Environmental Sciences

University of California, Berkeley

This is an archived copy of the 2014-15 guide. To access the most recent version of the guide, please visit http://guide.berkeley.edu/.

About the Program

Bachelor of Science (BS)

The Environmental Sciences (ES) major is designed for students interested in studying environmental problems from a scientific perspective. The ES major prepares students to deal with issues arising from the impact of human interaction on natural systems. To address these problems, all ES students acquire strong backgrounds in math, biological sciences, and physical sciences. Students may choose to specialize further in a biological or physical science field such as ecology, conservation biology, toxicology, geology, hydrology, meteorology, engineering, or a social science field such as planning, policy analysis, economics, environmental justice, or education. Each ES student completes a year-long senior research project with the support of a mentor in a biological, physical, or interdisciplinary research area.

Graduates are well-prepared for careers in fields such as environmental consulting, education, health, or law as well as community, urban, or regional planning and other related areas of environmentalism in public agencies, non-profit conservation organizations, and private companies. Graduates are well-qualified for a variety of graduate programs, including law school.

Admission to the Major

Freshman students may apply directly to the major, or may select the College of Natural Resource's undeclared option, and declare the major by the end of their fourth semester. For further information regarding how to declare the major after admission, including information on a change of major of change of college, please see the College of Natural Resources Undergraduate Student Handbook .

Honors Program

Students with a GPA of 3.6 or higher may enroll in the College of Natural Resources Honors Program (H196) once they have reached upper division standing. To fulfill the program requirements, students design, conduct, and report on an individual research project working with a faculty sponsor. For further information on registration for the Honors Symposium and the Honors requirements, please see the College of Natural Resources website .

Minor Program

There is no minor program in Environmental Sciences.

Other Majors Offered by the Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management

Conservation and Resource Studies  (Major and Minor)
Forestry and Natural Resources  (Major and Minor)
Molecular Environmental Biology  (Major only)
Society and Environment  (Major only)

Visit Department Website

Major Requirements

In addition to the University, campus, and college requirements, listed on the College Requirements tab, students must fulfill the below requirements specific to their major program.

General Guidelines

  1. All courses taken to fulfill the major requirements below must be taken for graded credit, other than courses listed which are offered on a Pass/No Pass basis only. Other exceptions to this requirement are noted as applicable.

  2. A minimum cumulative grade point average (GPA) of 2.0 is required.

  3. A minimum GPA of 2.0 in upper-division major requirements is required.

  4. At least 15 of the 36 required upper-division units must be taken in the College of Natural Resources (except for students majoring in Environmental Economics and Policy; please see the EEP major adviser for further information).

  5. A maximum of 16 units of Independent Study (courses numbered 97, 98, 99, 197, 198, and 199) may count toward graduation, with a maximum of 4 units of Independent Study per semester.

  6. No more than 1/3 of the total units attempted at UC Berkeley may be taken Pass/Not Pass. This includes units in the Education Abroad Program and UC Intercampus Visitor or Exchange Programs.

  7. A maximum of 4 units of Physical Education courses will count toward graduation.

For information regarding residence requirements and unit requirements, please see the College Requirements tab.

Students in this major choose a concentration in Biological, Physical, or Social Sciences.

Lower-division Requirements

ESPM Environmental Science Core
Select one of the following:
The Biosphere
Environmental Biology
Environmental Issues
Introduction to Environmental Sciences
ESPM Social Science Core
Select one of the following:
Americans and the Global Forest
Introduction to Environmental Studies
Introduction to Culture and Natural Resource Management
Environmental Policy, Administration, and Law
Environmental Economics
ENVECON C1/ECON C3Introduction to Environmental Economics and Policy4
Lower-division Concentration: Choose a concentration in Biological, Physical, or Social Sciences, based on intended research area (see below for requirements for each concentration)

Biological Science Concentration

MATH 16AAnalytic Geometry and Calculus3-4
or MATH 1A Calculus
MATH 16BAnalytic Geometry and Calculus3-4
or MATH 1B Calculus
CHEM 1A
  & 1AL
General Chemistry
   and General Chemistry Laboratory
4
CHEM 3A
  & 3AL
Chemical Structure and Reactivity
   and Organic Chemistry Laboratory
5
BIOLOGY 1A
  & 1AL
General Biology Lecture
   and General Biology Laboratory
5
BIOLOGY 1BGeneral Biology Lecture and Laboratory4
PHYSICS 8AIntroductory Physics4

