And the adventure begins!
The first 13 Faculty of Agriculture students participating in the African Wildlife Ecology Course began the first leg of their 32-hour journey to Johannesburg, South Africa, Tuesday evening, May 31st at the Robert Stanfield International Airport in Halifax.
The students will be spending the next three weeks in a tented camp in The Amakhala Game Reserve in South African as part of the Faculty’s newest program in Bioveterinary Science.
The African Wildlife Ecology Course is an optional three-week credit course for Bioveterinary Science students providing them with an opportunity to work with the Big 5 in South Africa.
“The Faculty of Agriculture is proud to be partnering with Rhodes University, one of South Africa’s leading research universities and its world renowned Wildlife & Reserve Management Research Group on the development and delivery of this unique and innovative course. The Faculty of Agriculture truly believes in applying theory to practice, real ‘hands on learning’ and this is a fantastic example of that approach,” explained Faculty of Agriculture Dean, David Gray.
Students will be given lectures on such topics as anthropology, ecology, animal behavior, palaeontology and the climate and history of the region. They will also be taken on fieldtrips to surrounding areas to experience various ecosystems including Addo Elephant Park and Mountain Zebra National Park.
“If you really want to see true ecology in action then there is only one place to do it…Africa! I was lucky enough to have the opportunity to study in South Africa and that experience has stayed with me throughout my career,” added Dean Gray. “The biology and ecology you get to see…to live…is in a different league to what we are all used to here in the northern hemisphere…and if you bring in “The Big 5” then things get REALLY exciting. Predator-prey relationships, conservation, ecological interactions from micro to macro scales and you’re living right in the middle of it all. It is simply fantastic!"
For more information on this program please contact Kendra Mellish at Kendra.mellish@dal.ca.
Follow the students on their blog at https://blogs.dal.ca/awe/
Twitter @aggiesinafrica
Recent News
- Look Who's Talking ‑ Robert Larsen
- Lifting our communities
- FAFU Students Celebrate Mid‑Autumn Festival in Cox Kitchen
- Growing with Confidence: Shirley Thorn’s Journey as a Master Gardener in Training
- Flu shot Clinic on campus
- Bringing Worlds Together
- Funding Announced for Organic Science Cluster 4: Advancing the Sustainability of Canadian Agriculture
- Annapolis Royal Historic Gardens Field Trip