Introduction à l'ingénierie de la biosphère [ LBIR1230A ]
3.0 crédits ECTS
Teacher(s) |
Baret Philippe ;
Defourny Pierre ;
Opfergelt Sophie ;
Delvaux Bruno ;
Dufey Joseph ;
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Language |
French
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Place of the course |
Louvain-la-Neuve
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Main themes |
The course proceeds from actual stakes related to the biological, agronomical and environmental engineering and will approach the following themes:
- the bio-geochemical cycles of the biosphere (water, carbon, nitrogen); enrgetic flows.
- notions of bio-climatology, classification of climats, climatic indicators.
- basic notions of ecosystems (biotopes and biocenoses, trophic chains); food chains; production and productivity.
- sustainable development; notions of equilibrium and imbalance; notions of vulnerability; biodiversity and the conservation problematic; pollution and tracability problems.
- role of the soil as a reactor in the functioning of ecosystems: water and mineral elements storage, alteration and acidification; notions of resilience, mobility of biogenous elements and bio-pedological cycles; storage and mobility of contaminants.
- impact of the human being on the functioning of the ecosystems and on the soil.
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Aims |
This course aims the initiation of the students to the important stakes related to the biological, agronomical and environmental engineering; to discern the role of the futur bio-engineer and to acquire the basic concepts essential to the analysis and management of ecosystems. It should bring the students to:
- understant the technical and scientific acts of a bio-engineer in a framework of wich's dimentions go beyond those of the engineer sensu stricto.
- acquire the basic concepts of the analysis of the air-water-soil interactions and of the global functioning of ecosystems.
- understand the bio-geochemical cycles (water, carbon, nitrogen) and the global funtioning of their compartments, especially the soil.
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Content |
The basic principles will be taught by means of concrete examples related to the biosphere engineering. For example: starting from the human nutrition seen globally, different concepts will be taught: trophic and food chains, energetic flows, productivity, bio-geochemical cycles (xater, carbon, nitrogen), functions of the soil compartment such as storage, mineral supply...
The learning process wiil be based on a problem-approach, where the basic concepts are acquired through an analysis of the stakes and a perspective view of the concepts.
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Other information |
Evaluation : continuous
Support : P.J. Jarvis (2000) Ecological Principles and Environmental Issues. Pearson Education Ltd., Limbourg, 303 p.
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Cycle et année d'étude |
> Bachelor in Biology
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Faculty or entity in charge |
> AGRO
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