23416a Lecture

WiSe 25/26: L Experimental and Theoretical Evolutionary Ecology

J. Wolinska, J. Jeschke, F. Hölker, M. T. Monaghan

Information for students

Additional information: Modulbeschreibung Experimental and Theoretical Evolutionary Ecology 

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): 14, 15

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Additional information / Pre-requisites

Pre-meeting on October 17th 2025 at 14:00

This block course will mainly take place in the semester break in March (but some elements will last until June, see "Kommentar"). The exact timing will be discussed with the course participants in the pre-meeting. close

Comments

Different empirical and theoretical research methods will be presented and applied, particularly experimental design (focusing on such aspects as stating research hypotheses, planning proper controls, choosing an appropriate number of replicates, avoiding pseudoreplications, etc.), observational field studies, mathematical modelling, and research synthesis. Selected topics in evolutionary ecology will be covered, for example the life history of organisms (incl. traits such as lifespan, age of first reproduction, fecundity) or predator-prey interactions (functional responses, prey defenses, predator offenses); current topics will be featured as well. The students will conduct a small research project, in groups, which will be written up in the format of a real research paper. Finally, each student will conduct an individual research project (ca. 40 hours) in April/May and present the results at the concluding symposium in June. close

Subjects A - Z