Social evolution is one key focus of our teaching, and our active research on cooperation and conflict in insect, bird and mammal societies provides great opportunities for research projects in this area.
UCAS code | 1234 |
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Duration | 1 year full time 2 years part time |
Entry year | 2025 |
Campus | Penryn Campus |
Discipline | Ecology and Conservation |
Contact |
Typical offer | Normally a 2:1 Honours degree or above in a relevant science subject |
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Overview
- Cutting-edge training in Evolution and Animal Behaviour and their application to tackling the global challenges of our time.
- Delivered by the Centre for Ecology & Conservation; a globally recognised centre of excellence in research and teaching in evolutionary biology, animal behaviour and conservation biology, based on our Penryn campus in stunning Cornwall.
- Two-week field course studying animal behaviour in the wild in the Galapagos Islands. Or focus on the challenges of rewilding in a two-week UK-based field course; a low-carbon alternative.
- Extensive skills training, designed to fast-track research and ecology careers.
- Gain first-hand experience conducting a major research project in your chosen area.
- Outstanding research facilities & opportunities to study the wild biodiversity on our spectacular Cornish coastline.
- Tailor your study to your needs with one-year full-time and two-year part-time options.
Top 20 in the UK for world-leading research in Biological Sciences
REF 2021, based on 4-star research
4th in the world for Ecology
Shanghai Rankings Global Ranking of Academic Subjects 2024
90% of our Biological Sciences research is internationally excellent
Based on research rated 4* and 3* in the Research Excellence Framework 2021
High-quality research supervision, with access to excellent facilities
Top 20 in the UK for world-leading research in Biological Sciences
REF 2021, based on 4-star research
4th in the world for Ecology
Shanghai Rankings Global Ranking of Academic Subjects 2024
90% of our Biological Sciences research is internationally excellent
Based on research rated 4* and 3* in the Research Excellence Framework 2021
High-quality research supervision, with access to excellent facilities
Course content
This programme provides cutting-edge training in Evolution and Animal Behaviour and their application to Global Challenges, through inspirational teaching and practical, first-hand research experience. By building transferable knowledge, skills and experience, the course acts as a stepping stone into ecology, research and conservation-facing careers.
The course is delivered by leading academics with global reputations in animal behaviour, evolution and conservation, and is based at the University’s internationally-renowned Centre for Ecology and Conservation on our Penryn campus in spectacular Cornwall.
Innovative taught modules
Our award-winning core taught modules provide in depth coverage of the frontiers and modern methods of evolutionary and animal behaviour research, interactions with leading researchers and practitioners working at the interface between animal behaviour and global challenges, and outstanding training in statistical analysis.
Galapagos Islands and UK field courses
As a major global centre for ecological research, we place a strong emphasis on teaching in the field. The programme therefore includes a two-week taught field course to either the Galapagos Islands or the UK, depending upon the programme variant you choose.
Research project
A key strength of the programme is the opportunity to conduct a major independent research project embedded within one of our world-class research groups. This allows students to deepen their technical knowledge, career-facing skills and research experience in the area that excites them most.
The modules we outline here provide examples of what you can expect to learn on this degree course based on recent academic teaching. The precise modules available to you in future years may vary depending on staff availability and research interests, new topics of study, timetabling and student demand.
Through interactive seminars, discussions and practical activities led by experts in each area, you will build an advanced understanding of frontier topics in evolutionary biology and animal behaviour, and gain practical experience in the diverse modern research methods used in these fields. You will also receive high-level training in the analytical and transferable skills needed for a career in research and the wider ecology sector.
On our field course in the Galapagos Islands you will gain first-hand experience studying animal behaviour in the wild, in the spectacular settings that have yielded many iconic advances in behavioural ecology.
180 credits of compulsory modules:
Compulsory modules
Code | Module | Credits |
---|---|---|
BIOM4009 | Research Project | 90 |
BIOM4046 | Evolutionary and Behavioural Ecology: Frontiers and Approaches | 30 |
BIOM4025 | Statistical Modelling | 15 |
BIOM422 | Animal Behaviour and Global Challenges | 15 |
BIOM423 | Evolutionary Principles in the Galapagos Island Field Course | 30 |
Through interactive seminars, discussions and practical activities led by experts in each area, you will build an advanced understanding of frontier topics in evolutionary biology and animal behaviour, and gain practical experience in the diverse modern research methods used in these fields. You will also receive high-level training in the analytical and transferable skills needed for a career in research and the wider ecology sector.
