Comparative Animal Physiology (BIO4201.01)

Elizabeth Sherman

A rigorous course in which physiological processes of vertebrates and invertebrates are studied at the cellular, organ, organ system, and whole animal levels of organization. The unifying themes of the course are the phenomenon of homeostasis (whereby an animal maintains its organization in the face of environmental perturbations) and the relationship between structure and function. The student will examine these phenomena in the laboratory by dissection and physiological experimentation. Topics include digestion and nutrition, metabolism, gas exchange, circulation, excretion, neurophysiology, and muscle physiology.

Corequisite: Comparative Animal Physiology Lab

Prerequisites: Cell Biology or Chemistry or permission of instructor (see Hugh Crowl for registration).
Credits: 4
T 10:10am - 12:00pm; F 10:10am - 12:00pm
Maximum Enrollment: 18
Course Frequency:
This course is categorized as 4000, All courses, Biology, Elizabeth Sherman, Four Credit, and tagged , , , , , .