Rhodes University Botany Department
Rhodes University Department of Botany
Rhodes University Department of Botany – See Details Below:
The staff of the Department include Craig Peter (HoD), Brad Ripley, Susi Veter, Tracey Nowell, Julie Coetzee, Tiffany Pillay and Tony Dold and Emeritus Associate Professor Roy Lubke. Collectively, staff members possess a broad range of botanical expertise including rangeland ecology, conservation ecology, plant population ecology, pollination biology, evolutionary biology, coastal ecology, ecophysiology, functional plant anatomy, coastal management, rehabilitation and disturbance ecology, molecular systematics and biogeography. The department is closely associated with the Selmar Schonland Herbarium.
The broad interests of the staff translates into a rounded, relevant and up-to-date undergraduate curriculum and numerous opportunities for postgraduate study at the honours, MSc and PhD level. At the honours level, the Department of Botany has refocused its honours course on the ecology and evolution of plants in a changing world.
- Botany Honours: Ecology, Evolution & Global Change
Why consider studying plants at Rhodes University?
- Graduates of the Department of Botany hold important and exciting positions as researchers, consultants, teachers and in the private sector around the world.
- The Department offeres a modern curriculum that is geared to the real world and exciting job opportunities.
- Theory is closely linked to field- and lab-based application, giving you hands-on experience in conducting research.
- The Botany Department has dedicated and enthusiastic staff and well-equipped teaching and research facilities.
- Opportunities are available for part-time employment on research projects.
- Grahamstown is located in The Albany centre of endemism – one of South Africa’s biodiversity hotspots. Nearby ecosystems ranging from the coast to savanna, Karoo, thicket, forest and fynbos.
- Land use in the Eastern Cape, in the vicinity of Grahamstown ranges from conservation areas with the Big Five to communal and commercial farms making Rhodes University ideal for countless research projects.