Syllabus
Topics
- Fundamental Concepts
- Population Ecology
- Interactions
- Community Ecology
- Ecosystems Structure and Function
- History of Evolutionary Thought
- Fundamentals
- Diversity of Life
- Life History Strategies
- Interactions
- Population and Quantitative Genetics
- Molecular Evolution and Phylogenetics
- Macroevolution
- Mathematics and Statistics in Ecology
- Statistical Hypothesis Testing
- Classical Ethology
- Sensory Ecology
- Foraging Ecology
- Reproduction
- Social Living
- Biodiversity and Conservation
- Disease Ecology and Evolution
- Global Climate Change
Fundamental Concepts section_1_1
Syllabus
Fundamental Concepts: Abiotic and biotic components; scales (population, species, community, ecosystems, biomes); niches and habitats.
Core concepts (5)
- Abiotic components
- Biotic components
- Levels (scales) of ecological organization
- Ecological niche
- Habitat
Related concepts (8)
- Species concept (ecological relevance)
- Population attributes
- Community interactions
- Ecosystem processes
- Biome classification
- Niche partitioning and coexistence
- Fundamental vs realized niche
- Habitat selection and habitat suitability
Population Ecology section_1_2
Syllabus
Population Ecology: Population growth rates (density dependent/independent); meta population ecology (colonization, persistence, extinction, patches, sources, sinks); age-structured populations
Core concepts (8)
- Population growth rate
- Density-independent regulation
- Density-dependent regulation
- Metapopulation
- Colonization and extinction dynamics
- Patch structure
- Source-sink dynamics
- Age-structured populations
Related concepts (9)
- Exponential growth model
- Logistic growth and carrying capacity
- Allee effects
- Demographic vs environmental stochasticity
- Dispersal and connectivity
- Rescue effect
- Life tables
- Leslie matrix model
- Reproductive value
Interactions section_1_3
Syllabus
Interactions: Types (mutualism, symbiosis, commensalism, competition, parasitism, predation, etc); ecophysiology (physiological adaptations to abiotic environment); prey-predator interactions (Lotka-Volterra equation, etc.)
Core concepts (10)
- Species interactions (interaction types)
- Mutualism
- Symbiosis
- Commensalism
- Competition
- Parasitism
- Predation
- Ecophysiology
- Physiological adaptation to abiotic environment
- Lotka-Volterra predator-prey model
Related concepts (10)
- Interaction outcomes and context dependence
- Functional response (Holling types)
- Numerical response
- Apparent competition
- Keystone predation and trophic cascades
- Competitive exclusion and coexistence
- Character displacement
- Thermal performance curves and Q10
- Osmoregulation and water balance
- Acclimation vs adaptation
Community Ecology section_1_4
Syllabus
Community Ecology: Community assembly, organization and succession; species richness, evenness and diversity indices, species-area relationships; theory of island biogeography
Core concepts (8)
- Community assembly
- Community organization
- Ecological succession
- Species richness
- Evenness
- Diversity indices
- Species-area relationship (SAR)
- Theory of island biogeography
Related concepts (10)
- Environmental filtering
- Dispersal limitation
- Priority effects
- Facilitation, tolerance, and inhibition models of succession
- Intermediate disturbance hypothesis
- Alpha, beta, gamma diversity
- Rarefaction and sampling effort
- Rank-abundance curves
- Nestedness and turnover in island/fragment communities
- Habitat fragmentation as 'islands'
Ecosystems Structure and Function section_1_5
Syllabus
Ecosystems Structure and Function: Trophic levels and their interactions; nutrient cycles; primary and secondary productivity
Core concepts (7)
- Ecosystem structure
- Trophic levels
- Food chains and food webs
- Trophic interactions
- Nutrient cycles (biogeochemical cycles)
- Primary productivity
- Secondary productivity
Related concepts (9)
- Energy flow vs nutrient cycling
- Ecological efficiency and trophic transfer efficiency
- Detrital pathway and decomposition
- Stoichiometry and nutrient limitation
- Mineralization and immobilization
- Nitrogen transformations
- Phosphorus cycle characteristics
- Bottom-up vs top-down control
- Standing crop and turnover
History of Evolutionary Thought section_2_1
Syllabus