Physical Science Concentration

MATH 1ACalculus4
MATH 1BCalculus4
CHEM 1A
  & 1AL
General Chemistry
   and General Chemistry Laboratory
4
CHEM 3A
  & 3AL
Chemical Structure and Reactivity
   and Organic Chemistry Laboratory
5
Select one of the following:
General Biology Lecture
   and General Biology Laboratory
   and General Biology Lecture and Laboratory
BIOLOGY 11 & BIOLOGY 11L, plus one of the following: INTEGBI 153, INTEGBI 154, ESPM 102A, ESPM 111, ESPM 113, ESPM 114, ESPM 115B, or ESPM 116B
PHYSICS 7APhysics for Scientists and Engineers4
PHYSICS 7BPhysics for Scientists and Engineers4

Social Science Concentration 

MATH 16AAnalytic Geometry and Calculus3-4
or MATH 1A Calculus
MATH 16BAnalytic Geometry and Calculus3-4
or MATH 1B Calculus
CHEM 1A
  & 1AL
General Chemistry
   and General Chemistry Laboratory
4
CHEM 3A
  & 3AL
Chemical Structure and Reactivity
   and Organic Chemistry Laboratory
5
or CHEM 1B General Chemistry
Select one of the following:4-5
General Biology Lecture
   and General Biology Laboratory
   and General Biology Lecture and Laboratory
BIOLOGY 11 & BIOLOGY 11L, plus one of the following: INTEGBI 153, INTEGBI 154, ESPM 102A, ESPM 111, ESPM 113, ESPM 114, ESPM 115B, or ESPM 116B
PHYSICS 8AIntroductory Physics4

Upper-division Requirements

Statistics (must be completed before Spring of student's junior year) 1
Select one of the following:
Introduction to Probability and Statistics for Life Scientists
Introduction to Biostatistics
Introduction to Probability and Statistics in Biology and Public Health
Introduction to Ecological Data Analysis
Intro to Methods of Environmental Science 1
ESPM 100ESIntroduction to the Methods of Environmental Science (must be taken spring of junior year)4
Sr. Research Seminar: First half 1
ESPM 175A
  & ESPM 175L
Senior Research Seminar in Environmental Sciences
   and Senior Research Laboratory in Environmental Sciences (must be taken fall of senior year)
4
Sr. Research Seminar: Second half 1
ESPM 175B
  & ESPM 175L
Senior Research Seminar in Environmental Sciences
   and Senior Research Laboratory in Environmental Sciences (must be taken spring of senior year)
4
Environmental Modeling
Select one of the following:
Quantitative Aspects of Global Environmental Problems
Modeling and Management of Biological Resources
Forest Ecosystem Management
Human Environment Interactions
Select one of the following:
Climate and Energy Policy
Society, Environment, and Culture
Sociology and Political Ecology of Agro-Food Systems
American Environmental and Cultural History
Environmental Philosophy and Ethics
Bioethics and Society
Environmental Justice: Race, Class, Equity, and the Environment
Natural Resource Policy and Indigenous Peoples
Environmental Health and Development
Political Ecology
International Environmental Politics
Management and Conservation of Rangeland Ecosystems
Environmental Economics
Globalization and the Natural Environment
Economics of Race, Agriculture, and the Environment
Population, Environment, and Development
Economics of Water Resources
Ecological Economics in Historical Context
Environmental Classics
Water and Development
Food and the Environment
Global Environmental Politics
Energy, Culture and Social Organization
Area of Concentration Elective, 3-4 units (see below)
Additional ES Elective, 2-4 units: Selected from any Area of Concentration (see below)
1

 These four courses must be completed in the sequence listed, beginning the Fall of the student's junior year. Students who plan to study abroad or otherwise not continuously enroll at UC Berkeley for their junior and senior years should meet with the ES adviser.

