Office of the University Registrar

Environmental Science

Environmental science is the science of people's role in natural systems, the basis of our economy. This program accesses courses universitywide and provides numerous opportunities for international study.

About This Major

  • College: Agricultural and Life Sciences
  • School: Natural Resources and Environment
  • Degree: Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Arts
  • Hours for the Degree: 120
  • Specializations: Bachelor of Arts - Environmental Policy, Environmental Policy and Business, Environmental Education
    Bachelor of Science - Environmental Science, Natural Resource Management
  • Minor: Yes
  • Combined Degree Program: Yes
  • Website: snre.ufl.edu/undergraduate

Overview

The environmental science degree approaches complex environmental issues with reliable knowledge and interdisciplinary perspectives, and provides the full range of knowledge relevant to complex environmental problems. This includes biological and physical sciences, ethics, economics, policy and law.

The degree prepares graduates for jobs in environmental consulting companies, government environmental offices or land and water management agencies, or non-government organizations. About one-third of environmental science students advance to graduate or professional degree programs. The combination of the school's broad undergraduate degree with a subsequent degree is highly marketable.

The school also offers a 4-year plus 1-year program, combining the bachelor's degree in environmental science and the Master of Science in interdisciplinary ecology.

Core Requirements for Both Degrees

Students take a core of courses, including a general course in environmental science and courses in ethics, ecology, organic chemistry, earth science, global science, hydrologic systems, and policy and natural resource management.

The core provides 31-32 hours of coursework in physical, biological and social sciences. The B.S. and B.A. tracks are similar. The B.S. includes one course in policy and one in organic chemistry; the B.A. includes two policy courses and no organic chemistry.

Beyond the core requirement, each student selects 21-27 additional credits from electives for the major. During the fourth year, all students take a capstone course where critical thinking skills are developed.

The freshmen and sophomore years lay a foundation of coursework for building later expertise. Students need to know the natural sciences of physics, chemistry and biology, with laboratory experience in each area. Study of microeconomics and macroeconomics are required to understand the human economy. Introductory statistics empowers students to independently evaluate sets of numbers. College algebra and an introduction to calculus enable students to work with rates of change, the heart of ecological science.

Coursework in the core of the major provides a base of common knowledge and experience in subjects essential to environmental science. Then students diverge into electives chosen according to individual interest. Senior-year students return to a common course that develops critical-thinking skills by confronting conflicts of ecological and economic paradigms, synthesizing across physical, biological and social systems, and engaging diverse knowledge and views to resolve key environmental problems.

The preprofessional courses for the B.S. tracks in environmental science and natural resource management prepare students for the science-oriented versions of the major. The requirements for the B.A. track in environmental policy include less physics and mathematics, in preparation for the major that combines science and policy.

Core Requirements for Both Degrees

Preprofessional Requirements for Both Degrees

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Course Requirements for Both Degrees

Required Foundation course
EVS 3000 and 3000L Environmental Science (3) and Environmental Science Laboratory (1)4
Environmental Ethics: take one
AEB 4126 Agricultural and Natural Resource Ethics (GE-H, S)3
PHM 3032 Ethics and Ecology (GE-H)3
POT 3503 Environmental Ethics and Politics3
REL 2104 Environmental Ethics (GE-H)3
REL 3492 Religion Ethics and Nature (H)3
Ecology: take one
ALS 3153 Agricultural Ecology3
EES 4103 Applied Ecology (GE-B)2
FOR 3153C Forest Ecology (GE-B) (B.S. only)3
PCB 3601C Plant Ecology3
PCB 4043C General Ecology (GE-B) (B.S. only)4
Organic Chemistry: BS - take one; BA - take none
Toxicology concentration - see other requirements
BCH 3023 Elementary Organic and Biological Chemistry3
CHM 2200 Basic Organic Chemistry3
EES 4203 Phase Partitioning in the Environment4
Earth and Soil Science: take one
GEO 2200 and 2200L Physical Geography (3) and Physical Geography Laboratory (1) GE-P)4
GLY 1000 Exploring the Geological Sciences (GE-P) (B.A. only)3
GLY 2010C Physical Geology (GE-P) (B.S. only)4
GLY 2030C Environmental and Engineering Geology (GE-P)3
GLY 2100C Historical Geology (GE-P) (B.S. only)4
SWS 3022 and 3022L Introduction to Soils in the Environment (3) and Introduction to Soils in the Environment Laboratory (1) (GE-P)4
SWS 4231C Soil, Water and Land Use (GE-P) *3
Global Systems: take one
EES 4370 Environmental Meteorology and Oceanography3
GEO 3250 Climatology (GE-P)3
GEO 3930 Introduction to Climate Change3
GLY 1073 Introduction to Global Change (B.A. only)3
GLY 3074 Oceans and Global Climate3
MET 1010 Principles of Weather and Climate3
OCE 1001 Introduction to Oceanography3
Hydrologic Systems: take one
AOM 4643 Environmental Hydrology: Principles and Issues3
FNR 4343C Forest Water Resources3
GEO 3280 Principles of Geographic Hydrology (GE-P)4
GLY 3882C Hydrology and Human Affairs3
SWS 4244 Wetlands3
SWS 4245 Water Resource Sustainability3
Environmental Policy: BS - take one; BA - take two
AEB 4123 Agricultural and Natural Resource Law3
AEB 3450 Introduction to Natural Resource and Environmental Economics3
AEB 4274 Natural Resource and Environmental Policy3
AEB 4283 International Development Policy (GE-S)3
ECP 3302 Environmental Economics and Resource Policy4
FNR 4660C Natural Resource Policy and Administration3
INR 3034 Politics of the World Economy3
INR 3502 International Institutions (GE-S, N)3
POS 4931 Florida Environmental Politics3
PUP 3204 Politics and Ecology (GE-S)3
PUP 4021 Law, Politics and Regulation (GE-S)3
Natural Resource Management: take one
AGG 3501 Environment, Food and Society3
AGR 3005 Principles of Crop Science3
AOM 3732 Agricultural Water Management3
EES 3008 Energy and Environment3
FAS 4305C Introduction to Fishery Science3
FOR 3004 Forests, Conservation and People3
FOR 3200C Foundations in Forest Resources and Conservation3
FOR 4621 Forest Economics and Management (GE-P)3
LEI 3546 Park Management3
SWS 4231C Soil, Water and Land Use (GE-P) *3
SWS 4932 Forest and Soil Ecosystem Services3
Required Capstone Course
EVS 4021 Critical Thinking in Environmental Science or
AEB 4454 Contemporary Issues in Natural Resource and Environmental
  Economics (use as substitute if conflict)
3