On our Rewilding the UK field course, you will move among iconic wildlife sites in the UK, you will learn from conservation practitioners and stakeholders engaged in the challenges of rewilding developed landscapes.
180 credits of compulsory modules:
Compulsory modules
Code | Module | Credits |
---|---|---|
BIOM4009 | Research Project | 90 |
BIOM4046 | Evolutionary and Behavioural Ecology: Frontiers and Approaches | 30 |
BIOM4025 | Statistical Modelling | 15 |
BIOM422 | Animal Behaviour and Global Challenges | 15 |
BIOM4043 | Rewilding the United Kingdom | 30 |
Assessments
Taught modules will be assessed through a variety of methods including oral and poster presentations, written research reports and literature reviews, during or upon completion of the modules. A significant proportion of the overall assessment is based on the research project, which is to be written up in the form of a research paper.
Full-time and part-time options
Our programme is designed to be taken full time in one year or part time over two years. We can customize the part-time experience, so do get in touch with the Programme Director if you’d like to discuss the options.
Support and community
All students are allocated two tutors who are available for advice and pastoral support throughout your time with us. We also foster a thriving and innovative postgraduate community within the Centre for Ecology and Conservation and the wider Graduate School of Environment and Sustainability on our Cornwall campus, of which you will become a member.
Field courses: the Galapagos Islands or UK
The programme includes a two week taught field course to either the Galapagos Islands or the UK, depending upon the programme variant that you choose when you apply. Travel and subsistence costs for the field course are included within the programme fee, which differs slightly for the two programme variants. There may be additional costs entailed in the purchase of personal equipment (e.g. walking boots and rucksack), visas or vaccinations.
In this module, you'll witness firsthand how ecological pressures shape evolutionary processes both on land and in the sea, and explore their significance for conserving the iconic wildlife of the Galapagos. We’ll study the remarkable behaviours of species like marine iguanas and Darwin’s finches, using them as models to understand the challenges of researching animals in the wild. Accommodation with local families provides an immersive cultural experience, contributing to a sustainable socio-economic model and enriching your time in the Galapagos.
Rewilding the UK field course
On this course you will move among iconic wildlife sites in the UK, learning from a diverse range of practitioners and stakeholders engaged in the modern conservation practice of rewilding developed landscapes. You will consider the meaning of the word “wild” in the UK, and learn the political, regulatory, economic, scientific, ecological and social opportunities and constraints that affect biodiversity conservation in our changing world. This option provides a low-carbon field course destination, in line with our commitment to tackling the global climate emergency.
More about our field courses:
Step into the footsteps of Charles Darwin and immerse yourself in the unparalleled natural beauty and scientific significance of the Galapagos islands. Our Evolution and Behaviour Field Course offers students the rare opportunity to experience first-hand one of the most iconic locations on the planet for evolutionary biology and conservation research.
Over two unforgettable weeks on San Cristobal Island, you will conduct hands-on research under the guidance of scientists from the University of Exeter and the University of San Francisco de Quito’s Galapagos Science Center. You’ll explore how ecological pressures shape species, from Darwin’s finches to marine iguanas, while developing key scientific skills through practical research activities.
During the course you’ll stay with local families for an immersive cultural experience that supports sustainable tourism, and you’ll work alongside leading experts in the field to study biodiversity and conservation. Whether you're analysing genetic data or observing behavioural strategies in the wild, this course will deepen your understanding of evolutionary biology and animal behaviour, while building your overall confidence in the scientific process.
If you're passionate about biodiversity, behaviour and exploring the natural world, this course is an unmissable adventure!
The United Kingdom is economically highly developed, densely populated and intensively farmed and industrialised. This human-dominated system makes life very challenging for the wildlife that shares our country with us, and for the biota that provides us with ecosystem services like pollination, clean air, freshwater and recreation. Some of our precious biodiversity is considered “pest” or “weed” by people. Many of our natural systems suffer invasion by non-native species. Many of our natural habitats are degraded, fragmented, and very fragile in the face of anthropogenic climatic and environmental change. Yet, the UK is at the forefront of global efforts to conserve, rescue, replenish or replace native biodiversity.
