Botany at Trinity College

Undergraduate Teaching in Botany

Field course Gran Canaria

 

Why Choose Botany?

 

Why conserve tropical rain forests? Which plant is the ancestor of the flowering plants? What can the DNA tell us about plant systematics? How did ancient Irish forests react to climate change? What will happen to Irish grasslands as carbon dioxide concentrations rise and the climate changes over the next century? How do soil organisms contribute to soil fertility and structure? How do you explain patterns of vegetation? Is it safe to use genetically modified crops? How can we conserve Irish bogs? Why do some plants grow faster than others? Why some plant families have more species than others? These are all questions for the modern Botanist and the Botany course should help you to provide some of the solutions. Click here for more information about the scientific study of plants.

The Department has eight teaching staff, who all contribute to mandatory courses in the JS year, and optional courses in both JS and SS years. Their main areas of interest are as follows:

Dr. Trevor Hodkinson – Plant Molecular Biology & Systematics
Prof. Mike Jones – Plant Ecophysiology
Dr. Daniel Kelly – Plant Ecology
Dr. Fraser Mitchell – Quaternary Ecology
Prof. John Parnell – Plant Taxonomy
Dr. Jane Stout – Plant-Animal Interactions
Dr. Steve Waldren – Conservation Biology & Biometry
Dr. Mike Williams – Plant Cell Biology