• Zoology is the study of animal life. It includes areas such as animal behavior, aquatic ecology, development, ecology, environmental toxicology, genetics, and physiology. However, Zoology is chosen by many students seeking a career in one of many healthcare professionals, the environmental sciences, or academia.
  • Zoology is the area of biology that focuses on animals, from the level of DNA to whole ecosystems.  Zoology contains many specific subdisciplines, and zoologists approach their study from different levels of the organization.  For example, physiologists are interested in the functioning of cells, tissues, and organ systems; ecologists are interested in the interactions of animals with one another and with their environment; developmental biologists are concerned with how a multicellular organism forms from a zygote; and molecular biologists study how specific molecules, such as nucleic acids, function in animals.  Some scientists study a particular group of animals, such as birds (ornithologists), mammals (mammalogists), amphibians and reptiles (herpetologists), insects (entomologists), and so on.  These people are concerned with all aspects of the group under study, including their taxonomic status, life history, physiology, ecology, genetics, etc.
  • The Zoology major is chosen by many students seeking a career in one of the health care professions.  It is also selected by those who wish to study animals as teachers and/or researchers, or who plan a career in one of the many areas within the environmental sciences.