This residential field-course will perform a transect through the United Kingdom’s hotspots of terrestrial and marine biodiversity, human-wildlife conflict and ecological restoration. You will see the endangered wildlife of the UK, and meet the people who are stakeholders in their management or their conservation: National Park authorities; farmers; government employees; conservation charity managers; people delivering species translocations; researchers; ecological consultants; tourism operators and the general public. You will consider the meaning of the word “wild” in the UK, and you will learn the political, regulatory, economic, scientific, ecological and social opportunities and constraints that affect all attempts to conserve biodiversity in our changing world.
This course will help you develop subject-specific and transferable skills relevant to your future employment. You will gain practical experience in wildlife identification; abundance and behavioural measurements; habitat monitoring; environmental stakeholder debates and focus groups; species translocations techniques, technologies and policies; critical appraisal of conservation evidence; presentation of rewilding information to broad audiences using a variety of formats including factsheets and posters.
Travel and subsistence costs for this part of the programme are included in the programme fee. However, you may be required to provide your own specialist personal equipment appropriate to the field course destination, e.g. walking boots, rucksack, binoculars.
This module has been designed specifically in response to the global Climate and Environment Emergency. Wherever possible we will use non-airborne public transport and low-impact accommodation, and work, eat and play in ways that tread as lightly as possible on our environment.
Entry requirements
Normally a 2:1 degree or above in a relevant science subject* is required, although applicants with a 2:1 degree in another subject will be considered if their CV and personal statement evidence significant relevant research experience.
*Relevant subjects include: Biology, Biosciences, Ecology, Evolutionary Biology, Geography, Marine Biology, Natural Sciences, Zoology.
Entry requirements for international students
English language requirements
International students need to show they have the required level of English language to study this course. The required test scores for this course fall under Profile B2. Please visit our English language requirements page to view the required test scores and equivalencies from your country.
Fees
2025/26 entry (with International Field Course)
UK fees per year:
£15,700 full-time; £7,850 part-time
International fees per year:
£30,700 full-time; £15,350 part-time
2025/26 entry (with UK Field Course)
UK fees per year:
£14,500 full-time; £7,250 part-time
International fees per year:
£29,500 full-time; £14,750 part-time
Scholarships
The University of Exeter has many different scholarships available to support your education, including £5 million in scholarships for international students applying to study with us in the 2025/26 academic year, such as our Exeter Excellence Scholarships*.
For more information on scholarships and other financial support, please visit our scholarships and bursaries page.
*Terms and conditions apply. See online for details.
Field course
The programme includes a two week taught field course to either the Galapagos Islands or the UK, depending upon the programme variant that you choose when you apply.
Travel and subsistence costs for the field course are included within the programme fee, which differs slightly for the two programme variants.
There may be additional costs entailed in the purchase of personal equipment (e.g. walking boots and rucksack), visas or vaccinations.
Research experience
During your MSc you will join and train with a world-class community of researchers in organismal biology at our Centre for Ecology and Conservation in Cornwall. It is the largest and fastest-growing institute of its kind in the UK, and hosts globally significant expertise in Evolutionary biology, Animal Behaviour, Ecology and Conservation Biology across an array of leading international research groups. Our groups study a diverse range of organisms, from social mammals and birds to reptiles, fish, insects and microbes, and use a wide array of modern research methods.
Our research spans all of the key fields in Evolutionary and Behavioural Ecology, with particular strengths in Social Behaviour, Social Evolution, Cognition, Culture, Personality, Life-Histories and Ageing, Sexual Selection, Sensory Ecology, Migration, Microbial Evolution, Disease Ecology, Evolutionary Theory, and Quantitative Genetics. With major research groups in Ecology and Conservation as well, we also excel in the application of Animal Behaviour expertise to conservation-facing challenges.
Your Research Project
A key strength of the programme is the opportunity to the conduct an independent research project embedded within one of our 60+ world-class research groups at the Centre for Ecology and Conservation. Our academics offer a wide variety of research projects both in the UK and abroad, spanning the full range of the evolutionary and animal behaviour expertise at the Centre and using a wide range of systems from the field to the lab. This allows students to deepen their technical knowledge, career-facing skills and research experience in the area that excites them most.
