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File - Ms. Poole`s Biology
File - Ms. Poole`s Biology

... • Communities with higher diversity are – More productive and more stable regarding their productivity – Better able to withstand and recover from environmental stresses – More resistant to invasive species, organisms that become established outside their native range – Identify human actions that a ...
Natural Selection
Natural Selection

... environment  Adaptation – an inherited trait which makes an individual more fit in its environment  Darwin called this natural selection because of its similarity to artificial selection ...
Keystone Species Project
Keystone Species Project

... 2. You will be given time today and Monday 10.19 to research your species. Any information you do not get that day will be gathered on your own time. Posters Due on October 21st . 3. Find the following information on your species: a. Where does your species live? (country) b. In what type of ecosyst ...
Evolution and Biodiversity
Evolution and Biodiversity

... Anatomical: Picture a mouse and an elephant hooking up Genetic Inviability: Mules ...
Bell Work: What is the difference between habitat and niche
Bell Work: What is the difference between habitat and niche

... section14.2.notebook ...
Population Limits and Dynamics Definitions: Niche: The function or
Population Limits and Dynamics Definitions: Niche: The function or

... There are 4 main factors that affect the biotic potential of a species: ○ Birth Potential: The maximum number of offspring per year. ○ Capacity for Survival: How many members of that species reach reproductive age. ○ Procreation: Times per year a species reproduces. ○ Length of Reproductive Cycle: H ...
biodiversity activity
biodiversity activity

... 2. When finished collecting your sample of insects, carefully allow them to crawl up and out of the net – they will reach the top and fly away. Identify each species observed with a letter in the data table and make a tally for each specimen of each species. 3. Use the calculator to sum the number o ...
Symbiosis
Symbiosis

... Symbiotic relationships, or symbioses (plural), are close interactions between individuals of different species over an extended period of time which impact the abundance and distribution of the associating populations. Most scientists accept this definition, but some restrict the term to only those ...
PPT
PPT

... The coral gains energy from the sugars produced by the algae. The algae gain ...
Data/hora: 28/04/2017 22:39:14 Biblioteca(s): Área de Informação
Data/hora: 28/04/2017 22:39:14 Biblioteca(s): Área de Informação

... Conteúdo: Over the past two decades, soil ecotoxicologists have made strides in utilizing the basic concepts and advancements in soil zoology and ecology. They have applied the existing tools, and developed new ones to investigate how chemical contamination can affect soil ecosystems, including the ...
The Invasive Species Context: general principles
The Invasive Species Context: general principles

... A heavy flood in 1981/2 brought a few plants of Mimosa pigra on to the floodplain (which was a new ecosystem changed by a dam upstream) ...
Populations And Communities
Populations And Communities

... ABIOTIC (non-living) – Physical or chemical factors affecting organisms, such as pH, or terrain. BIOTIC (living) – Biological factors affecting organisms, such as the presence of predators or disease. ...
ESS Topic 2.1 - Ecosystem Structures
ESS Topic 2.1 - Ecosystem Structures

... (source: wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn) ...
here
here

... EcoBeaker models, each individual belongs to a “species” which is defined by a collection of rules that determine that species’ behavior. For example, species that are mobile consumers follow rules that dictate how far they can move in a time step, what they can eat, how much energy they obtain from ...
Powerpoint
Powerpoint

... • Species richness varies with latitude • Species richness varies with altitude • Hotspots of diversity contain many endemic species ...
Allopatric Speciation*Drift
Allopatric Speciation*Drift

... Low probability of spawning between different ecomorphs, even when closely related (A). Ecology is important in RIM. C = control (same species, same population, high probability of spawning) D = same ecotype, distantly related (act like same species) A = sympatric, closely related, different ecotype ...
Document
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... A large natural metapopulation of Silene latifolia was studied to test the hypothesis that the third trophic level (parasitoids) is more vulnerable to habitat fragmentation than the second trophic level (herbivores). By collecting herbivores in the natural plant populations we could establish the di ...
Leafy Spurge Photo by Matt Lavin A weed is a plant or flower that
Leafy Spurge Photo by Matt Lavin A weed is a plant or flower that

... spreads easily by way of wind, traffic, and contaminated hay. It has a tendency to quickly take over grazing pasture & agricultural crops, roadsides, displace native species (Minnesota Dept. of Natural Resources), and can pose a threat to various ecological regions. It is also an economic threat bec ...
Up to 15 Inches of Rain Floods Texas
Up to 15 Inches of Rain Floods Texas

Macroevolution
Macroevolution

... Why would taxa have characteristic ranges of duration in the fossil record? Why would taxa have different ranges? What is cause of these characteristic durations? ...
Module code AW-2311 Module Title Ecosystem Dynamics Degree
Module code AW-2311 Module Title Ecosystem Dynamics Degree

... Concepts of stability and equilibrium in ecological systems Energy and material flows in ecosystems with an emphasis on the terrestrial & wetland ecosystems, and temporal organisation of populations and communities Biological and ecological characteristics including life cycle, dispersal, migrations ...
Chapter 49- Energy Flow
Chapter 49- Energy Flow

... a) It was thought that hare and lynx populations oscillated together b) New evidence shows that hare populations oscillate on their own, perhaps due to overgrazing c) Lynx populations follow hare populations but do not cause the oscillations, although they may affect them D. Keystone species: specie ...
Principles of Ecology
Principles of Ecology

... Rephrase mutualism, commensalism, and parasitism in your own words. Provide an example of each term. 1. mutualism: Certain types of bacteria in our intestines help digest our food. ...
Invasive Species
Invasive Species

...  Distance from nearest mainlandAssuming equal rate of extinction on two islands, one closer to mainland will have higher immigration rates ...
Being and Environmental Scientist Unit Study Guide (8/17 – 8/28
Being and Environmental Scientist Unit Study Guide (8/17 – 8/28

... within an ecosystem thereby causing it to become stable. 21. True or False. Fluctuations in predator–prey populations are predictable. At some point the prey population grows so numerous that they are easy to find. 22. What does a graph of predator–prey density over time show? how the cycle of fluct ...
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Ecological fitting



Ecological fitting is ""the process whereby organisms colonize and persist in novel environments, use novel resources or form novel associations with other species as a result of the suites of traits that they carry at the time they encounter the novel condition.” It can be understood as a situation in which a species' interactions with its biotic and abiotic environment seem to indicate a history of coevolution, when in actuality the relevant traits evolved in response to a different set of biotic and abiotic conditions. The simplest form of ecological fitting is resource tracking, in which an organism continues to exploit the same resources, but in a new host or environment. In this framework, the organism occupies a multidimensional operative environment defined by the conditions in which it can persist, similar to the idea of the Hutchinsonian niche. In this case, a species can colonize new environments (e.g. an area with the same temperature and water regime) and/or form new species interactions (e.g. a parasite infecting a new host) which can lead to the misinterpretation of the relationship as coevolution, although the organism has not evolved and is continuing to exploit the same resources it always has. The more strict definition of ecological fitting requires that a species encounter an environment or host outside of its original operative environment and obtain realized fitness based on traits developed in previous environments that are now co-opted for a new purpose. This strict form of ecological fitting can also be expressed either as colonization of new habitat or the formation of new species interactions.
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