History of Evolutionary Thought: Lamarckism; Darwinism; Modern Synthesis
Core concepts (4)
- Lamarckism
- Darwinism
- Modern Synthesis (Neo-Darwinism)
- Comparative analysis of evolutionary theories
Related concepts (9)
- Mendelian genetics
- Weismann barrier and germplasm theory
- Population genetics basics
- Variation and mutation
- Adaptation and fitness
- Selection types
- Genetic drift and gene flow
- Speciation overview
- Evidence for evolution (historical context)
Fundamentals section_2_2
Syllabus
Fundamentals: Variation; heritability; natural selection; fitness and adaptation; types of selection (stabilizing, directional, disruptive)
Core concepts (6)
- Variation
- Heritability
- Natural selection
- Fitness
- Adaptation
- Types of selection
Related concepts (8)
- Genotype–phenotype map
- Phenotypic plasticity
- Sources of genetic variation
- Quantitative genetics
- Hardy–Weinberg baseline
- Trade-offs and constraints
- Selection coefficients and selection gradients
- Inclusive fitness (high-level)
Diversity of Life section_2_3
Syllabus
Fundamentals: Diversity of Life: Origin and history of life on earth; diversity and classification of life; systems of classification (cladistics and phenetics)
Core concepts (7)
- Origin of life (abiogenesis) — overview
- Early evolution and history of life on Earth
- Diversity of life
- Classification and taxonomy
- Cladistics (phylogenetic systematics)
- Phenetics (numerical taxonomy)
- Comparing classification systems
Related concepts (10)
- Geological time scale
- Endosymbiotic theory
- Great Oxidation Event and oxygenation
- Fossil record and dating
- Molecular phylogenetics (overview)
- Homology vs analogy
- Character states and polarity
- Tree thinking
- Species concepts (overview)
- Horizontal gene transfer (HGT)
Life History Strategies section_2_4
Syllabus
Life History Strategies: Allocation of resources; tradeoffs; r/K selection; semelparity and iteroparity
Core concepts (7)
- Life-history strategies (framework)
- Resource allocation
- Trade-offs
- r/K selection (classic heuristic)
- Semelparity
- Iteroparity
- Comparing parity modes
Related concepts (9)
- Fitness components and reproductive value
- Cost of reproduction
- Age at first reproduction
- Offspring size–number trade-off
- Bet-hedging (overview)
- Density dependence
- Environmental stochasticity
- Phenotypic plasticity in life histories
- Survivorship curves
Interactions section_2_5
Syllabus
Interactions: Co-evolution (co-adaptations, arms race, Red Queen hypothesis, cospeciation); prey-predator interactions (mimicry, crypsis, etc)
Core concepts (8)
- Coevolution
- Co-adaptations
- Evolutionary arms race
- Red Queen hypothesis
- Cospeciation
- Predator–prey interactions (evolutionary outcomes)
- Crypsis (camouflage)
- Mimicry
Related concepts (9)
- Host–parasite coevolution
- Geographic mosaic theory of coevolution
- Frequency-dependent selection
- Aposematism
- Behavioral ecology of predation
- Sensory ecology
- Phylogenetic congruence tests (overview)
- Constraints and trade-offs in defenses
- Community context
Population and Quantitative Genetics section_2_6
Syllabus
Population and Quantitative Genetics: Origins of genetic variation; Mendelian genetics; Hardy- Weinberg equilibrium; drift; selection (one-locus two-alleles model); population genetic structure (panmixia, gene flow, FST); polygenic traits; gene-environment interactions (phenotypic plasticity); heritability
Core concepts (13)
- Origins of genetic variation
- Mendelian genetics (population context)
- Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium (HWE)
- Genetic drift
- Selection in a one-locus two-allele model
- Panmixia
- Gene flow (migration)
- Population genetic structure
- Fixation index \(F_{ST}\)
- Polygenic (quantitative) traits
- Gene–environment interaction (G×E)
- Phenotypic plasticity
- Heritability (quantitative genetics)
Related concepts (10)
- Allele and genotype frequencies
- Effective population size \(N_e\)
- Inbreeding and assortative mating
- Mutation–selection balance (overview)
- Bottleneck and founder effects
- Linkage disequilibrium (LD) (overview)
- Additive, dominance, and epistatic variance
- Breeder’s equation
- Common garden and reciprocal transplant
- Reaction norms
Molecular Evolution and Phylogenetics section_2_7
Syllabus
Molecular Evolution and Phylogenetics: Neutral theory; molecular clocks; rates of evolution; phylogenetic reconstruction; molecular systematics
Core concepts (6)
- Neutral theory of molecular evolution
- Nearly neutral theory (exam-relevant extension)
- Molecular clocks
- Rates of evolution
- Phylogenetic reconstruction
- Molecular systematics
Related concepts (14)
- Genetic drift and fixation
- Effective population size \(N_e\)
- Synonymous vs nonsynonymous substitutions
- Purifying selection and constraint
- Positive selection (molecular signatures)
- Multiple sequence alignment (MSA)
- Models of sequence evolution
- Distance methods
- Parsimony, maximum likelihood, Bayesian inference
- Support and uncertainty
- Rooting and outgroups
- Gene trees vs species trees
- Orthology vs paralogy
- Long-branch attraction (LBA)
Macroevolution section_2_8
Syllabus
Macroevolution: Species concepts and speciation; adaptive radiation; convergence; biogeography
Core concepts (7)
- Macroevolution (scope and patterns)
- Species concepts
- Speciation
- Reproductive isolation
- Adaptive radiation
- Convergent evolution
- Biogeography
Related concepts (14)
- Allopatric speciation
- Peripatric speciation
- Parapatric speciation
- Sympatric speciation
- Hybrid zones and reinforcement
- Ecological speciation
- Sexual selection in speciation
- Dobzhansky–Muller incompatibilities (DMI)
- Polyploid speciation
- Key innovations
- Character displacement
- Homology vs convergence in phylogenies
- Vicariance vs dispersal
- Island biogeography link (overview)
Mathematics and Statistics in Ecology section_3_1
Syllabus
Mathematics and Statistics in Ecology: Simple functions (linear, quadratic, exponential, logarithmic, etc); concept of derivatives and slope of a function; permutations and combinations; basic probability (probability of random events; sequences of events, etc); frequency distributions and their descriptive statistics (mean, variance, coefficient of variation, correlation, etc).
Core concepts (5)
- Simple functions used in ecology
- Derivatives and slope
- Permutations and combinations
- Basic probability
- Frequency distributions and descriptive statistics
Related concepts (5)
- Transformations and linearization
- Units, scaling, and dimensional reasoning
- Sampling concepts
- Graphical summaries
- Covariance vs correlation
Statistical Hypothesis Testing section_3_2
Syllabus
Statistical Hypothesis Testing: Concept of p-value; Type I and Type II error, test statistics like t- test and Chi-square test; basics of linear regression and ANOVA.
Core concepts (7)
- Statistical hypotheses and p-values
- Type I and Type II errors
- Test statistics and sampling distributions (working level)
- t-tests
- Chi-square tests
- Linear regression (basics)
- ANOVA (basics)
Related concepts (5)
- Assumptions and diagnostics
- Confidence intervals vs hypothesis tests
- Effect size and practical significance
- Multiple comparisons (awareness level)
- Categorical vs continuous responses
Classical Ethology section_4_1
Syllabus
Behavioural Ecology (4.1): Classical Ethology—Instinct; fixed action patterns; imprinting; learnt behavior; proximate and ultimate questions.
Core concepts (5)
- Instinct
- Fixed action patterns (FAPs)
- Imprinting
- Learned behavior
- Proximate vs ultimate questions
Related concepts (9)
- Sign stimuli (releasers)
- Innate releasing mechanism (IRM)
- Sensitive/critical periods
- Habituation and sensitization
- Classical vs operant conditioning
- Nature–nurture and reaction norms
- Ethogram and behavioral measurement
- Comparative method in ethology
- Tinbergen’s four questions
Sensory Ecology section_4_2
Syllabus
Behavioural Ecology (4.2): Sensory Ecology—Neuroethology; communication (chemical, acoustic and visual signaling); recognition systems.
Core concepts (7)
- Sensory ecology
- Neuroethology
- Animal communication
- Chemical signaling
- Acoustic signaling
- Visual signaling
- Recognition systems
Related concepts (10)
- Signal vs cue
- Sender–receiver coevolution
- Honest signaling and signal reliability
- Environmental transmission channels
- Noise and masking
- Receiver psychology
- Multimodal signaling
- Self/non-self and kin recognition
- Species recognition and reproductive isolation
- Sensory drive hypothesis
Foraging Ecology section_4_3
Syllabus
Behavioural Ecology (4.3): Foraging Ecology—Foraging behaviour; optimal foraging theory.
Core concepts (6)
- Foraging behaviour
- Optimal foraging theory (OFT)
- Energy/time budgets
- Prey choice (diet breadth) model
- Patch use and patch leaving
- Marginal Value Theorem (MVT)
Related concepts (9)
- Fitness currencies
- Constraints and trade-offs
- Information and uncertainty
- Risk-sensitive foraging
- Central place foraging
- Functional responses
- Giving-up density (GUD)
- Interference and exploitation competition
- State-dependent foraging
Reproduction section_4_4
Syllabus
Behavioural Ecology (4.4): Reproduction—Cost of sex; sexual dimorphism; mate choice; sexual selection (runaway selection, good-genes, handicap principle, etc.); sexual conflict; mating systems; parental care.
Core concepts (10)
- Cost of sex
- Sexual dimorphism
- Mate choice
- Sexual selection
- Runaway (Fisherian) selection
- Good-genes sexual selection
- Handicap principle
- Sexual conflict
- Mating systems
- Parental care
Related concepts (10)
- Anisogamy and Bateman’s principle
- Operational sex ratio (OSR)
- Parental investment theory (Trivers)
- Sperm competition and cryptic female choice
- Alternative reproductive tactics
- Sex role reversal
- Fecundity selection
- Life-history trade-offs
- Inclusive fitness and kin selection in care
- Parent–offspring conflict
Social Living section_4_5
Syllabus
Behavioural Ecology (4.5): Social Living—Costs and benefits of group-living (including responses to predators); effect of competition (scramble and contest) on group formation; dominance relationships; eusociality; kin selection; altruism; reciprocity; human behaviour.
Core concepts (12)
- Group living (social living)
- Costs and benefits of group living
- Anti-predator benefits of groups
- Competition and group formation
- Scramble competition
- Contest competition
- Dominance relationships
- Kin selection
- Altruism
- Reciprocity
- Eusociality
- Human behaviour (behavioral ecology perspective)
Related concepts (13)
- Hamilton’s rule
- Inclusive fitness
- Direct vs indirect fitness
- Mutualism
- Reciprocal altruism (Trivers)
- By-product benefits
- Cheater problem
- Kin recognition and discrimination
- Policing and punishment
- Game theory in social behavior
- Group selection and multilevel selection
- Life-history and ecological constraints on eusociality
- Gene–culture coevolution
Biodiversity and Conservation section_5_1
Syllabus
Biodiversity and Conservation: Importance of conserving biodiversity; ecosystem services; threats to biodiversity; invasive species; in-situ conservation (endemism, biodiversity hotspots, protected areas); ex-situ conservation; conservation genetics (genetic diversity, inbreeding depression); DNA fingerprinting and DNA barcoding.
Core concepts (8)
- Biodiversity: levels and value
- Ecosystem services
- Threats to biodiversity
- Invasive alien species
- In-situ conservation
- Ex-situ conservation
- Conservation genetics
- DNA fingerprinting and DNA barcoding
Related concepts (6)
- Species concepts and taxonomy basics
- Population viability analysis (PVA)
- Metapopulations and fragmentation
- IUCN categories and conservation prioritization
- Conservation policy instruments
- Molecular markers overview
Disease Ecology and Evolution section_5_2
Syllabus
Disease Ecology and Evolution: Epidemiology; zoonotic diseases; antibiotic resistance; vector Control Plant and animal breeding: Marker assisted breeding; genetic basis of economically important traits.
Core concepts (8)
- Epidemiology fundamentals
- Disease transmission models
- Zoonotic diseases
- Evolution of virulence and pathogen life-history
- Antibiotic resistance evolution
- Vector ecology and vector control
- Genetic basis of economically important traits
- Marker-assisted breeding
Related concepts (8)
- Surveillance and study designs
- Diagnostics and test performance
- Phylogenetics and phylodynamics
- One Health framework
- Integrated vector management (IVM)
- Quantitative genetics in breeding programs
- Genomic selection (contrast to MAS)
- Ethics and biosafety in breeding and control
Global Climate Change section_5_3
Syllabus
Global Climate Change: Causes; consequences; mitigation
Core concepts (10)
- Earth’s climate system basics
- Causes of modern climate change
- Carbon cycle and major greenhouse gases
- Climate variability vs climate change
- Consequences for physical systems
- Consequences for ecosystems and biodiversity
- Consequences for society and health
- Mitigation: emission reduction
- Mitigation: carbon dioxide removal (CDR)
- Adaptation and resilience (bridge to mitigation)
Related concepts (8)
- IPCC framing and scenarios
- Climate feedbacks and tipping elements
- Ocean–atmosphere coupling
- Ecophysiology under climate stress
- Conservation under climate change
- Policy instruments
- Life cycle assessment (LCA)
- Geoengineering overview