After the first five months of taught modules, your primary focus will switch to your research project. This approach allows you to build your core research skills before embarking on your project, and to use knowledge gained during the taught modules to inform your project choice. It also allows you to focus exclusively on your research project without distraction, and offers geographical flexibility during the research project phase (e.g. allowing you to pursue a project involving international fieldwork).
Research Funding
All of our MSc research projects are supported by a research budget of up to £1000 towards research costs entailed in the work. This can be used to support research costs ranging from laboratory consumables to fieldwork travel and accommodation costs, depending on the nature of the project undertaken.
Graduate School of Environment and Sustainability
You will become part of Exeter's Graduate School of Environment & Sustainability - a vibrant and supportive postgraduate community based here on our Penryn campus in Cornwall. The Graduate School brings together experts from across the spectrum of earth and life sciences, engineering, humanities, social sciences and business. You will interact with students from other MScs and have the opportunity to explore issues from a range of perspectives, benefiting from a truly interdisciplinary experience. All our programmes are designed with a focus on developing solutions to global challenges and creating a better future for our planet and its people.
Over 150 MSc research project publications
MSc research projects at the Centre for Ecology and Conservation have now led to student authorship on a staggering 150 publications and counting in peer-reviewed journals. Nothing fast-tracks a research career better than a publication from your MSc.
10 of our most recent published research projects with the MSc student as first author
- Bullough et al. 2023. Artificial light at night causes conflicting behavioural and morphological defence responses in a marine isopod. Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
- Satsias et al. 2022. Sex-specific responses to anthropogenic risk shape wild chimpanzee social networks in a human-impacted landscape. Animal Behaviour.
- Allison et al. 2020. The drivers and functions of rock juggling in otters. Royal Society Open Science.
- Castledine et al. 2020. Experimental coevolution in a multi‐species microbial community results in local maladaptation. Ecology Letters.
- Knox et al. 2019. Gesture use in communication between mothers and offspring in wild orang-utans (Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii) from the Sabangau peat-swamp forest, Borneo. International Journal of Primatology.
- Evans et al. 2018. Effects of ambient noise on zebra finch vigilance and foraging efficiency. Plos One.
- Walton & Stevens 2018. Avian vision models and field experiments determine the survival value of peppered moth camouflage. Communications Biology.
- Cabrera et al. 2017. Island tameness and the repeatability of flight initiation distance in a large herbivore. Canadian Journal of Zoology.
- Hawkes et al. 2016. Intralocus sexual conflict and insecticide resistance. Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
- Zwirner E, Thornton A (2015) Cognitive requirements of cumulative culture: teaching is useful but not essential. Scientific Reports.
Careers
Our programme is designed to prepare candidates for research and ecology-facing careers, whether within academia or the wider ecology and conservation sectors.
While many of our graduates go on to study for PhDs, the programme provides an excellent grounding for a wide range of post-graduate destinations linked to front-line research. For examples of the diverse career destinations of our past graduates, check out interviews with our MSc alumni on the Graduate School of Environment and Sustainability blog.
Employer-valued skills this course develops
During the course you will gain first-hand practical experience with a diverse range of modern methods in evolutionary and behavioural research, ranging from quantifying behaviour in the field to genetic sequencing and microbial research in the lab. Your chosen research project provides an excellent opportunity to then deepen your practical skills and experience within the area that interests you most.
You will also develop the strong transferable skills needed to advance your career, including quantitative skills, scientific writing, public speaking, grant writing, CV writing, and the professional use of social media.
Networking opportunities
By joining a globally recognised centre of excellence in evolutionary, behavioural and conservation-facing research, you will have outstanding opportunities to build a network of contacts in your area of interest, drawing on the academic community here as well as the wide array of external stakeholders and researchers who join us in our regular research and employability seminar series.
Careers support
Our careers teams at the Career Zone can help guide you through a wealth of information to match your skills and interests to a career that will suit you. Our staff work with regional, national and international employers to develop new work placement, project and graduate opportunities.
Graduate destinations
Below are a few examples of the career destinations of graduates from the MSc Programmes here at the Centre for Ecology & Conservation. You will also find examples of the career paths of our past graduates on the Graduate School of Environment and Sustainability blog.
- PhD Researcher
- Ecologist
- Conservation Scientist
- Field Researcher
- Data Analyst
- Environmental Consultant
- Research Technician
- Research Assistant
- Science Media Officer
- Natural History Film Maker