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Community Ecology
Community Ecology

... • The soil is now able to support a greater variety of species such as grasses and small shrubs. ...
013368718X_CH03_029-046.indd
013368718X_CH03_029-046.indd

... 2. What does the biosphere contain? ...
Natural Selection Review Sheet
Natural Selection Review Sheet

... disappear? First, look at the idea of a species. A species is a reproductively isolated individual. Lions and tigers can breed with one another to produce a tiger or a lion but they don't. Why not? Because there is a serious desert and several mountain ranges between the groups. They are reproductiv ...
06 ICA 6 Coevol-Mutualism rubric
06 ICA 6 Coevol-Mutualism rubric

... virulence. High rabbit mortality ensued, but over time the level of mortality declined. Selection by the virus favored the few rabbits with resistance and they increased in number. Selection by the death of rabbits favored the few viruses with lower virulence that did not kill their required living ...
APES-Unit #3- Study Guide
APES-Unit #3- Study Guide

... population vs. community population crash population density predation predator-prey relationship primary ecological succession ...
Biodiversity and Biodiversity at Risk Student notes 2016
Biodiversity and Biodiversity at Risk Student notes 2016

...  Researchers suspect another Mass extinction will occur within the next 100, 000 years because of trends o Many species are currently _______________________ or ____________________ right now. Three levels of diversity: Species, Ecosystem, and Genetic diversity 1. _______________________________-Th ...
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 4

... Page 97 ...
Importance of Biodiversity
Importance of Biodiversity

... Biodiversity also has value in its own right, and is not something that should simply be viewed for its usefulness to humans. Human responsibility toward other living things, and obligations to future generations, provide strong reasons for conservation. ...
E6 COMMUNITIES ARE CONTINUALLY UNDERGOING CHANGE
E6 COMMUNITIES ARE CONTINUALLY UNDERGOING CHANGE

...  Producers trap suns energy-herbivores feed on them-and so on- each organisms having its place in the food chain or web  Organisms then interact with each other in various ways-predator/prey relationships ...
049539193X_177847
049539193X_177847

... 6. Environmental resistance is the sum of the effects of limiting factors in the environment. An unfettered population will reproduce in a “J” shaped growth curve until a limiting factor intervenes. 7. Random distribution is most rare. 8. A climax community is a stable, long-established community. T ...
ECOLOGY
ECOLOGY

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biological species concept

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Species Interactions - Effingham County Schools
Species Interactions - Effingham County Schools

... into direct contact with each other. • For example, suppose that one insect feeds on a certain plant during they day and that another species feeds on the same plant during the night. Because they use the same food source, the two species are indirect competitors. • Humans rarely interact with the i ...
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Marine Ecosystems & Biodiversity
Marine Ecosystems & Biodiversity

Example 1 - Leesburg High School
Example 1 - Leesburg High School

Impacts of Catastrophes
Impacts of Catastrophes

... •Ryder 1986: populations that actually represent significant adaptive variation based on concordance between sets of data derived by different techniques •Waples 1991: populations that are reproductively separate from other populations and have unique or different adaptations •Moritz 1994: populatio ...
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section_1.1_notes_and_discussion

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Biogeographic Processes
Biogeographic Processes

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Species concept

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Interactions Among Living Things

Impacts of Climate Change on Mediterranean Biodiversity and
Impacts of Climate Change on Mediterranean Biodiversity and

... Map of one scenario of the expected change in biodiversity for the year 2100. Scenario C implies that interactions among the drivers are synergistic; consequently, total change is calculated as the product of the changes resulting from the action of each driver. Different colors represent expected ...
Final Exam Review - Hicksville Public Schools / Homepage
Final Exam Review - Hicksville Public Schools / Homepage

... the number of different niches in an ecosystem due to abiotic factors • fluctuating abiotic factors many niches (desert) • constant abiotic factors=few niches (marsh) ...
Types of Life - Mercer Island School District
Types of Life - Mercer Island School District

... 22. Rainforests have a high level of biodiversity, but have very poor soil (because the conditions for life are so ideal that those nutrients get used up quickly and are stored in the large amount of biomass in a rainforest). Rainforests have ... A.High inertia/persistence and low resilience B.Low ...
Ecology - Berrybio
Ecology - Berrybio

...  This is why top predators are few in number & vulnerable to extinction. ...
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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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