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Biodiversity Informatics and Prediction of Disease Dynamics
Biodiversity Informatics and Prediction of Disease Dynamics

... Miguel Ortega-Huerta, Kris McNyset (all KU), Mark Benedict, Ben Beard, Jim Mills, Darin Carroll (CDC) ...
Basic characteristics of Populations - Powerpoint for Sept. 25.
Basic characteristics of Populations - Powerpoint for Sept. 25.

... conditions that permits the survival and reproduction of an organism - many resources and conditions interact to form the niche. • The realized niche - the portion of the fundamental niche actually occupied by the species when restricted by other organisms - restricted by competition, predation, par ...
diversity presentation
diversity presentation

... • (Number of quadrats present in/total number of quadrats) x 100 • (3/10) x 100 = 30%  Richness: • The number of different species found in a given area.  Percentage cover: • As animals move around too much, this is usually used for plants. • Quadrat should be divided into 10 x 10 grid. Then count ...
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... during the course of a year. The experiments were carried out in the presence and absence of a drought treatment. Forage yields rose with the number of species present in the drought-treated plots, due to the complementary use of resources, avoidance of specialist herbivores or pathogens, and/or ben ...
Canaries in a Coal Mine
Canaries in a Coal Mine

... • Provides a case study in identifying critical habitat factors. • Southeastern USA ...
Ch 35 Population/ Community Ecology
Ch 35 Population/ Community Ecology

... -Competition within a single species limits ...
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... 2.1.1 distinguish between biotic and abiotic components of an ecosystem. 2.1.2 define the term trophic level. 2.1.3 Identify and explain trophic levels in food chains and food webs selected from the local environment. 2.1.4 explain the principles of pyramids of numbers, pyramids of biomass and pyram ...
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Corrección de tendidos eléctricos peligrosos en

... or, more frequently, by contact between one phase and some conductive element that can derive to earth (contact phase-to-earth). ...
Submission by the National Parks and Wildlife Service
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... The National Parks and Wildlife Service, recognising that Ireland historically lost almost all of its forest cover, supports afforestation. It will be understood that from the perspective of Irish wildlife, NPWS has a preference for the planting of trees of native species, among which the Scots Pine ...
Ecology review assignment
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... 1. The environment of an organism includes only nonliving physical factors. 2. A community is the biotic component of an ecosystem. 3. An ecosystem is always closed in terms of energy. 4. An ecosystem depends on continuous inputs of matter from outside the system. 5. Organisms that depend on differe ...
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... The existence of invasive alien species influenced the ecosystem, and at the same time could not be controlled. This could cause disturbance of ecosystem function and also declined forest value, ecologically and economically. Some national parks have been facing serious threat caused by invasive ali ...
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Review: photosynthesis cellular respiration pyramid of energy

... each species occupies its own niche ...
Biodiversity
Biodiversity

... The variety of different types of organisms present and interacting in an ecosystem. Often more species equals more diversity, although there are, in fact many more factors beyond a simple count of species that determine whether biodiversity is higher or lower in any given ecosystem. ...
Exotic and Invasive Alien Species in Newfoundland and Labrador
Exotic and Invasive Alien Species in Newfoundland and Labrador

... H a r mf ul e xot i c s pe ci e s wh o se introduction or spread threatens the environment, economy, or society, including human health. PATHWAYS OF INTRODUCTION: The activity, most commonly human, that provides the opportunity for species to establish in new habitats. THREATS: The potential negativ ...
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... 78%-80% of air. Organisms can not use it in that form. Lightning and bacteria convert nitrogen into ...
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Endangered Species Act Update: Bats, Crayfish, and other Species

... • Endangered: In danger of extinction through all or a significant portion of its range • Threatened: Likely to become an endangered species within the foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion of its range • Critical Habitat: Specific areas within area occupied by species when list ...
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... 3. Biological extinction- species is no longer found anywhere on the earth Endangered species- so few individuals are left that it could soon become extinct Ex- California condor, giant panda Threatened species- still abundant in its natural range but is declining and will likely become endangered E ...
Guidelines for Application for a Permit for the translocation
Guidelines for Application for a Permit for the translocation

... (2) Does the stock from which the introduction/translocation will be made have a link with any known non-target species? (3) What is the distribution of such non-target species within the area of origin of the stock to be introduced/translocated? (4) Record where the species was introduced previousl ...
The Monterrey Platy - Xiphophorus couchianus
The Monterrey Platy - Xiphophorus couchianus

... CRITICALLY ENDANGERED (CR) - A taxon is Critically Endangered when it is facing an extremely high risk of extinction in the wild in the immediate future, as defined by any of the criteria (A to E) as described below. A) Population reduction in the form of either of the following: 1) An observed, est ...
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1 38.1. Hierarchy of Ecology A. Definitions and Levels of Study 1

... a. A population is a potentially reproductively interactive group of animals of the same species. b. Local disjunct populations that do actually interbreed are demes and they share a gene pool. c. Migration among demes provides some evolutionary cohesion among this species. d. Local environments may ...
Exam 4
Exam 4

... meant by density dependent? What limits the population size in r and K-selected species? Be able to compare and contrast r and Kselected life history strategies, including the stability of their environment, organism size, energy invested in offspring, number of offspring produced, life expectancy, ...
CITES Convention on International Trade in Endangered
CITES Convention on International Trade in Endangered

... • Unsustainable hunting and harvesting of animals and plants for food ...
community
community

... resources is called the species’ ecological niche. • An ecological niche can also be thought of as an organism’s ecological role. • Ecologically similar species can coexist in a community if there are one or more significant differences in their niches. ...
Jeff Leppo, Stoel Rives
Jeff Leppo, Stoel Rives

... • eNGO initiatives will continue to proliferate and to complicate Alaska resource development, but their strategies will evolve • Nearly every significant federal permitting decision, including project-specific decisions, are likely to be challenged • NEPA, ESA, CAA, CWA, MMPA will continue to be pr ...
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... Most Populations Live Together in Clumps or Patches (1) • Population: group of interbreeding individuals of the same species • Population distribution 1. Clumping 2. Uniform dispersion 3. Random dispersion ...
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Occupancy–abundance relationship

In ecology, the occupancy–abundance (O–A) relationship is the relationship between the abundance of species and the size of their ranges within a region. This relationship is perhaps one of the most well-documented relationships in macroecology, and applies both intra- and interspecifically (within and among species). In most cases, the O–A relationship is a positive relationship. Although an O–A relationship would be expected, given that a species colonizing a region must pass through the origin (zero abundance, zero occupancy) and could reach some theoretical maximum abundance and distribution (that is, occupancy and abundance can be expected to co-vary), the relationship described here is somewhat more substantial, in that observed changes in range are associated with greater-than-proportional changes in abundance. Although this relationship appears to be pervasive (e.g. Gaston 1996 and references therein), and has important implications for the conservation of endangered species, the mechanism(s) underlying it remain poorly understood
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