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Postgraduate Courses

 
 

 

The Department offers ample opportunities for students to pursue postgraduate studies and research. Over the years there has been a steady growth in postgraduate programmes and research in the Department. The Department has earned recognition both in Sri Lanka and overseas for research and documentation work in the areas such as Forestry, Ecology, Plant Taxonomy and Postharvest Technology/Pathology.

Every staff member is involved in research and some are internationally renowned for research in their disciplines. The staff has been able to attract substantial funding for research from local and international donors. Among these there were collaborative research programmes involving overseas partners. Some of the research projects included strong postgraduate training components, staff and student exchanges and capacity building. The staff members have made numerous research publications in national and international journals, contributed to text books, reviews and conference proceedings. Although the list of research publications made by staff is extensive it is not a true reflection of the scale of actual research done in the Department as the work load and other commitments give staff members little time for publication.

Master of Science degrees are offered as course work plus research. The M. Phil and Ph. D. programmes are predominantly research based and dependent on research funding available to individual staff members of the Department. The postgraduate programmes in the Department of Botany are administered through the Board of Study in Plant Sciences of the Postgraduate Institute of Science (PGIS). The Department follows the guidelines and regulations set out by the PGIS, the details of which are given in the Handbook of the PGIS. The areas of research programmes broadly fall within Plant Systematics, Plant Ecology, Forestry, Restoration Ecology, Plant Pathology, Postharvest Technology of fresh produce, Rhizobiology, Nitrogen Fixation, Soil Science, Cut foliage and cut flowers, Water Microbiology, Medicinal plants, Genetic resources, Reproductive Biology & Forestry, Eco-Physiology, Forest die-back, Food Science and nutrition, Water microbiology, Medicinal Plants, Fungi and Mosses. There has been an increase in postgraduate activities since 1996. Postgraduate reading for M. Phil. or Ph. D. degrees are normally supervised by more than one staff member. Periodic evaluation (6 monthly) of the work accomplished by the research student is done through thesis committee meetings. The student writes a full written report of his/her findings like a Thesis Chapter prior to the meeting submitted through the supervisor, and the relevant Chair of the Board of Study

The Department conducts five self-financed M.Sc. programmes.

  • M.Sc. in Postharvest Technology of fruits and
  • M.Sc. in Wildlife Conservation and Management
  • M.Sc. in Biodiversity Conservation Management
  • M.Sc. in Plant Sciences
  • M.Sc. in Medical Microbiology - conducted jointly by the Departments of Botany and Microbiology (Faculty of Medicine)

For information on postgraduate research please see the Research Section and for postgraduate courses please visit Postgraduate Institute of Science (PGIS).

 

 
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