Biological Sciences Concentration Electives

CHEM 103Inorganic Chemistry in Living Systems3
CHEM 112AOrganic Chemistry5
CHEM 112BOrganic Chemistry5
CHEM 115Organic Chemistry--Advanced Laboratory Methods4
CIV ENG 101Fluid Mechanics of Rivers, Streams, and Wetlands3
CIV ENG 107Climate Change Mitigation3
CIV ENG 110Course Not Available4
CIV ENG 114Environmental Microbiology3
EPS/INTEGBI C100/GEOG C146Communicating Ocean Science4
EPS C120Course Not Available
EPS/ESPM C129Biometeorology3
EPS 185Marine Geobiology2
ENE,RES 102Quantitative Aspects of Global Environmental Problems4
ENE,RES C130/EPS C120Course Not Available4
ENVECON C115/ESPM C104Modeling and Management of Biological Resources4
ESPM 101ACourse Not Available4
ESPM 102ATerrestrial Resource Ecology4
ESPM 102B
  & 102BL
Natural Resource Sampling
   and Laboratory in Natural Resource Sampling
4
ESPM C103/INTEGBI C156Principles of Conservation Biology4
ESPM C104/ENVECON C115Modeling and Management of Biological Resources4
ESPM 105ASierra Nevada Ecology4
ESPM 106American Wildlife: Identification and Conservation3
ESPM C107/INTEGBI 158LFBiology and Geomorphology of Tropical Islands13
ESPM 108ATrees: Taxonomy, Growth, and Structures3
ESPM 109Course Not Available4
ESPM 110Primate Ecology4
ESPM 111Ecosystem Ecology4
ESPM 112Microbial Ecology3
ESPM 113Insect Ecology2
ESPM 114Wildlife Ecology3
ESPM 115BBiology of Aquatic Insects2
ESPM 116ACourse Not Available4
ESPM 116BRange Ecology, Improvements, and Management3
ESPM 116CTropical Forest Ecology3
ESPM 117Urban Garden Ecosystems4
ESPM 118Agricultural Ecology3
ESPM 119Chemical Ecology2
ESPM 120Soil Characteristics3
ESPM 121Development and Classification of Soils3
ESPM/EPS C129Biometeorology3
ESPM 131Soil Microbial Ecology3
ESPM 134Fire, Insects, and Diseases in Forest Ecosystems3
ESPM 135Course Not Available4
ESPM C138/MCELLBI C114/PLANTBI C114Introduction to Comparative Virology4
ESPM 140General Entomology4
ESPM 144Insect Physiology3
ESPM 145Course Not Available4
ESPM 146
  & 146L
Course Not Available
   and Medical and Veterinary Entomology Laboratory
4
ESPM 147Field Entomology1
ESPM C148/NUSCTX C114Pesticide Chemistry and Toxicology3
ESPM C149
  & ESPM C149L
Molecular Ecology
   and Course Not Available
4
ESPM 162Bioethics and Society4
ESPM 172Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing3
ESPM 181AFire Ecology3
ESPM 184Agroforestry Systems3
ESPM 185Applied Forest Ecology4
ESPM 186Management and Conservation of Rangeland Ecosystems4
ESPM 187Restoration Ecology4
ESPM 188Case Histories in Wildlife Management2
GEOG 142Climate Dynamics4
GEOG 148Biogeography4
GEOG/LD ARCH C188Geographic Information Systems4
INTEGBI/EPS C100/GEOG C146Communicating Ocean Science4
INTEGBI C101
  & INTEGBI C101L
Course Not Available
   and Course Not Available
4
INTEGBI 102LFIntroduction to California Plant Life with Laboratory4
INTEGBI 103LFInvertebrate Zoology with Laboratory5
INTEGBI 104LFNatural History of the Vertebrates with Laboratory5
INTEGBI 106Course Not Available4
INTEGBI 106APhysical and Chemical Environment of the Ocean4
INTEGBI 106LCourse Not Available4
INTEGBI 117
  & INTEGBI 117L
Medical Ethnobotany
   and Course Not Available
2
INTEGBI C144Animal Behavior4
INTEGBI 146Course Not Available
INTEGBI C149L/ESPM C149Course Not Available4
INTEGBI 151
  & 151L
Plant Physiological Ecology
   and Plant Physiological Ecology Laboratory
6
INTEGBI 152Environmental Toxicology4
INTEGBI 153
  & INTEGBI 153L
Ecology
   and Course Not Available
3
INTEGBI 154
  & 154L
Plant Ecology
   and Plant Ecology Laboratory
5
INTEGBI C156/ESPM C103Principles of Conservation Biology4
INTEGBI 157LFEcosystems of California4
INTEGBI C158/ESPM C107Course Not Available4
INTEGBI 160Evolution4
INTEGBI 162Ecological Genetics4
INTEGBI C163/MCELLBI C142Course Not Available4
INTEGBI 168
  & 168L
Systematics of Vascular Plants
   and Systematics of Vascular Plants with Laboratory
6
INTEGBI 173LFMammalogy with Laboratory5
INTEGBI 174LFOrnithology with Laboratory4
INTEGBI 175LFHerpetology with Laboratory4
LD ARCH 110Ecological Analysis3
LD ARCH/GEOG C188Geographic Information Systems4
MCELLBI 102Survey of the Principles of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology4
MCELLBI C112
  & C112L
General Microbiology
   and General Microbiology Laboratory
6
MCELLBI C114/ESPM C138/PLANTBI C114Introduction to Comparative Virology4
MCELLBI/PLANTBI C116Microbial Diversity3
NUSCTX 110Toxicology4
NUSCTX 113Course Not Available4
NUSCTX C114/ESPM C148Pesticide Chemistry and Toxicology3
NUSCTX C119/PB HLTH C170BCourse Not Available
PLANTBI C102
  & PLANTBI C102L
Course Not Available
   and Course Not Available
4
PLANTBI 110
  & PLANTBI 110L
Course Not Available
   and Course Not Available
4
PLANTBI C112
  & C112L
General Microbiology
   and General Microbiology Laboratory
6
PLANTBI C114/ESPM C138/MCELLBI C114Introduction to Comparative Virology4
PLANTBI/MCELLBI C116Microbial Diversity3
PLANTBI 120
  & 120L
Biology of Algae
   and Laboratory for Biology of Algae
4
PLANTBI 180Environmental Plant Biology2
PSYCH C115B/INTEGBI C144Course Not Available4
PB HLTH 140Introduction to Risk and Demographic Statistics4
PB HLTH 150AIntroduction to Epidemiology and Human Disease4
PB HLTH 150BIntroduction to Environmental Health Sciences3
PB HLTH 162A
  & PB HLTH 162L
Public Health Microbiology
   and Public Health Microbiology Laboratory
4
PB HLTH C170B/NUSCTX C119Course Not Available