* If taken from one group, this course does not satisfy the requirement for a course from the other group.

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Preprofessional Requirements for Both Degrees

Each student must fulfill preprofessional requirements that differ slightly for the B.S. and B.A. degrees. These consist of courses in chemistry, physics, biology, calculus, statistics and economics, totaling 39-46 (typically 43) hours for the B.S. and 31-39 (typically 34) hours for the B.A.

In addition to the preprofessional requirements, all students are responsible for completing the university's general education and the writing and math requirements.

Certain preprofessional requirements simultaneously satisfy 18-21 credit hours (depending on courses selected) of the general education mathematics, physics, biology, and social and behavioral science. Remaining general education requirements include 15-18 credit hours (depending on preprofessional courses taken) in composition, humanities and social and behavioral sciences.

The 12 credit hours of writing requirements include 3-12 hours taken for general education and preprofessional requirements, depending on selections. The six hours of math requirements are satisfied by preprofessional requirements.

For efficiency, freshmen should seek to maximize overlap of preprofessional requirements with general education and the writing and math requirements, as outlined below:

  • Science preprofessional requirements satisfy up to 12 hours of the general education physical and biological sciences requirement (the basic nine-hour requirement plus the variable three hours from a category). Students should allocate the variable three hours to physical and biological sciences to reduce the humanities requirement from nine to six hours.
  • Economics preprofessional requirements satisfy up to six of the nine-hour general education social and behavioral sciences requirement (six if satisfied with ECO 2013 and 2023; four if satisfied with AEB 3103).
  • Policy preprofessional requirement (POS 2041) for B.A. students satisfies the remaining three hours of the nine-hour general education social and behavioral sciences requirement. B.S. students can satisfy the remaining three hours of the nine-hour general education social and behavioral sciences requirement with certain core courses, under ethics (AEB 4126) and policy (PUP 3204, PUP 4021).
  • Mathematics and statistics preprofessional requirements satisfy the six-hour general education mathematics requirement and the six-hour computation requirement.
  • Satisfying the preceding requirements leaves 18 hours: six hours of humanities, three hours of composition and nine hours of writing.
  • Students should take humanities, composition and writing courses that also satisfy the six-hour international studies and diversity overlap, such as LIT 2110 and 2120 or 2000-level foreign language humanities courses.

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Bachelor of Arts

Bachelor of Science


Bachelor of Arts
(with specializations in Environmental Policy, Environmental Policy and Business, and Environmental Education)

The Bachelor of Arts degree in environmental science focuses on the social sciences that connect the natural sciences and engineering to society.

Electives in the areas of policy, law, public administration and resource economics make this the preferred specialization for students interested in advancing to law school or to the policy aspects of environmental consulting and public agency work.

To graduate with this major, students must complete the general education and major requirements, as well as all college requirements.

Critical Tracking and Recommended Semester Plan

Equivalent critical tracking courses as determined by the State of Florida Common Course Prerequisites may be used for transfer students

Semester 1

  • 2.0 UF GPA required semester 1-5
  • 2.0 GPA required for all critical-tracking coursework for semesters 1-5
  • Complete 2 of 9 critical-tracking courses, excluding labs: BSC 2007/2009L,
    BSC 2008, CHM 2045/2045L, CHM 2046/2046L, ECO 2013 and ECO 2023
    or AEB 2014, MAC 1147, PHY 2020 or PHY 2004, POS 2041, STA 2023

Semester 2

  • Complete 2 additional critical-tracking courses, excluding labs

Semester 3

  • Complete 2 additional critical-tracking courses, excluding labs

Semester 4

  • Complete 2 additional critical-tracking courses, excluding labs

Semester 5

  • Complete all 9 critical-tracking courses, including labs

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To remain on track, students must complete the appropriate critical-tracking courses, which appear in bold.

