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Department of Natural Resource Sciences
Location
Location
- Macdonald-Stewart Building, Room MS3-039
- 91ÉçÇø, Macdonald Campus
- 21,111 Lakeshore Road
- Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue QC H9X 3V9
- Canada
- Telephone: 514-398-7773
- Fax: 514-398-7990
- Email: info.macdonald [at] mcgill.ca
- Website: www.mcgill.ca/nrs
About the Department of Natural Resource Sciences
About the Department of Natural Resource Sciences
Human society depends on the natural world for many of its needs. The more traditional view of natural resources as food, fibre, and energy drawn from the natural world has expanded as we have learned more about the relationships between humans and our environment. While we continue to manage ecosystems for food, fibre, and energy, we increasingly recognize the importance of a wide range of ecosystem services including: regulation of local and global cycles or carbon, nutrients and water; biodiversity and its link to resilience; and recreational, aesthetic and spiritual dimensions. Governance of human activity in ecosystems requires an understanding of all of these services.
The Department of Natural Resource Sciences is an interdisciplinary collaboration among professors, staff, and students with a wide range of disciplinary backgrounds including wildlife and fish biology, entomology, soil science, microbiology, meteorology, forest science, landscape ecology, agricultural and resource economics, and environmental policy. We are concerned with populations and diversity of organisms within ecosystems, the flow of energy and nutrients through ecosystems; and processes that influence human behaviour toward ecosystem services and the environment. Our graduate program aims to give students both disciplinary depth and interdisciplinary breadth. At the undergraduate level, we are particularly active in the Environmental Biology, Life Science, and Agricultural Economics Majors, as well as in several specializations including Wildlife Biology, Microbiology and Molecular Biotechnology, Environmental Economics, Entomology, Applied Ecosystem Sciences, and Agri-business.