Physical Sciences Concentration Electives

ARCH 140Energy and Environment4
ARCH 149Special Topics in Energy and Environment1-4
CHM ENG 140Introduction to Chemical Process Analysis4
CHM ENG 141Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics4
CHM ENG 142Chemical Kinetics and Reaction Engineering4
CHM ENG 150ATransport Processes4
CHM ENG 150BTransport and Separation Processes4
CHEM 103Inorganic Chemistry in Living Systems3
CHEM 104AAdvanced Inorganic Chemistry3
CHEM 104BAdvanced Inorganic Chemistry3
CHEM 105Instrumental Methods in Analytical Chemistry4
CHEM 112AOrganic Chemistry5
CHEM 112BOrganic Chemistry5
CHEM 120APhysical Chemistry3
CHEM 120BPhysical Chemistry3
CHEM 125Physical Chemistry Laboratory3
CHEM 130BBiophysical Chemistry3
CHEM/EPS C182Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Laboratory3
CIV ENG 100Elementary Fluid Mechanics4
CIV ENG 101Fluid Mechanics of Rivers, Streams, and Wetlands3
CIV ENG 103Introduction to Hydrology3
CIV ENG C106/EPS C180/ESPM C180Air Pollution3
CIV ENG 107Climate Change Mitigation3
CIV ENG 108Course Not Available
CIV ENG 109Course Not Available4
CIV ENG 110Course Not Available4
CIV ENG 111Environmental Engineering3
CIV ENG 115
  & CIV ENG 115L
Water Chemistry
   and Course Not Available
3
CIV ENG C116/ESPM C128Chemistry of Soils3
CIV ENG 117
  & CIV ENG 117L
Course Not Available
   and Course Not Available
4
CIV ENG 171Introduction to Geological Engineering3
CIV ENG 173Groundwater and Seepage3
EPS/INTEGBI C100/GEOG C146Communicating Ocean Science4
EPS 100AMinerals: Their Constitution and Origin4
EPS 100BGenesis and Interpretation of Rocks4
EPS 101Field Geology and Digital Mapping4
EPS 105Course Not Available4
EPS 117Geomorphology4
EPS 119Geologic Field Studies2
EPS C120Course Not Available4
EPS/ESPM C129Biometeorology3
EPS 131Geochemistry4
EPS/GEOG C141Course Not Available4
EPS C146/GEOG C145Geological Oceanography4
EPS 170ACCrossroads of Earth Resources and Society4
EPS/ESPM C180Air Pollution3
EPS C181/GEOG C139Atmospheric Physics and Dynamics3
EPS/CHEM C182Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Laboratory3
EPS 185Marine Geobiology2
ENE,RES C100Energy and Society4
ENE,RES 102Quantitative Aspects of Global Environmental Problems4
ENE,RES 120Course Not Available4
ENE,RES C130/EPS C120Course Not Available4
ENE,RES 151Course Not Available4
ENGIN 115Engineering Thermodynamics4
ESPM 102B
  & 102BL
Natural Resource Sampling
   and Laboratory in Natural Resource Sampling
4
ESPM 120Soil Characteristics3
ESPM 121Development and Classification of Soils3
ESPM 122Field Study of Soil Development1
ESPM 126Course Not Available
ESPM C128/CIV ENG C116Chemistry of Soils3
ESPM C130/GEOG C136Terrestrial Hydrology4
ESPM 131Soil Microbial Ecology3
ESPM C148/NUSCTX C114Pesticide Chemistry and Toxicology3
ESPM 172Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing3
ESPM/EPS C180Air Pollution3
ESPM 181AFire Ecology3
GEOG C136/ESPM C130Terrestrial Hydrology4
GEOG C139/EPS C181Atmospheric Physics and Dynamics3
GEOG 140APhysical Landscapes: Process and Form4
GEOG 140BCourse Not Available4
GEOG/EPS C141Course Not Available4
GEOG 143Global Change Biogeochemistry3
GEOG 144Principles of Meteorology3
GEOG C145/EPS C146Geological Oceanography4
GEOG 180Field Methods for Physical Geography5
GEOG 183Cartographic Representation5
GEOG/LD ARCH C188Geographic Information Systems4
INTEGBI/EPS C100/GEOG C146Communicating Ocean Science4
INTEGBI 106APhysical and Chemical Environment of the Ocean4
LD ARCH 120Topographic Form and Design Technology3
LD ARCH/GEOG C188Geographic Information Systems4
L & S/EPS 170ACCrossroads of Earth Resources and Society4
MATH 121AMathematical Tools for the Physical Sciences4
MATH 121BMathematical Tools for the Physical Sciences4
MEC ENG 106Fluid Mechanics3
PB HLTH 171Course Not Available4