Recommended semester plan

Semester 1Credits
CHM 2045 and 2045L General Chemistry 1 (3) and General Chemistry 1 Laboratory (1) (GE-P) 14
MAC 1147 Precalculus: Algebra and Trigonometry (GE-M) 24
Composition, according to placement (GE-C)3
Humanities (GE-H, N) *3
Total 14
Semester 2Credits
CHM 2046 and 2046L General Chemistry 2 (GE-P) and General Chemistry 2 Laboratory (1) (GE-P)4
STA 2023 Introduction to Statistics 1 (GE-M)3
Electives (WR)6
Humanities (GE-H, D) *3
Total 16
Semester 3Credits
BSC 2007 Biological Cells, Organisms and Genetics (GE-B) 3 3
BSC 2009L Laboratory in Biological Sciences (GE-B) 31
ECO 2013 Principles of Macroeconomics (4) or
AEB 2014 Economic Issues, Food and You (3) (GE-S)
3-4
PHY 2020 Introduction to Principles of Physics or
PHY 2004 Applied Physics 1 (GE-P) 3
3
Electives5
Total 15-16
Semester 4Credits
BSC 2008 Biological Evolution, Ecology and Behavior (GE-B) 3 3
ECO 2023 Principles of Microeconomics (GE-S) or
Electives
4
EES 3000L Environmental Science and Humanity Laboratory1
EVS 3000 Environmental Science3
POS 2041 American Federal Government (GE-S)3
Social and Behavioral Sciences (GE-S) or
Elective
3
Total 17

* Select courses that carry humanities (H), composition (C), international (N) and diversity (D) credit.

1 If students take CHM 1025 in preparation for CHM 2045, the extra credits count as free electives.

2 If students precede this sequence with MAC 1114, 1140 or 1147, the extra credits count as electives.

3 The following courses may be used as substitutes:
BSC 2010 and 2010L for BSC 2007 and 2009L
BSC 2011 and 2011L for BSC 2008
PHY 2053 for PHY 2020 or PHY 2004

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Semester 5Credits
Earth and Soil Science, from master list3-4
Ecology, from master list2-4
Environmental Ethics, from master list3
Environmental Policy, from master list3-4
Total 11-15
Semester 6Credits
Environmental Law, from master list3-4
Environmental Policy, from master list3-4
Global Systems, from master list3
Hydrologic Systems, from master list3-4
Natural Resource Management, from master list 3
Total 15-18
Semester 7Credits
Environmental Policy, from master list3-4
Public Administration, from master list3
Resource Economics, from master list3-4
Electives for the major, two, from master list6
Total 15-17
Semester 8Credits
EVS 4021 Critical Thinking in Environmental Science3
Electives5
Electives for the major, three, from master list9
Total 17

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Environmental Policy Specialization for the B.A.

Students can substitute appropriate graduate courses for electives, with approval of the school and permission of the instructor. To substitute a 6000-level course, the student must have senior standing and a minimum junior/senior-level GPA of 3.0.

Electives: take 9 courses, 27 credits

Environmental Law: take one
AEB 4085 Agricultural Risk Management and the Law3
AEB 4123 Agricultural and Natural Resource Law3
BUL 4310 The Legal Environmental of Business4
PUP 4021 Law, Politics and Regulation *3
Environmental Policy: take one
AEB 4274 Natural Resource and Environmental Policy3
AEB 4283 International Development Policy *3
POS 4931 Florida Environmental Politics3
POS 4931 Environmental Politics in the Global South3
PUP 3204 Politics and Ecology *3
PUP 4021 Law, Politics and Regulation *3
Public Administration: take one
PAD 3003 Introduction to Public Administration3
PAD 4034 Problems of Public Administration and Policy3
PAD 4604 Administrative Law and Regulatory Politics *3
Resource Economics: take one
AEB 3450 Introduction to Natural Resource and Environmental Economics *3
ECP 3302 Environmental Economics and Resource Policy *4
Other electives: take five
AEB 4085 Agricultural Risk Management and the Law3
AEB 4123 Agricultural and Natural Resource Law3
AEB 4242 International Trade Policy in Agriculture3
AEB 4452 Advanced Natural Resource and Environmental Economics3
AEC 3030C Effective Oral Communication3
AEC 3033C Research and Business Writing in Agricultural and Life Sciences (WR) 3
AEC 4905 Gender, Environment, Agriculture and Participation3
AMH 4930 Florida Environmental History3
ANT 4403 Environment and Cultural Behavior3
ECO 3101 Intermediate Microeconomics4
ECO 3203 Intermediate Macroeconomics4
ECO 3532 Public Choice4
ECP 3113 Population Economics4
EES 4316 Industrial Ecology3
EVS 4949 Environmental Science Internship1-3
GEO 3315 Geography of Crop Plants3
GEO 3427 Plants, Health and Spirituality3
GEO 3502 Economic Geography3
GIS 3043 Foundations of Geographic Information Systems4
FNR 4040C Natural Resource Communication3
FNR 4343C Forest Water Resources3
FNR 4623C Integrated Natural Resource Management3
FOR 3202 Society and Natural Resources3
FOR 4664 Sustainable Ecotourism Development3
FOS 4731 Government Regulations and the Food Industry2
FYC 3401 Introduction to Social and Economic Perspectives on the Community3
INR 4035 Rich and Poor Nations in the International System3
INR 4350 International Environmental Relations3
LEI 4833 Ecotourism3
MAN 3025 Principles of Management4
PAD 4034 Problems of Public Administration and Policy3
PAD 4604 Administrative Law and Regulatory Politics3
POS 2112 American State and Local Government3
POS 4674 Political Change and Legal Development3
POT 3503 Environmental Ethics and Politics3
PUP 3204 Politics and Ecology *3
PUP 4021 Law, Politics and Regulation *3
SWS 4245 Water Resource Sustainability *3
SWS 4932 Forest and Soil Ecosystem Services3
SYA 4403 Sociology of Environmental Health3
SYD 3410 Urban Sociology3
SYD 4020 Population3
SYD 4021 Special Study: U.S. Population Issues and Families in Later Life3
SYO 4530 Social Inequality3
URP 4000 Preview of Urban and Regional Planning3
URP 4273 Survey of Planning Information Systems3

