¶¡ÏãÔ°AV

Master of Pest Management Program

Department of Biological Sciences | Faculty of Science
¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Calendar 2013 Spring

Program Requirements

The research-based master of pest management (MPM) program is distinct from an MSc program because of its strongly applied context and its interaction with practioners and producers.

The student completes all of

  • BISC 601-2 Agriculture, Horticulture and Urban Pest Management
  • BISC 602-2 Forest Pest Management
  • BISC 847-3 Pest Management in Practice

and two of

  • BISC 816-3 Biology and Management of Forest Insects
  • BISC 817-3 Social Insects
  • BISC 841-3 Plant Disease Development and Control
  • BISC 842-3 Insect Development and Reproduction
  • BISC 843-3 Population Processes
  • BISC 844-3 Biological Controls
  • BISC 846-3 Insecticide Chemistry and Toxicology
  • BISC 851-3 Vertebrate Pests
  • BISC 852-3 Biology of Animal Disease Vectors
  • BISC 884-3 Special Topics in Pest Biology and Management

and one additional 800 division elective (three units).

Thesis Requirements

The program requires a thesis, which is based on original research with relevance to pest management. To do this, the student enrols in

  • BISC 849-6 Master of Pest Management Thesis

and continues enrolling in that course until the thesis is finished.

The thesis will be defended publicly.  The examining committee is composed of a chair (non-voting), all members of the student’s supervisory committee, and a member of faculty at the university, or a person otherwise suitably qualified, who is not a member of the student's supervisory committee.

Supervisory Committee

A senior supervisor is appointed prior to admission.

The supervisory committee consists of, at minimum, the senior supervisor and one additional regular biology faculty member.  In exceptional cases, a faculty member from another ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV department may be substituted for the Department of Biological Sciences faculty member.  Additional supervisory committee members from other institutions may be appointed upon submission of research credentials and approval by the departmental graduate studies committee.

Annual Progress Report

Students submit a report of their progress every year, and will maintain satisfactory progress toward degree completion to remain in the program. Students receive an annual report form from the graduate secretary every year in the term in which they started, and are expected to complete and return it within six weeks. They will have a committee meeting each year, and a brief summary of this meeting will be included in the report. Also included should be a description of the work/courses completed since the last report (or since starting their program if this is the first time), student progress evaluation forms by each of the supervisory committee members, and a copy of the student’s unofficial transcript.

Academic Requirements within the Graduate General Regulations

All graduate students must satisfy the academic requirements that are specified in the (residence, course work, academic progress, supervision, research competence requirement, completion time, and degree completion), as well as the specific requirements for the program in which they are enrolled, as shown above.

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