Social Sciences Concentration Electives

CIV ENG 107Climate Change Mitigation3
DEMOG/SOCIOL C126Social Consequences of Population Dynamics4
DEMOG/ECON C175Economic Demography3
EPS C120Course Not Available4
EPS 170ACCrossroads of Earth Resources and Society4
ECON/ENVECON C102Natural Resource Economics4
ECON C125/ENVECON C101Environmental Economics4
ECON C171/ENVECON C151Economic Development4
ECON/DEMOG C175Economic Demography3
ENE,RES C100Energy and Society4
ENE,RES 102Quantitative Aspects of Global Environmental Problems4
ENE,RES C130/EPS C120Course Not Available4
ENE,RES 151Course Not Available4
ENE,RES 170Environmental Classics3
ENE,RES/ENVECON C180Ecological Economics in Historical Context3
ENGIN 124Course Not Available4
ENVECON 100Microeconomic Theory with Application to Natural Resources4
ENVECON C101/ECON C125Environmental Economics4
ENVECON/ECON C102Natural Resource Economics4
ENVECON C115/ESPM C104Modeling and Management of Biological Resources4
ENVECON 131Globalization and the Natural Environment3
ENVECON 141Course Not Available4
ENVECON C151/ECON C171Economic Development4
ENVECON 153Population, Environment, and Development3
ENVECON 161Advanced Topics in Environmental and Resource Economics4
ENVECON 162Economics of Water Resources3
ESPM 102CResource Management4
ESPM 102DClimate and Energy Policy4
ESPM C104/ENVECON C115Modeling and Management of Biological Resources4
ESPM 117Urban Garden Ecosystems4
ESPM 155Sociology and Political Ecology of Agro-Food Systems4
ESPM 160AC/HISTORY 120ACAmerican Environmental and Cultural History4
ESPM 161Environmental Philosophy and Ethics4
ESPM 162Bioethics and Society4
ESPM 163ACEnvironmental Justice: Race, Class, Equity, and the Environment4
ESPM 165International Rural Development Policy4
ESPM 166Natural Resource Policy and Indigenous Peoples4
ESPM C167Environmental Health and Development4
ESPM 168Political Ecology4
ESPM 169International Environmental Politics4
ESPM 181BCourse Not Available4
ESPM 183Forest Planning and Management4
GEOG 130Food and the Environment4
GEOG C188Geographic Information Systems4
HISTORY 120ACAmerican Environmental and Cultural History4
INTEGBI 117
  & INTEGBI 117L
Medical Ethnobotany
   and Course Not Available
2
LD ARCH 110Ecological Analysis3
LD ARCH C188Geographic Information Systems4
PB HLTH 140Introduction to Risk and Demographic Statistics4
SOCIOL C126Social Consequences of Population Dynamics4
SOCIOL 128ACCourse Not Available4

College Requirements

For College Requirements, please refer to the College of Natural Resources .