* If this course was taken to fulfill the core requirement, it cannot fulfill the elective requirement. Students must select a substitution from the electives for the major.

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Environmental Policy and Business Specialization for the B.A.

Environmental policy and business combines a general overview of business (courses in the major functional areas of business administration) with courses in environmental policy.

Along with the prerequisite ECO 2013 Microeconomics, the courses listed from the Warrington College of Business Administration would make students eligible for a minor in business administration.

Similarly, combining the prerequisite AEB 3103, ACG 2021 and three of the listed AEB courses would make students eligible for a minor in food and resource economics. This specializationh benefits employment in environmental consulting, corporate/agency environmental management and environmental law.

Students may substitute appropriate graduate courses for electives, with approval of the school and permission of the instructor. To substitute a 6000-level course, the student must have senior standing and a junior/senior-level GPA of at least 3.0.

Electives: take 9 courses, 27 credits

Required courses
Take four: ACG 2021 (4); AEB 3144 (3) or FIN 3403 (4); AEB 3133 (3) or
MAN 3025 (4); MAR 3023 (4) or AEB 3300 (3) or AEB 4343 (3)
13-16
ACG 2021 Introduction to Financial Accounting4
AEB 3133 Principles of Agribusiness Management3
AEB 3144 Introduction to Agricultural Finance3
AEB 3300 Agricultural and Food Marketing3
AEB 4343 International Agribusiness Marketing3
FIN 3403 Business Finance4
MAN 3025 Principles of Management4
MAR 3023 Principles of Marketing4
Other electives
Take four or five courses from Environmental Policy electives11-14

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Environmental Education Specialization for the B.A.

Environmental education prepares students for work in nature education centers, environmental organizations, public agency environmental interpretation programs and as nature tour guides in the private sector.

While this is a suitable degree for graduate school in education, it does not lead to teacher certification or sufficient completion of the five-year teacher program in the College of Education.

Students can substitute appropriate graduate courses for listed electives, with approval of the school and permission of the instructor. To substitute a 6000-level course, the student must have senior standing and a junior/senior-level GPA of at least 3.0.

