Lectures (Video)
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Algae, Mosses, Lower Vascular Plants
- 3. Ferns and Gymnosperms
- 4. Angiosperms
- 5. Angiosperms II
- 6. Cells, Tissues
- 7. Roots, Structure and Development
- 8. Shoots, Primary Structure
- 9. Shoots, Secondary Structure
- 10. Plant Growth Substances 1
- 11. Plant Growth Substances 2
- 12. Flowering
- 13. Water Relations
- 14. Water Relations, Mineral Nutrition
- 15. Mineral Nutrition, Fruit Development
- 16. Darwin and The Origin
- 17. Difficulties for Darwin
- 18. Mendel, Hardy, and Weinberg
- 19. Mutation and Selection
- 20. Genetic drift and gene flow
- 21. Sex and sexual selection
- 22. Biological species
- 23. Modes of speciation
- 24. Macroevolution
- 25. Phlogenetic systematics
- 26. Molecular phylogenetics
- 27. Precambrian and Paleozoic
- 28. Mesozoic and Cenozoic
- 29. Generalizations about the fossil record
- 30. Review
- 31. Control of Onchocerciasis
- 32. Population Growth
- 33. Dynamics of Populations
- 34. Demography
- 35. Organism Interactions and Competition
- 36. Ecological Studies
- 37. Communities
- 38. Island Biogeography
- 39. Ecosystems
- 40. Aquatic Ecosystems
- 41. San Francisco Bay
- 42. Microevolution and Natural Selection
- 43. Humans and the Environment
- 44. Review II
General Biology II
Course Summary
This course is based on Bio 1B General Biology, Spring 2008 made available by University of California, Berkeley: Webcast.Berkeley under the Creative commons BY-NC-ND 2.5 license.
This course covers the general introduction to plant development, form, and function; population genetics, ecology, and evolution. Intended for students majoring in the biological sciences. The course is conducted by L Feldman, M Slatkin and V Resh and offered in University of California, Berkeley.
General Biology and General Biology II constitute a sequence.
Reading Material
1. Textbook: Biology (Berkeley course)Campbell, Neil A., and Jane B. Reece, Biology, 8th edition, Pearson Benjamin Cummings.
Course Material
Not available.Other Resources
Not available.Software
Not available.Discussion Forum
For discussion on this topic, please go to the relevant forum for General Biology II. Click the button below to open the forum page in a new window. 