Student Learning Goals

Learning Goals for the Major

  1. Develop a broad, interdisciplinary framework for approaching complex, interconnected environmental problems facing our world at multiple scales
  2. Develop strong analytic and quantitative skills needed to identify problems, develop a program to address the problem, execute a rigorous analysis of the issue, and reach independent conclusions
  3. Develop a rigorous scientific base across multiple disciplines (social, biological, and physical sciences) but with a strong concentration in one area so as to develop depth of expertise in that field
  4. Learn how to communicate their findings effectively to the scientific community, government agencies, non-government environmental organizations, and the public

Skills

  1. Recognition of and knowledge about environmental problems and areas of research
  2. Comprehensive training in basic mathematics and the biological and physical sciences (calculus, biology, chemistry, and physics)
  3. Introduction to the social science concepts and methods (environmental economics, course in human environment interactions)
  4. Training in sampling and experimental design, and quantitative methods of data analysis and interpretation (statistics, introduction to estimation and modeling techniques)
  5. Development of critical thinking and evaluation skills
  6. Training in general research methods
  7. Training in written communication, especially scientific writing
  8. Training in oral and visual communication skills
  9. Additional training in specialized research methods in the student’s area of concentration

Courses

Environmental Sciences

ENV SCI 8X Climate Change: The Interface of Science and Public Policy 2 Units

The possible impacts of climate changes enhanced by or following from human activities create challenges for planners, policy-makers, industrialists, and all citizens of the globe. This course seeks to examine the science of climate change and the policy issues that follow from that change.

ENV SCI 10 Introduction to Environmental Sciences 3 Units

A survey of biological and physical environmental problems, focusing on geologic hazards, water and air quality, water supply, solid waste, introduced and endangered species, preservation of wetland ecosystems. Interaction of technical, social, and political approaches to environmental management.

ENV SCI 10L Field Study in Environmental Sciences 1 Unit

Field and laboratory studies of Strawberry Creek throughout its course from the hills to the Bay are used to exemplify integration of the physical, biological, and social components of science-based approaches to environmental management.

ENV SCI 24 Freshman Seminar 1 Unit

The Freshman Seminar Program has been designed to provide new students with the opportunity to explore an intellectual topic with a faculty member in a small-seminar setting. Freshman Seminars are offered in all campus departments, and topics vary from department to department and semester to semester. Enrollment limited to fifteen freshmen.

ENV SCI 84 Sophomore Seminar 1 or 2 Units

Sophomore seminars are small interactive courses offered by faculty members in departments all across the campus. Sophomore seminars offer opportunity for close, regular intellectual contact between faculty members and students in the crucial second year. The topics vary from department to department and semester to semester. Enrollment limited to 15 sophomores.

ENV SCI 100 Introduction to the Methods of Environmental Science 4 Units

Introduction to basic methods used in environmental research by biological, physical, and social scientists. The course is designed to teach skills necessary for majors to conduct independent thesis research in the required senior seminar, 196A-196B/196L. Topics include development of research questions, sampling methods, experimental design, statistical analysis, scientific writing and graphics, and introductions to special techniques for characterizing environmental conditions and features. This course is the prerequisite to 196A, from which the senior thesis topic statement is determined.

ENV SCI 125 Environments of the San Francisco Bay Area 3 Units

The weather and climate, plants and animals, geology, landforms, and soils of the Bay Area, with an emphasis on the interaction of these physical elements, their modification by humans, and problems deriving from human use.

Contact Information

Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management

130 Mulford Hall

Phone: 510-643-7430

Fax: 510-643-5438

Visit Department Website

Department Chair

Ronald Amundson, PhD

317 Hilgard Hall

Phone: 510-643-7890

earthy@berkeley.edu

Undergraduate Student Advising

Office of Instruction and Student Affairs, CNR

260 Mulford Hall

Phone: 510-642-0542

Fax: 510-643-3132

cnrteaching@berkeley.edu

Undergraduate Staff Adviser

Carina Gailicia

260 Mulford Hall

Phone: 510-643-9479

cgalicia@berkeley.edu

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