Electives: take 9 courses, 27 credits

Learning: take one
EDF 3214 Learning and Cognition in Education2
Measurement and Evaluation: take one
EDF 4430 Measurement and Evaluation in Education3
Environmental Education: take two
FNR 4070C Environmental Education Program Development3
SCE 4342 Environmental Education Methods and Materials3
WIS 4523 Human Dimensions of Natural Resource Conservation3
Leadership Development: take one
AEC 3414 Leadership Development3
Other Electives: take four or five
EVS 4949 Environmental Science Internship1-3
Biology -
BOT 2011C Plant Diversity4
BOT 3151C Local Flora of North Florida3
ENY 3030C Insect Field Biology3
FNR 3131C Dendrology/Forest Plants3
ZOO 2203C Invertebrate Zoology4
ZOO 2303C Vertebrate Zoology4
ZOO 4403C Field Problems in Marine Biology (counts as one or two courses)4-6
ZOO 4472C Avian Biology4
Communication Skills -
AEC 3030C Effective Oral Communication3
AEC 3033C Research and Business Writing in Agricultural and Life Sciences (WR) 3
AEC 3073 Intercultural Communications3
ENC 3250 Professional Communication3
ENC 3310 Advanced Exposition3
ENC 3312 Advanced Argumentative Writing3
FNR 4040C Natural Resource Communication3
JOU 3101 Reporting3
JOU 4308 Magazine and Feature Writing3
MMC 2100 Writing for Mass Communication3
Education -
AEC 4052 Communication Campaign Strategies in Agricultural and Life Sciences3
AEC 4500 Program Development and Evaluation3
DEP 3053 Developmental Psychology3
EDF 3110 Human Growth and Development3
EDF 4542 Philosophy of Education3
FNR 4040C Natural Resource Communication3
Human Dimensions -
AEB 4283 International Development Policy (GE-S) *3
ANT 4403 Environment and Cultural Behavior3
FOR 4664 Sustainable Ecotourism Development3
FYC 3401 Introduction to Social and Economic Perspectives on the Community3
INR 4035 Rich and Poor Nations in the International System3
LEI 3250 Introduction to Outdoor Recreation and Parks3
LEI 4833 Ecotourism3
POS 4674 Political Change and Legal Development3
URP 4000 Preview of Urban and Regional Planning3
Policy -
AEB 3450 Introduction to Natural Resource and Environmental Economics3
AEB 4274 Natural Resource and Environmental Policy3
ECP 3302 Environmental Economics and Resource Policy4
FNR 4660C Natural Resource Policy and Administration3
INR 4035 Rich and Poor Nations in the International System3
INR 4350 International Environmental Relations3
PAD 4034 Problems of Public Administration and Policy3
PAD 4604 Administrative Law and Regulatory Politics3
POS 4931 Florida Environmental Politics3
POS 4931 Special Topics: Environmental Politics in the Global South3
PUP 3204 Politics and Ecology3
PUP 4021 Law, Politics and Regulation3

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Bachelor of Science
(with specializations in Environmental Science and Natural Resource Management)

The Bachelor of Science degree in environmental science emphasizes the applied sciences and the basic sciences from which they derive. The track is designed to prepare for a particular employment goal or for graduate or professional school.

Elective courses required beyond the core requirements are distributed among four categories: physical sciences, biological sciences, human dimensions and additional skills and concepts. For advice on choice of electives, consult with the adviser in 102 Black Hall. Students pursuing the Bachelor of Science who want more environmental policy electives can substitute them for the courses in human dimensions in the environmental science specialization.

Courses taken to fulfill the core requirements cannot fulfill elective requirements. Students can substitute graduate courses for electives, with approval of the school and permission of the instructor. To substitute a 6000-level course, the student must have senior standing and a junior/senior-level GPA of at least 3.0.

To graduate with this major, students must complete the general education and major requirements, as well as all college requirements.

Critical Tracking and Recommended Semester Plan

Equivalent critical tracking courses as determined by the State of Florida Common Course Prerequisites may be used for transfer students

Semester 1

  • 2.0 UF GPA required semester 1-5
  • 2.0 GPA required for all critical-tracking coursework for semesters 1-5
  • Complete 2 of 11 critical-tracking courses, excluding labs: BSC 2010/2010L,
    BSC 2011/2011L, CHM 2045/2045L, CHM 2046/2046L, ECO 2013 and ECO 2023
    or AEB 3103, MAC 2311, MAC 2312, PHY 2004/2004L, PHY 2005/2005L and
    STA 2023

Semester 2

  • Complete 3 additional courses of the 11 critical-tracking courses, excluding labs

Semester 3

  • Complete 3 additional critical-tracking courses, excluding labs

Semester 4

  • Complete 3 additional critical-tracking courses, excluding labs

Semester 5

  • Complete all 11 critical-tracking courses, including labs

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To remain on track, students must complete the appropriate critical-tracking courses, which appear in bold.

Recommended semester plan

Semester 1Credits
CHM 2045 and 2045L General Chemistry 1 (3) and General Chemistry 1 Laboratory (1) (GE-P) 14
MAC 2311 Analytic Geometry and Calculus 1 (GE-M) 2 4
Composition, according to placement (GE-C)3
Humanities (GE-H, D) *3
Total 14
Semester 2Credits
CHM 2046 and 2046L General Chemistry 2 (3) and General Chemistry 2 Laboratory (1) (GE-P)4
MAC 2312 Analytic Geometry and Calculus 2 (GE-M) 2 4
STA 2023 Introduction to Statistics 1 (GE-M) 33
Electives (GE-H, N) *5
Total 16
Semester 3Credits
BSC 2010 and 2010L Integrated Principles of Biology 1 (3) and Integrated Principles of Biology 1 Laboratory (1) (GE-B)4
ECO 2013 Principles of Macroeconomics (GE-S) or
AEB 3103 Principles of Food and Resource Economics (GE-S)
4
PHY 2004 and 2004L Applied Physics 1 (3) and Applied Physics 1 Laboratory (1) (both GE-P) 33
Humanities (GE-H) *3
Total 15
Semester 4Credits
BSC 2011 and 2011L Integrated Principles of Biology 2 (3) and Integrated Principles of Biology 2 Laboratory (1) (GE-B)4
ECO 2023 Principles of Microeconomics (GE-S) or
Electives
4
PHY 2005 and 2005L Applied Physics 2 (3) and Applied Physics 2 Laboratory (1) (both GE-P) 33
Humanities (GE-H) * or Social and Behavioral Sciences (GE-S) 3
Total 15

* Select courses that carry humanities (H), composition (C), international (N) and diversity (D) credit.

