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faculty of SCIENCE
International Conference on Grey Systems and Intelligent
Services, 15-18 September 2011, Nanjing, China.
Piscataway, NJ: Institute of Electrical and Electronic
Engineers. ISBN 978-1-61284-488-6.
Guo, R., Thiart, C., Cui, Y. and Guo, D. 2011. Lifetime
distributions with wavelike bathtub hazard. In K. Koowrocki,
J. Soszyska and E. Zio (eds), Proceedings of Summer
Safety and Reliability Seminars, 20-26 June, Gsansk-
Sopot, Poland. Poland: Polish Safety and Reliability
Assocation. ISBN 978-83-925436-2-6.
Guo, R., Dai, W., Guo, D. and Cui, Y. 2011. The
autocorrelation of an uncertain integral driven process. In
K. Hirota, D.A. Ralescu and J. Peng (eds), Proceedings
of the Second International Conference on Uncertainty
Theory, 6-11 August 2011, Lhasa, Tibet, China. Cincinatti,
USA: International Consortium for Uncertainty Theory.
ISSN 2079-5238.
Guo, R., Dai, W., Guo, D., Cui, Y. and Dunne, T.T. 2011.
The uncertain canonical process regression models. In K.
Hirota, D.A. Ralescu and J. Peng (eds), Proceedings of the
Second International Conference on Uncertainty Theory,
6-11 August 2011, Lhasa, Tibet, China. Cincinatti, USA:
International Consortium for Uncertainty Theory. ISSN
2079-5238.
Guo, R., Cui, Y. and Guo, D. 2011. Uncertain canonical
process driven models and data analysis. In Z. Guo, Y.
Xiang-Qun, P. Jin and N. Yufu (eds), Proceedings of Ninth
China Annual Conference on Uncertainty, 27-31 July,
2011, Nanjing, China. Hong Kong: Global-Link Publisher.
ISBN 962-8286-65-2.
Guo, R., Guo, D. and Cui, Y. 2011. Uncertain DEAR models.
In K. Hirota, D.A. Ralescu and J. Peng (eds), Proceedings
of the Second International Conference on Uncertainty
Theory, 6-11 August 2011, Lhasa, Tibet, China. Cincinatti,
USA: International Consortium for Uncertainty Theory.
ISSN 2079-5238.
Guo, R., Guo, D., Cui, Y. and Dai, W. 2011. Uncertain
temporal regression models. In K. Hirota, D.A. Ralescu and
J. Peng (eds), Proceedings of the Second International
Conference on Uncertainty Theory, 6-11 August 2011,
Lhasa, Tibet, China. Cincinatti, USA: International
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Ramaboa, K. and Underhill, L.G. 2011. Eigenvector
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Department of Zoology
(Including the FitzPatrick Institute, DST/NRF Centre of
Excellence, the Marine Research Institute and the Animal
Demography Unit)
Head of Department: Professor Anusuya
Chinsamy-Turan
Department Profile
The Zoology Department houses the Marine Biology
Research Centre (MBRC), the Percy FitzPatrick Institute,
DST/NRF Centre of Excellence (PFIAO); the Freshwater
Research Unit (FRU) and the Animal Demography Unit
(ADU). Other smaller cogent groups co-ordinate research
on mammals, palaeobiology, entomology and physiology.
The Department hosts South African Research Chairs in
Evolution and Systematics and in Marine Ecology and
Fisheries. The Departmetn has a large postgraduate
school of some 130 master’s and doctoral students and a
significant portion of the research publications produced
by UCT originate from Zoology.
Research interests of the MBRC include fisheries and
coastal zone management, rocky shore ecology, seaweed
and invertebrate biodiversity and systematics, the biology
of the Benguela upwelling ecosystem, and biogeochemical
cycles of the ocean, particularly of carbon and nitrogen,
and how such cycles may be impacted by climate change.
The PFIAO remains primarily involved in avian research,
coupled with a strong emphasis on conservation biology.
Research in the FRU focuses on the ecology of freshwater
ecosystems, and on the conservation and management of
rivers and wetlands. The Animal Demography Unit focuses
on statistical ecology, with two strands of activities: a
series of monitoring projects for birds, butterflies and
reptiles, and a cohort of postgraduate students with
statistics-rich research projects relating to various aspects
of population dynamics. Other research in the department
is centred around: the behaviour, ecology, physiology,
systematics and evolutionary biology of a variety of small
mammals (molerats, golden moles, rodents, bats), seals
and primates; palaeobiology and osteohistology, including
factors that affect bone depositional rates in modern
birds and reptiles and the biological signals recorded in
fossil bones of non-mammalian therapsids, mammals,
dinosaurs and other archosaurs; the systematics and
biogeography of insects and insect ecology in arid
ecosystems; biological control, especially the use of
herbivorous insects to curb the seeding capacity and
invasiveness of problematic Australian acacia species;
and physiological studies on how small peptide hormones
produced in nerve cells regulate energy metabolism,
growth, development and reproduction in insects and
crustaceans and how astaxanthin and chitin can be used
in an economically viable way to deal with so-called waste
products of the rock lobster industry.