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Download Plant Ecology 101 in 5 minutes - Rutgers Environmental Stewards
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Plant Ecology 101 in 5 minutes Bruce Barbour, RCE Environmental Program Leader Time Other species don’t necessarily operate on the same time scale as we do. Their survival mechanisms often involve time intervals that make them hard for us to perceive. Catastrophe Catastrophes are infrequent but of great significance to the survival of species. The prosperity of a species may depend upon catastrophic events that control it’s competitors or provide food. Ie. fire, flood, epizootic. etc. Succession and Climax Classic plant ecology describes an orderly progression of species that colonize and then yield to others over time following disturbance or catastrophe. This chain of succession culminates in a stable, efficient, and usually diverse community of plants, animals and microorganisms called the climax ecosystem. Energy Flow Most of the interactions in an ecosystem can be understood if examined from the standpoint of energy transfers, losses, accumulation and leakiness or efficiency. All the cycles of predator and prey, growth and decay, balance and imbalance are largely understandable as the movement of energy in the system. Nutrient Flow What can’t be explained by energy flow probably can be by nutrients. Niche The set of parameters a species need to live or the conditions outside of which it cannot survive. Typically temperature, water, food, reproductive needs, etc. Specialists and Generalists Generalists is the term given to species whose evolution has adapted them to survive under changing circumstances. They are usually adaptable with respect to energy and nutrient needs. They are the colonizers who are the first to move in after catastrophe occurs. They are the survivors and wanderers of the world. The price of their adaptability is that, as a group in a system, they are not very efficient at using the scarce resources of energy and nutrients. Given a stable environment generalists will evolve into specialists. Specialists are the residents of climax ecosystems. Their specialization is their unique adaptation to a narrow niche. It allows them to extract energy and nutrients not available to more generalized species and thus out compete them. As a group communities of specialists constitute very efficient and stable ecosystems. Often inter species dependence is part of specialization and this creates the complex set of relationships that characterizes a mature, diverse and efficient ecosystem.