1 If students take CHM 1025 in preparation for CHM 2045, the extra credits count as electives.

2 If students precede this sequence with MAC 1114, 1140 or 1147, the extra credits count as electives. Students can substitute MAC 2233 and 2234 for MAC 2311 and 2312, but this may preclude access to certain courses.

3 The following courses may be used as substitutes:
PHY 2053 and 2053L for PHY 2004 and 2004L
PHY 2054 and 2054L for PHY 2005 and 2005L

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Semester 5Credits
EVS 3000 Environmental Science - foundation course3
EES 3000L Environmental Science and Humanity Laboratory1
Ecology, from master list2-4
Environmental Ethics, from master list3
Environmental Policy, from master list3-4
Organic Chemistry, from master list3-4
Total 15-19
Semester 6Credits
Earth and Soil Science, from master list3-4
Global Systems, from master list3
Hydrologic Systems, from master list3-4
Natural Resource Management, from master list3
Specialization elective, from master list3
Total 15-17
Semester 7Credits
EVS 4021 Critical Thinking in Environmental Science3
Elective3
Specialization electives, three, from master list9
Total 15
Semester 8Credits
Biological Sciences, from master list3
Human Dimensions, from master list3
Physical Sciences, from master list3
Electives or specialization electives, if needed6
Total 15

Students preparing for science modeling in graduate school should take MAP 2302 as an elective.

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Environmental Science Specialization for the B.S.

No concentration: 7 courses, 21 credits

  • Physical Sciences: take 1-5 courses, 3-15 credits
  • Biological Sciences: take 1-5 courses, 3-15 credits
  • Human Dimensions: take 1-3 courses, 3-9 credits
  • Additional Skills and Concepts: take 1-4 courses, 3-12 credits

Toxicology concentration: 9 courses, 30-32 credits

  • Biological Sciences: take BCH 4024, BSC 3096 or PCB 4723C, MCB 3020 and 3020L, PCB 3063, VME 4611, VME 4612 for 22-24 credits
  • Additional Skills and Concepts: take CHM 2210, 2211 and 2211L for 8 credits

Electives: Take according to concentrations (above)

