ENTOM 4100

ENTOM 4100

Course information provided by the 2025-2026 Catalog.

This course integrates technical approaches to biodiversity conservation, with a focus on biological analysis of species facing extinction risk. Students will learn quantitative tools for analyzing variation at genetic, population, and landscape levels. The curriculum covers stage-structured population dynamics, predation, gene flow, inbreeding, extinction processes, and harvesting effects. Analytical methods include population-projection models, perturbation analysis, metapopulation models, population viability analysis, and various genetic diversity assessments. Special attention is given to evaluating extinction risk in data-deficient species such as insects. By developing these quantitative skills, students will critically evaluate assumptions underlying conservation plans and assessments, including IUCN criteria and endangered species classification. The course is suitable for all biology and conservation-related majors.


Prerequisites an ecology class such as: NTRES 3100, BIOEE 3610 or ENTOM 4550; a genetics class such as: BIOMG2800, NTRES 2830 DNA or ENTOM 4700; or permission of the instructor.

Distribution Requirements (BSC-AG, DLG-AG, MQL-AG)

Exploratory Studies (CU-SBY)

Last 1 Terms Offered 2024FA

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Syllabi: none
  •  4756 ENTOM 4100   LEC 001

  • Instruction Mode: In Person

  •  4757 ENTOM 4100   LAB 401

  • Instruction Mode: In Person