Population ecology is a sub-field of ecology that studies how populations of organisms interact with their environment and change over time and space. Populations are groups of organisms of the same species living in the same area at the same time. Population ecology includes the study of: Population growth and spread How a population interacts with its environment How individuals within a population interact among themselves Population ecology also studies the mechanisms responsible for changes in the distribution and abundance of individuals over space and time. Population ecology... Show more Population ecology is a sub-field of ecology that studies how populations of organisms interact with their environment and change over time and space. Populations are groups of organisms of the same species living in the same area at the same time. Population ecology includes the study of: Population growth and spread How a population interacts with its environment How individuals within a population interact among themselves Population ecology also studies the mechanisms responsible for changes in the distribution and abundance of individuals over space and time. Population ecology has its deepest historic roots in the study of population growth, regulation, and dynamics, or demography. A population ecology research method involves marking a sample of captured animals and then releasing them back into the environment. Later, a new sample is collected, including some individuals that are marked. Two primary abiotic factors that influence population dynamics and distribution are physical geography and climate. A third factor, specific to plants, is soil. An actively interacting collection of a variety of populations of many species in the same environment is known as the biotic community. The members of the group of biotic communities are divided into three categories: producers, consumers, and decomposers. Show less
Population ecology is a sub-field of ecology that studies how populations of organisms interact with their environment and change over time and space. Populations are groups of organisms of the same species living in the same area at the same time.
Population ecology includes the study of: Population growth and spread How a population interacts with its environment How individuals within a population interact among themselves
Population ecology also studies the mechanisms responsible for changes in the distribution and abundance of individuals over space and time. Population ecology has its deepest historic roots in the study of population growth, regulation, and dynamics, or demography. A population ecology research method involves marking a sample of captured animals and then releasing them back into the environment. Later, a new sample is collected, including some individuals that are marked.
Two primary abiotic factors that influence population dynamics and distribution are physical geography and climate. A third factor, specific to plants, is soil.
An actively interacting collection of a variety of populations of many species in the same environment is known as the biotic community. The members of the group of biotic communities are divided into three categories: producers, consumers, and decomposers.
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