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Course Overview: 

This course presents the discipline of Landscape Ecology, where natural and social sciences meet. You will realize how innovative and collaborative approaches used in Landscape Ecology allow land managers, planners and the public to shape landscapes for future societies. We will teach you the modern tools of Landscape Ecology enabling you to address fundamental research questions. Leading Landscape Ecology professors will present case studies from around the world, highlighting tools and methods in Landscape Ecology and how they are used to solve environmental problems.

What you'll learn:

  • Methods for the valuation of landscapes using the ecosystem service paradigm
  • How to quantify landscape attributes using landscape metrics
  • Methods to assess user conflicts in ecologically sensitive landscapes
  • How to use satellite data to detect landscape changes
  • Philosophical aspects of landscapes, land ethics and conservation
  • Theories of landscape perception and place attachment
  • Ecology in the context of urban landscapes
  • Statistical analysis with R
  • How to work with spatial data and GIS

Schedule & Syllabus: 

  • The content is released in three large units (see columns "Unit" and "Release Date" below)
  • Each week one section of the respective unit is due ( see "Due Date" below)

Week

Unit

Section

Workload

Release Date

Due Date*

1 (09.09 -15.09)

 Course Welcome

0.3 Introduce Yourself 

0h20 

09.09 

15.09

1 (09.09 -15.09)

Unit 1:LE Foundations 

1.1 Introducing Landscape Ecology 

2h05

15.09

2 (16.09 -22.09)

 

1.2 Drivers of Landscape Pattern  

1h50 

 

22.09 

3 (23.09 -29.09)

Unit 2: Land System Modelling

2.1 Theory: Landscape Modelling

2h35

23.09

29.09

4 (30.09. -06.10)

 

2.2 Case Study: Oil Exploration and Rare Plants Conservation

2h50

 

06.10

5 (7.10. -13.10)

 

2.3 Theory: Landscape Metrics 

1h50 

 

13.10

6 (14.10. -20.10)

 

2.4 Case Study: Landscape Impacts of Transportation Infrastructure

2h20 

 

20.10

7 (21.10. -27.10)

 

2.5 Theory: Remote Sensing

1h00 

 

27.10 

8 (26.10. -03.11)

 

2.6 Case Study: Urbanisation in the Maldives

2h10 

 

03.11

9 (04.11 -10.11)

Unit 3: Landscape and Society

3.1 Theory: Landscape Perception

1h30

04.11

10.11

10 (11.11 -17.11)

 

3.2 Case Study: Renewable Energy and Landscape Conflicts

2h15

 

17.11

11 (18.11 -24.11)

 

3.3 Case Study: Soundscape Ecology

 

 

 24.11.

12 (25.11 -01.12)

 

3.4 Theory: Ecosystem Services and Valuation

1h30 

 

1.12.

13 (02.12 -08.12)

 

3.5 Case Study: Land Ethics 

2h30 

 

08.12

14 (9.12. -15.12.)

 

3.6 Theory: Urban Ecology

3.7 Case Study: Urban Ecology in Bangalore

0h30 

1h40

 

15.12

*Assignment due date refers to 11:30pm UCT. There is a 24h grace period on the respective deadlines. Note that there are a number of mini essays tasks (Six Sentence Arguments) which have different due dates and no grace period due to a peer review process. See the specific assignments for more details (sections 1.1.8, 2.4.10, 3.2.11 and 3.5.8) 

Grading Policy: 

  • Each section of this course is graded individually ( e.g. section "1.1 Foundation: Introducing Landscape Ecology" is graded by Quiz Q1)
  • All questions within a section count towards the grade of that section. 
  • To pass you need to score above 50% in 11 of the 15 sections. 

Workload:

  • Approximately 2-4 hours per week
  • The workload is equal to 2 ECTS

Duration:

  • 14 Weeks

Prerequisits: 

  • High-school algebra
  • Basic knowledge in GIS and statistics ( or willingness to put in some extra effort)
  • basic ecology
  • understanding of maps

Academic Policy

You are required to abide by the terms of the edX honor code