is only offered...")
 
 
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{{Infobox
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| title  = Marine Ecology
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| header1 = Science Course
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| label2 = Course Code | data2 = [[Marine Ecology|MARE]]
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| label3 = Year Opened | data3 = 1996
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| label4 = Sites Offered | data4 = [[BRI]], [[LOS]]
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| label5 = Previously Offered | data5 = [[CHS]], [[CLA]], [[SRF]]
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}}
 
{{Baby CTY Courses}}
 
{{Baby CTY Courses}}
[[Bay Ecology]] is a [[Baby CTY]] course where students are exposed to the beauty of the Chesapeake bay and its surroundings. This course is only offered at [[Chestertown]] and is available for both sessions.
 
  
 
==Course Description==
 
==Course Description==
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From the CTY Course Catalog (2023):
  
From the CTY Summer Catalog:
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Ninety-four percent of life on earth is aquatic, yet we have only explored 5 percent of Earth’s oceans. Marine ecologists aim to reduce this knowledge gap while using biology, chemistry, physics, geology, geography, and meteorology to study oceans and the hundreds of thousands of known species that live below their surface.
  
This course gives students a comprehensive view of the Chesapeake Bay, one of the largest estuaries in the world. Students examine the relationships among the land, the rivers, and the Bay, as well as the human impact on this system. They address the greatest problems affecting the Bay—excess nutrients and sediment—and learn how these pollutants reach its waters. Students consider different viewpoints on political, economic, social, and scientific issues affecting the health of the Bay, and they discuss and debate the Bay’s future.
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In this field science course, you will learn the geography of ocean floors, and the physical and chemical properties of ocean water; visit local habitats to collect and test water samples and examine microscopic organisms; and explore how the slightest changes in salinity and temperature can impact entire species. You and your classmates will conduct field observations and dissections in the lab, and observe and analyze plants and animals and the adaptations that allow them to live underwater. Field experiences may include an aquarium trip, visits from marine life experts, or a boat excursion in local waters. The course ends with an analysis of human impact and how to protect marine ecosystems now and in the future.  
  
Students strengthen their skills in collecting, recording, and interpreting data through scientific field work. In the course of several field trips to and around the Bay, they collect biological samples, test water quality, pull fishing nets, dredge for oysters, evaluate land usage, and observe wildlife. Students leave with a greater understanding of the intricate and crucial Chesapeake Bay ecosystem.
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[[Category: Courses]]
 
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[[Category: Bristol]]
Lab and Field Trip Fee: $110 (Due to the intensive field component of this course, the lab and field trip fee is higher than for other science courses.)
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[[Category: Los Angeles (LMU)]]
 
 
Students must have completed grades: 5 or 6
 

Latest revision as of 10:49, 22 March 2023

Marine Ecology
Science Course
Course CodeMARE
Year Opened1996
Sites OfferedBRI, LOS
Previously OfferedCHS, CLA, SRF
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Course Description

From the CTY Course Catalog (2023):

Ninety-four percent of life on earth is aquatic, yet we have only explored 5 percent of Earth’s oceans. Marine ecologists aim to reduce this knowledge gap while using biology, chemistry, physics, geology, geography, and meteorology to study oceans and the hundreds of thousands of known species that live below their surface.

In this field science course, you will learn the geography of ocean floors, and the physical and chemical properties of ocean water; visit local habitats to collect and test water samples and examine microscopic organisms; and explore how the slightest changes in salinity and temperature can impact entire species. You and your classmates will conduct field observations and dissections in the lab, and observe and analyze plants and animals and the adaptations that allow them to live underwater. Field experiences may include an aquarium trip, visits from marine life experts, or a boat excursion in local waters. The course ends with an analysis of human impact and how to protect marine ecosystems now and in the future.