1 / 12

Biology 3800 – Aquatic Ecosystems Lab

Biology 3800 – Aquatic Ecosystems Lab. Tuesday 13:40-16:20 E640 Friday 13:00-15:50 E640 Kathryn Kuchapski , MSc Candidate Email: k.kuchapski at uleth.ca Office: WE 1052, Lab: WE 1084 Office Phone: 317-5046 Office Hours: By appointment. Labs.

vaughan
Download Presentation

Biology 3800 – Aquatic Ecosystems Lab

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Biology 3800 – Aquatic Ecosystems Lab Tuesday 13:40-16:20 E640Friday 13:00-15:50 E640 Kathryn Kuchapski, MSc CandidateEmail: k.kuchapski at uleth.caOffice: WE 1052, Lab: WE 1084Office Phone: 317-5046Office Hours: By appointment

  2. Labs • There will be 5 assignments each worth 8%, meaning the labs will count for 40% of your final grade. • You will be given 1-2 lab periods to complete each assignment and they will be due at the beginning of lab in the week following the final period allotted to the assignment. • Part or all of each assignment will be introduced during the lab period and you will be given time to work through the exercises. If you wish to work ahead you must be willing to do so without in-class guidance.

  3. Tips for handing in assignments: • Units/Graph Labels – Units are a fundamental component of most answers and if they are not included the answer is not considered correct. The axes on graphs are also important and should be properly labelled (including units!). • Show your work – If a question in an assignment requires calculations include formulas and how they were derived. • Computer – Work done on the computer (written portion of assignments, graphs/tables/figures, etc.) results in a final product that is much clearer and easier to grade than hand-written work. • Plagiarism – Working together during and outside of lab is permitted but each student must hand in THEIR OWN assignment. Copying someone else’s work is an academic offense and will not be tolerated.

  4. Formats Accepted • Type out formulas, equations and answers • Printed Excel spreadsheets with formulas used in the row below the column title

  5. 1) Watershed Mapping • Make sure to look at direction of stream flows • Take note of contour lines

  6. 2) Bathymetry

  7. 2) Area Under the Curve • Calculate it • Use Adobe Pro Area = base * average height http://people.stfx.ca/bliengme/ExcelTips/AreaUnderCurve.htm

  8. 3) Filling of the reservoir • Adding areas together will give you volume at different dates Area = base * average height http://people.stfx.ca/bliengme/ExcelTips/AreaUnderCurve.htm

  9. 4) Residence Time • Measures the time that an average molecule of water spends within the reservoir • The more water there is in the reservoir, the more time each molecule will spend there • The faster the flow from the reservoir, the less time each molecule will spend there

  10. 5) Reservoir Communities • Length of life cycles • Competition, predation • Mobility of organisms • Abiotic factors

More Related