Ecosystem Management
Contents
Introduction
Ecosystem management are part of the School of Environmental and Rural Sciences. Our teaching and research span disciplines such as biological conservation, land and water management, natural resource policy and geographical information systems. This discipline delivers the major components of the Bachelor of Natural Resources and has a strong track record in training industry-based postgraduate students.
Why Study Ecosystem Management at UNE?
The UNE has a long history in environmental science with the Bachelor of Natural Resources degree being the first of its kind in Australia, giving the school more than thirty years of research and teaching experience. Our location in the North Coast region of NSW means we have a wide diversity of ecosystems at our doorstep. To the east we have upland plains, temperate and rainforests, and an array of swamps and streams in pristine National Parks leading to populated urban centres in one of Australia’s fastest developing regions. Heading west we find the expanse of the Murray-Darling Basin, with rangelands, irrigated cropping and regulated lowland rivers in a semi-arid climate. Students wishing to study in Ecosystem Management will learn skills in the ecology and management of diverse systems including agricultural and forest landscapes, mining and extractive industries, and wetlands and rivers.
Courses
Undergraduate:
Bachelor of Engineering Technology
Bachelor of Environmental Science
Bachelor of Environmental Science/Bachelor of Laws
Bachelor of GeoScience
Bachelor of Marine Science and Management
Bachelor of Natural Resources
Bachelor of Natural Resources/Bachelor of Urban and Regional Planning
Bachelor of Science
Postgraduate Research
Master of Resource Science
Doctor of Philosophy
Postgraduate
Graduate Certificate in Geographic Information Science
Graduate Certificate in Marine Science and Management
Graduate Certificate in Natural Resources
Graduate Diploma in Geographic Information Science
Graduate Diploma in Marine Science and Management
Graduate Diploma in Natural Resources
Master of Environmental Management
Master of Geographic Information Science
Master of Marine Science and Management
Master of Natural Resources
Professional Doctorate in Science
Bachelor Honours
Bachelor of Environmental Science with Honours
Bachelor of Science with Honours
Units
ECOL202 – Marine and Freshwater Ecology
ECOL203 – Ecological Gradients
ECOL204 – Ecological Methods
EM234 - Introduction to GIS
EM311 - Land Assessment for Sustainable Use
EM312 - Impact Assessment in Natural Resources Management
EM323 - Ecology and Management of Australasian Wildlife
EM351 – Ecosystem Rehabilitation
EM353 - Conservation Biology
EM432 - Remote Sensing and Image Analysis
NR411 - Resource Policy and the Community
NR490 - Project Report: B. Natural Resources
RSNR301 – Pollution Management
RSNR402 – Freshwater Ecology and Management
RSNR403 - Sustainable Land Management
RSNR404 - Project Management
ZOOL203 - Vertebrate Zoology - Evolution and Diversity
Careers
Job opportunities that require training in resource management will remain in demand as society moves towards ecologically sustainable management practices for all of our natural resources. Students trained in ecosystem management will be sought after as the pressures of urban and agricultural development place unprecedented demands on natural resources. Our graduates have taken positions in catchment management authorities, state and federal government management agencies, consultancies and industry, and research organisations. Our graduates are especially well-placed to gain employment at the end of their degree through contacts made during the 12 weeks of work experience required in the Bachelor of Natural resources.