Physical Sciences
ALS 3133 Agricultural and Environmental Quality3
AOM 3732 Agricultural Water Management *3
AOM 4643 Environmental Hydrology: Principles and Issues3
CWR 4111 Engineering Hydrology3
EES 4370 Environmental Meteorology and Oceanography *3
EMA 3010 Materials3
ENV 4101 Elements of Atmospheric Pollution3
FNR 4343C Forest Water Resources3
GEO 3250 Climatology *3
GEO 3280 Principles of Geographic Hydrology *4
GEO 4221 Coastal Morphology and Processes3
GEO 4281 Fluvial Morphology and Processes3
GLY 2100C Historical Geology *4
GLY 3074 Oceans and Global Climate3
GLY 3200C Principles of Mineralogy4
GLY 3603C Paleontology4
GLY 4155C Geology of Florida3
GLY 4552C Sedimentary Geology4
GLY 5827 Groundwater Geology3
MET 3503 Weather and Forecasting3
MET 4352 Hurricanes3
OCE 3016 Introduction to Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering3
SWS 3022 and 3022L Introduction to Soils in the Environment (3) and Soils in the Environment Laboratory (1) *4
SWS 4223 Environmental Biogeochemistry3
SWS 4231C Soil, Water and Land Use3
SWS 4245 Water Resource Sustainability *3
SWS 4602C Soil Physics3
SWS 4715C Environmental Pedology4
Biological Sciences
AGR 3005 Principles of Crop Science3
AGR 4231C Forage Science and Range Management4
ALS 3153 Agricultural Ecology3
BOT 2710C Practical Plant Taxonomy3
BOT 3151C Local Flora of North Florida3
EES 3008 Energy and Environment3
EES 4102 Wastewater Microbiology2
EES 4103 Applied Ecology2
EES 4401 Public Health Engineering3
ENV 4351 Solid and Hazardous Waste Management4
ENV 4612 Green Engineering Design and Sustainability3
ENY 3005 and 3005L Principles of Entomology (2) and Principles of Entomology Laboratory (1)3
ENY 3030C Insect Field Biology3
ENY 4161 Insect Classification3
FAS 4305C Introduction to Fishery Science *3
FAS 4405 Aquariums, Water and Aquaculture3
FNR 3131C Dendrology of Forest Plants3
FNR 4623C Integrated Natural Resource Management *3
FOR 3153C Forest Ecology3
FOR 3342C Tree Biology3
FOS 3042 Introductory Food Science3
FOS 4202 Food Safety and Sanitation2
MCB 2000 and 2000L Microbiology (3) and Microbiology Laboratory (1)4
MCB 3020 and 3020L Basic Biology of Microorganisms (3) and Basic Biology of Microorganisms Laboratory (1)4
NEM 3002 Principles of Nematology3
ORH 3513C Environmental Plant Identification and Use3
PLP 3002C Fundamentals of Plant Pathology4
PLS 4343C Identification and Ecology of Aquatic Plants3
SWS 4303C Soil Microbial Ecology3
WIS 3401 Wildlife Ecology and Management3
WIS 4443C Wetland Wildlife Ecology4
WIS 4545 Ecology and Management of Wildlife Invasions3
WIS 4554 Conservation Biology3
ZOO 2203C Invertebrate Zoology4
ZOO 2303C Vertebrate Zoology4
ZOO 4472C Avian Biology4
ZOO 4403C Field Problems in Marine Biology (counts as one or two courses)4-6
Human Dimensions
AEB 3450 Introduction to Natural Resource and Environmental Economics3
AEB 4085 Agricultural Risk Management and the Law3
AEB 4123 Agricultural and Natural Resource Law3
AEB 4274 Natural Resource and Environmental Policy3
AEB 4283 International Development Policy *3
AEC 4905 Gender, Environment, Agriculture and Participation3
AMH 4930 Florida Environmental History3
ANT 3514C Introduction to Biological Anthropology4
ANT 4403 Environment and Cultural Behavior3
BUL 4310 The Legal Environmental of Business4
ECP 3113 Population Economics4
ECP 3302 Environmental Economics and Resource Policy4
EES 4316 Industrial Ecology3
ENV 4612 Green Engineering Design and Sustainability3
FOR 3202 Society and Natural Resources3
FOR 4060 Global Forests3
FOR 4664 Sustainable Ecotourism Development3
FOS 4731 Government Regulations and the Food Industry2
FYC 3401 Introduction to Social and Economic Perspectives on the Community3
GEO 2500 Global and Regional Economies3
GEO 3315 Geography of Crop Plants3
GEO 3372 Conservation of Resources3
GEO 3430 Population Geography3
GEO 3502 Economic Geography3
GEO 4554 Regional Development3
INR 4035 Rich and Poor Nations in the International System3
INR 4350 International Environmental Relations3
LEI 3250 Introduction to Outdoor Recreation and Parks3
LEI 3546 Park Management3
MAN 3025 Principles of Management4
PAD 4604 Administrative Law and Regulatory Politics3
PLP 2000 Plants, Plagues and People3
POS 4931 Florida Environmental Politics3
POS 4931 Special Topics: Environmental Politics in the Global South3
POT 3503 Environmental Ethics and Politics3
PUP 3204 Politics and Ecology3
PUP 4021 Law, Politics and Regulation3
SWS 4550 Soils, Water and Public Health3
SWS 4932 Florida Lake Management3
SWS 4932 Forest and Soil Ecosystem Services3
URP 4000 Preview of Urban and Regional Planning3
WIS 4523 Human Dimensions of Natural Resource Conservation3
Additional Skills and Concepts
Biology -
AGR 3303 Genetics3
BSC 3096 Human Physiology3
PCB 2050 Genes and Gender3
PCB 3063 Genetics4
PCB 4674 Evolution4
PCB 4723C Physiology and Molecular Biology of Animals5
Business Administration -
ACG 2021 Introduction to Financial Accounting4
AEB 3133 Principles of Agribusiness Management3
AEB 3144 Introduction to Agricultural Finance3
AEB 3300 Agricultural and Food Marketing3
AEB 4343 International Agribusiness Marketing (GE-S)3
FIN 3403 Business Finance4
MAN 3025 Principles of Management4
MAR 3023 Principles of Marketing4
Chemistry -
BCH 3025 Fundamentals of Biochemistry4
BCH 4024 Introduction to Biochemistry and Molecular Biology4
CHM 2200L Organic Chemistry Laboratory1
CHM 2210 Organic Chemistry 13
CHM 2211 and 2211L Organic Chemistry 2 (3) and Organic Chemistry 2 Laboratory (2)5
CHM 3120 Introduction to Analytical Chemistry3
CHM 3400 Physical Chemistry3
EES 4201 Water Chemistry3
EES 4241C Water Analysis3
Communication -
AEC 3030C Effective Oral Communication3
AEC 3033C Research and Business Writing in Agricultural and Life Sciences (WR)3
FNR 4040C Natural Resource Communication3
Mathematics -
MAC 2313 Analytic Geometry and Calculus 34
MAP 2302 Elementary Differential Equations3
MAS 3114 Computational Linear Algebra3
MAS 4105 Linear Algebra 14
Pest Management -
AOM 3333 Pesticide Application Techniques3
FOR 4624C Forest Health Management4
IPM 3022 Fundamentals of Pest Management3
Social Sciences -
AEB 3103 Principles of Food and Resource Economics4
Spatial Analysis -
EES 4027 Spatial Analysis Using Geographic Information Systems3
GEO 3162C Introduction to Quantitative Analysis for Geographers4
GIS 3043 Foundations of Geographic Information Systems4
GIS 4001C Maps and Graphs4
GIS 4021C Air Photo Interpretation *3
SUR 3103C Geomatics *3
SUR 3393 and 3393L Geographic Information Systems (2) and Geographic Information Systems Laboratory (1)3
SUR 4380 Remote Sensing *3
SWS 4720C GIS in Land Resource Management3
URP 4273 Survey of Spatial Information Systems3

* If this course was taken to fulfill the core requirement, it cannot fulfill the elective requirement.

