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BSc Ecology and Conservation with Science Foundation Year
About this course
Ecology and conservation is the scientific discipline concerned with understanding living systems and protecting them from the pressures of human activity. Ecology examines how organisms interact with each other and their environments, from the dynamics of populations and communities to the functioning of entire ecosystems. Conservation applies this understanding to the practical challenge of preventing biodiversity loss, restoring degraded habitats, and managing species and landscapes in ways that sustain natural systems for the future. As the scale of the ecological crisis has become increasingly apparent, ecologists and conservationists have never been more needed. At the University of Lincoln this four-year full-time programme opens with a foundation year in science, providing the grounding in biology, chemistry, and mathematical reasoning needed before you progress to the main ecology and conservation degree. The foundation year gives students from a variety of academic backgrounds a solid scientific foundation and the study skills to succeed at degree level. Across the programme you will study population ecology, community ecology, habitat management, wildlife survey techniques, conservation biology, and environmental policy, developing both field skills and analytical competence. A sandwich year and a year abroad are incorporated into the degree, and a work placement is built in, giving you substantial professional experience in conservation or environmental management alongside your studies. Graduates in ecology and conservation pursue careers in environmental consultancy, nature conservation organisations, national parks, wildlife trusts, environmental government agencies, and research. Field survey work, habitat management, species monitoring, and environmental impact assessment are common professional activities. The analytical and quantitative skills developed through the degree are also valued in environmental policy, data science applied to biodiversity, and science communication. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in ecology, conservation biology, or environmental management, deepening their expertise and strengthening their research credentials.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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