BIOL3012: Animal Diversity and Evolution

4 Credits

This course is a survey of animal diversity, with an emphasis on understanding the major animal groups, how they are related to one another, how they differ in structure, and how each group achieves survival and reproduction in the diverse environments of the Earth. We will place particular emphasis on major evolutionary transitions that animals have made through their history, including the origins of multicellularity, the achievement of motion, invasion of terrestrial habitats, and the achievement of flight. We will also emphasize the science behind our contemporary understanding of animals, from multiple perspectives – behavioral, evolutionary, physiological, and ecological. Lab requires dissection, including mammals. prereq: BIOL 1001/1001H, or BIOL 1009/1009H, or BIOL 1951/1951H

View on University Catalog

All Instructors

B+ Average (3.361)Most Common: A (40%)

This total also includes data from semesters with unknown instructors.

537 students
WFDCBA
  • 5.59

    /6

    Recommend
  • 5.38

    /6

    Effort
  • 5.75

    /6

    Understanding
  • 5.64

    /6

    Interesting
  • 5.57

    /6

    Activities


      Contribute on our Github

      Gopher Grades is maintained by Social Coding with data from Summer 2017 to Summer 2025 provided by the University in response to a public records request

      Not affiliated with the University of Minnesota

      Privacy Policy