Hey, I know this area is generally pretty dead - but felixthecat got a couple of responses to their thread just a few days ago, so I thought I'd give it a shot.
For the two case studies that we have to have of ecosystems - are they about the ecosystem as a biome (ie. globally), or about single case studies - such as the Great Barrier Reef, or a mixture of both (ie. Talk about coral reefs at a local scale, then go to regional, then global).
If it helps, the syllabus says:
"case studies of ecosystems
TWO case studies of different ecosystems at risk to illustrate their unique
characteristics including: . . .
The selected ecosystems at risk could include areas such as coastal dunes,
freshwater wetlands,inter-tidal wetlands,coral reefs,arid areas,alpine areas,
rainforests,temperate forests."
I've trimmed out the middle bits. But if any one could answer my question, that'd be great.
Just summing up: Do we need case studies at a global level, local level or both?
For the two case studies that we have to have of ecosystems - are they about the ecosystem as a biome (ie. globally), or about single case studies - such as the Great Barrier Reef, or a mixture of both (ie. Talk about coral reefs at a local scale, then go to regional, then global).
If it helps, the syllabus says:
"case studies of ecosystems
TWO case studies of different ecosystems at risk to illustrate their unique
characteristics including: . . .
The selected ecosystems at risk could include areas such as coastal dunes,
freshwater wetlands,inter-tidal wetlands,coral reefs,arid areas,alpine areas,
rainforests,temperate forests."
I've trimmed out the middle bits. But if any one could answer my question, that'd be great.
Just summing up: Do we need case studies at a global level, local level or both?