
Note: This is the 2024–2025 eCalendar. Current program and course information is now found in the Ä¢¹½¶ÌÊÓÆµ Course Catalogue at .
Note: This is the 2024–2025 eCalendar. Current program and course information is now found in the Ä¢¹½¶ÌÊÓÆµ Course Catalogue at .
As humans depend on a wide variety of ecosystem services, society is becoming increasingly aware of the need for sustainable management of natural resources. We require the natural world to provide us with necessities such as air, water, food, and energy; but we also depend on ecosystems for services such as nutrient cycling, biodiversity, recreation, and the splendour of nature. Sustainable management of natural resources via governance of human activities requires an understanding of all of these elements.
The Department of Natural Resource Sciences is a multidisciplinary group with a wide range of interests, including wildlife and fish biology, entomology, agriculture, soil science, microbiology, genomics, meteorology, forest science, landscape ecology, agricultural and resource economics, and environmental policy. We are concerned with the populations and diversity of organisms within ecosystems, the flow of energy and nutrients through ecosystems, and processes that influence human behaviour toward ecosystem services and the environment. Our graduate programs in agricultural economics, entomology, microbiology, and renewable resources allow students to gain disciplinary depth and interdisciplinary breadth.
Natural Resource Sciences plays a strong role in several undergraduate programs, from the inter-departmental majors in:
to the specializations such as: