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116. Economic Vertebrate Zoology. (3) I.

Professor GRINNELL, Mr. DIXON Lectures, Tu Th, 1; laboratory, Tu Th, 2—4.

The relations of mammals, birds, and reptiles of California to human affairs; changes due to the settlement of the country; important useful and injurious species; methods of encouragement and control. Special emphasis on ground squirrel, pocket gopher, fur-bearing mammals, game birds and mammals. Lectures, museum, and field work, and assigned papers.

119A-119B. Extra Session Work. (1-4).

The STAFF

Work on assigned topics carried on in Berkeley when the University is not in session, or in the field, or at the seashore under the direction of a member of the staff.

199. Special Study for Advanced Undergraduates. (1-4) Each half-year. The STAFF

All work supplementary to courses above. Credit to be fixed in each case.

GRADUATE COURSES

Concerning conditions for admission to graduate courses see page 3 of this announcement.

221A-221B. Seminar. Present Day Problems in Biology. Yr.

W, 4. No credit.

224A-224B. Research.

The STAFF (Professor KoFOID in charge)

The STAFF

Original study on special topics, in the field, laboratory, and museum. The work may be carried on in the laboratories at Berkeley or at a marine station at any season of the year.

240. Seminar in Protozoology. (1) II. F, 4-6.

299. Thesis for the Master's Degree.

Professor KOFOID

MUSEUM OF VERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY

1

The Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, located in a separate building on the campus at Berkeley, was founded and endowed by Miss Annie M. Alexander as a repository for specimens and information relative to the higher vertebrate animals of the Pacific Coast region of North America. The particular groups of animals with which it is concerned are the mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians; of these, it has very large and continually growing collections, comprising (on April 15, 1924) a total of 89,326 catalogue entries. These materials, together with the accompanying field notes, photographs, and maps, furnish basis for studies along systematic, faunistic, ecologic, and economic lines.

Students interested in the museum may address Professor J. GRINNELL, Director of the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley, California.

COURSES IN OTHER DEPARTMENTS

General Entomology. (See Agriculture, Entomology 1.)
Insect Taxonomy. (See Agriculture, Entomology 112.)
Ecology. (See Agriculture, Entomology 127.)

Histology and Microscopic Organology. (See Anatomy 101.)

Organs of Special Sense and Neurology. (See Anatomy 103.)

General Bacteriology and Microbiology. (See Bacteriology 1.) Microorganisms in Their Relation to Disease. (See Bacteriology 101.) Biochemistry. (See Biochemistry 103, 104.)

General Botany. (See Botany 2A, 2B.)

Paleontology. (See Geological Sciences, Paleontology.)

Comparative Physiology. (See Physiology 100A, 100в.)

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