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Natural Resource Management Specialization for the B.S.

This specialization focuses on the applied sciences that enable sustainable use of natural resources. Students can substitute appropriate graduate courses for electives, with approval of the school and permission of the instructor. To substitute a 6000-level course, the student must have senior standing and a 3.0 minimum junior/senior-level GPA.

Electives: take 7 courses, 21 credits

Required course
POS 2041 American Federal Government3
Environmental Policy: take one *
AEB 4242 International Trade Policy in Agriculture (GE-S)3
AEB 4274 Natural Resource and Environmental Policy **3
AEB 4283 International Development Policy *3
AEB 4085 Agricultural Risk Management and the Law3
BUL 4310 The Legal Environment of Business4
INR 4035 Rich and Poor Nations in the International System **3
INR 4350 International Environmental Relations **3
POS 4931 Florida Environmental Politics3
POS 4931 Special Topics: Environmental Politics in the Global South3
PUP 3204 Politics and Ecology (GE-S) ** 3
PUP 4021 Law, Politics and Regulation (GE-S) **3
Resource Economics: take one
AEB 3450 Introduction to Natural Resource and Environmental Economics **3
ECP 3302 Environmental Economics and Resource Policy (GE-S) **4
GEO 2500 Global and Regional Economies (GE-S)3
GEO 3502 Economic Geography3
Human Effects on the Environment: take one
ALS 3133 Agricultural and Environmental Quality3
ANT 4403 Environment and Cultural Behavior3
FOR 3004 Forests, Conservation and People **3
FOR 4060 Global Forests3
GEO 3372 Conservation of Resources3
LEI 3250 Introduction to Outdoor Recreation and Parks3
SWS 4932 Forest and Soil Ecosystem Services3
URP 4000 Preview of Urban and Regional Planning (GE-H)3
WIS 2040 Wildlife Issues in a Changing World3
WIS 4523 Human Dimensions of Natural Resource Conservation3
Resource Management: take two
AEB 4452 Advanced Natural Resource and Environmental Economics3
AGR 3005 Principles of Crop Science3
AGR 4231C Forage Science and Range Management *4
ALS 3133 Agricultural and Environmental Quality3
ALS 3153 Agricultural Ecology3
EES 3008 Energy and Environment **3
EES 4050 Environmental Planning and Design3
EES 4103 Applied Ecology2
EES 4316 Industrial Ecology3
ENV 4612 Green Engineering Design and Sustainability3
GEO 3315 Geography of Crop Plants3
FAS 4305C Introduction to Fishery Science **3
FAS 4405 Aquariums, Water and Aquaculture3
FNR 4343C Forest Water Resources3
FNR 4623C Integrated Natural Resource Management3
FOR 3153C Forest Ecology3
FOR 3202 Society and Natural Resources3
FOR 4621 Forest Economics and Management **3
FOR 4664 Sustainable Ecotourism Development3
LEI 4833 Ecotourism3
MAN 3025 Principles of Management4
SWS 4231C Soil, Water and Land Use **3
SWS 4245 Water Resource Sustainability **3
SWS 4932 Florida Lake Management3
WIS 3401 Wildlife Ecology and Management **3
WIS 4443C Wetland Wildlife Ecology4
WIS 4545 Ecology and Management of Wildlife Invasions3
WIS 4554 Conservation Biology3
Skills for Resource Management: take one
AEC 3030C Effective Oral Communication3
AEC 3033C Research and Business Writing in Agricultural and Life Sciences (WR) 3
AEC 4905 Gender, Environment, Agriculture and Participation3
EES 4021 Modeling Environmental System Dynamics3
EES 4027 Spatial Analysis Using Geographic Information Systems3
EES 5307 Ecological Engineering3
ENV 3040C Computational Methods in Environmental Engineering5
ENV 4601 Environmental Resources Management2
FNR 3131C Dendrology/Forest Plants3
FNR 3410C Natural Resource Sampling3
FNR 4040C Natural Resource Communication3
FYC 3401 Introduction to Social and Economic Perspectives on the Community3
GEO 3280 Principles of Geographic Hydrology **3
GIS 3043 Foundations of Geographic Information Systems4
GIS 4021C Air Photo Interpretation3
SUR 3103C Geomatics3
SUR 3393 Geographic Information Systems2
SUR 3393L Geographic Information Systems Laboratory1
SUR 4380 Remote Sensing3
URP 4273 Survey of Planning Information Systems3

* POS 2041 is a prerequisite for all courses in the environmental policy category.

** If this course was taken to fulfill the core requirement, it cannot fulfill this elective requirement. The student must select a substitution from the human effects, resource management or quantitative methods category.

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