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ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE Chapter 5 Sections 1 & 3 HABITATS AND NICHES • A NICHE is the role of an organism in the ecosystem • A niche is more than a habitat, it is also what the organism does within its habitat • A niche includes BIOTIC FACTORS and ABIOTIC FACTORS • No two species can share the same niche in the same habitat • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pt0lZZ_QMf4 HABITATS AND NICHES • If two species do, they will COMPETE for RESOURCES • The extinction of a population due to direct competition with another species is called COMPETITIVE EXCLUSION • Competitive exclusion refers to the extinction of a species in a particular place, not the whole species HABITATS AND NICHES • A FUNDAMENTAL NICHE is the theoretical niche an organism could be in • A REALIZED NICHE is where the organism actually is • See figure 5.3 • NICHE DIVERSITY is relative to the abiotic factors of an ecosystem HABITATS AND NICHES • A PREDATOR is an organism that actively hunts other organisms • PREY is the hunted • A predator that promotes niche diversity is called a KEYSTONE PREDATOR • See Fig 5.4 • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_IWw8Ruz8Uo POPULATION GROWTH • Population growth in which the rate of growth in each generation is a multiple of the previous is called EXPONENTIAL GROWTH • This can only happen if food and other resources were not limited • See fig 5.8 CARRYING CAPACITY • The number of individuals of a species that can be supported by an ecosystem is called CARRYING CAPACITY • Growth stops when # of births = # of deaths • See fig 5.9 LIMITING FACTORS • Limiting factors that are dependent on population size are called DENSITY-DEPENDENT LIMITING FACTORS • Examples are PREDATION, PARASITISM, DISEASE, FOOD COMPETITION, LIVING SPACE, WATER AVAILABILITY • Limiting factors that affect the same percentage of a population , regardless of size are called DENSITY-INDEPENDENT LIMITING FACTOR • Examples are CLIMATE, HUMAN DISTURBANCE, AND NATURAL DISASTERS LIMITING FACTORS • Populations controlled by density-dependant factors show an S-shaped curve (fig 5.9) • Populations controlled by density-independent factors show a boom and bust curve (see fig 5.11)