Next offered in Fall 2010
To see some underwater photos taken by students in
2006 - click here
Class photos from all trips
are found at
the bottom of the page.
The purpose
of
this
course
is to provide first-hand experience of
this amazing biological
habitat through lectures at Temple University's main campus in
Philadelphia and an 8 day field trip to part of the largest,
(realtively) unspoiled coral
reef
complex in the western hemisphere: the Great Barrier Reef of
Belize.
The focus of the course is
the organization, ecology and biological
diversity of reef systems. Topics will include reef formation,
energy flow within the
reef, predator-prey
interactions, symbiotic relationships, and
coral
bleaching and disease. Coral biology will be emphasized, but other
invertebrates,
plants
and fishes, including those of nearby mangrove
ecosystems will be studied.
Students will learn about the impact of both human and natural
disturbances
that endanger reef habitats.
Coral reefs
represent a major source of
biological
diversity, provide storm protection for tropical islands, have the
potential
for extraction
of large numbers of biologically
active molecules for
medical
use, yet are under serious threat worldwide. Loss of the biological
resources
and the incredible beauty of coral reefs would be a major ecological,
economic,
and
aesthetic disaster.
Registration and
Costs: Interested
students should contact Dr. Sanders via e-mail to ensure that
space
is reserved and to get access to application forms. You will need
special
authorization and a "green
card" to register for the course, and will need to fill out an
application. Lectures during the Fall
semester in Philadelphia will be on Mondays and Wednesdays
from 10:40
am - 12:30.
Although the course is a fall semester offering, the
field
experience, some lectures, and
presentations
occur in January before the start of the spring semester. For 2008-2009
the travel dates were: January 3
thru
10 - excursion to Belize; January 14 - student
project reports presented at Temple.
Note that the last day to drop a fall course is September x, 20xx. Students are responsible for full payment of tuition and fees if the class is dropped after this date!
Travel Costs: The future cost of round trip airfare from Philadelphia to Belize obviously can and will change. For our trip in January 2009, airline tickets had inceased considerably from the past, and even at a discounted group rate, round-trip tickets were approximately $900 per person. Other years have been less or about the same cost. Airline reservations are made in October for our trip.
The Marine
TREC station has easy access to pristine reef areas, but is
also close the resources of the town of San Pedro where there are
stores, restaurants, medical clinics with doctors, etc. Most rooms are
double or triple occupancy with a private bath. There is an on-site
kitchen and a freshwater swimming pool. Contact Dr. Sanders early
if you have ANY dietary restrictions.
Teaching facilities include a two classrooms and a small research library at Neptune plus a remote field station. A 48-foot research vessel and several other boats are available at the nearby beach and dock. The boats are used on most days for transport to different reef locations and habitats.
Class
participants will not be allowed to SCUBA
dive. Snorkeling
is a big part of the course since most of our time in Belize is spent
investigating
organisms that live underwater. However, even beginning swimmers
can take this
course and participate in snorkeling activities using floats.
Marine Trec has a
new website for 2009. Check out their link!
Additional Travel
Information:
A
passport is required to enter Belize, but a
visa
is not needed for U.S. citizens. Students
with non-U.S. passports
may need
a visa. Your passport must be valid for at least 6 months after
you
leave Belize; if it is scheduled to expire before August 2009, you
should
renew
it before you go. The Center for Disease Control recommends that
travelers
to Belize get immunized for Hepatitis A and B, have a current tetanus
booster, and take preventative
malaria
medication
(chloroquine is less expensive and has fewer side effects than
mefloquine,
but check with your physician (and see http://wwwn.cdc.gov/travel/regionCentralAmerica.aspx).
There is a 20 minute flight in a small
airplane required to get from the mainland to
Ambergris
Caye (and back).
Faculty:
Click Dr. Sanders' name to link to
his
faculty web page.
Dr. Robert W. Sanders. Field of research: Marine and Freshwater Ecology involving nutrient transfer and food web organization; microbial ecology. Dr. Sanders has coral reef experience in the Caribbean and Central America. Dr. Richard Miller worked with Dr. Sanders to set up this course as it originally ran.