Teacher
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DI GIULIO ANDREA
(syllabus)
The course is an introduction to the study of animal biodiversity over time and space, through an evolutionary, ecological, behavioural and phylogenetic reading. The most investigated taxonomic groups are those of Vertebrates (cyclostomes, cartilaginous and osseous fishes, amphibians, reptiles (including birds) and mammals), analyzed in terms of evolutionary history, systematic classification, distribution, ethological and ecological aspects, rarefaction and extinction in relationship to phenomena of interspecific competition, climate change and the impact of man on ecosystems. A comparative study of the invertebrate communities of the main terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems will also be studied in depth, as will the study of the fundamental ecological role they play in natural trophic networks. The taxonomic groups selected for the study are found in the electronic documents distributed by the teacher. Among these, the student will explore the most significant species from the conservation or economic point of view of the European fauna, with recognition of cyclostomes, cartilaginous and osseous fishes, amphibians, reptiles (ncluding birds) and mammals of the Italian fauna or of their country (for Erasmus students). Number of credits: 5 credits of lectures (40 hours) + 1 zoological laboratory credit on the field (10 actual hours of fauna exploration in three selected environmental typologies).
(reference books)
- Hickman et alii. 2008/2012. Diversità animale. McGraw-Hill, Milano (iv / xv edition). (study the last five chapters, those on Vertebrates). - Guides to the identification of mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles, cartilaginous and osseous fishes of the European fauna. - Electronic documents distributed by the teacher.
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