Ecology Guide

Plant Ecology Section


 

Plant Ecology Navigation

Main Home Page
Tell A Friend about us

List of Ecology Articles

Plant Ecology Best seller

Buy it Now!



Best Plant Ecology products

Sitemap

"Don't be a marshmallow. Walk the street with us into history. Get off the sidewalk. Stop being vegetables. Work for Justice. Viva the boycott!"

by Dolores Huerta

"I have always thought it would be a blessing if each person could be blind and deaf for a few days during his early adult life. Darkness would make him appreciate sight; silence would teach him the joys of sound."

by Helen Keller

"When I see the Ten Most Wanted Lists... I always have this thought: If we'd made them feel wanted earlier, they wouldn't be wanted now."

by Eddie Cantor

"Caesar said to the soothsayer, 'The ides of March are come'; who answered him calmly, 'Yes, they are come, but they are not past.'"

by Plutarch

"Be like the bird that, pausing in her flight awhile on boughs too slight, feels them give way beneath her, and yet sings, knowing that she hath wings."

by Victor Hugo

"Man never made any material as resilient as the human spirit."

by Bern Williams



Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Ecology
Email:
First Name:



Main Plant Ecology sponsors


 

 

Welcome to Ecology Guide

 

Plant Ecology Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.



from:

Understanding Community Ecology


Community ecology is a type of ecology. Perhaps one of the most interesting forms of ecology, community ecology studies the abundance, demography, and the distribution between populations that are coexisting in the same area. By studying and understanding the interaction with each other and the effect on the environment for each, it becomes evident that two species do have an effect on each other. The way that these populations interact with each other is what ecologists are looking into.

Community ecology studies a wide selection of aspects of the interaction between the populations. This includes:

• Studying the predator and prey population situation between the populations

• Understanding the productivity and food web structure of the two populations (or more)

• Understanding why one species does better than others
• Succession is studied

• And community assembly is studied


Why do scientists need to study community ecology? There are actually many reasons, but one aspect that many are turning to in recent months is to better understand how one population's actions related to the other. This can be blown up significantly when you consider all that humans do to populations around them. The effect that humans have on the environment, including the wide range of animal species they come into contact with is remarkable, and worrisome. By better understanding the relationship between humans and animals, and the environment, it is the hope that repairs can be done to fix the damage done, or at least methods to slow the progression of these problems.

Community ecology is an ideal way to learn about animals and how they effect their own environment. Do they need more than is available to them as natural resources? How do they distribute food that is available? Understanding the way that they eat, live and use the recourses of the plant will help people to see how they too can make better decisions to protect the plant.

Thos that study community ecology will spend years training for it. Understanding and loving animal life is an important qualification here. In the latest studies, much of the focus of community ecology has been on finding improvements to the environment. The more expansive studies are and the more thorough the understanding is of this effect, the better people can make changes to reach the common goals of a healthy and strong environment.

Since humans play such a large role in the health and well-being of the rest of the planet's animals, it is essential to understand what can be done and should be done to improve the situation.




Other Plant Ecology related Articles

Ocean Ecology
Social Economics And Ecology Sustainability
Definition Of Ecology
Ecology Terms
Ecology Wildlife

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Plant Ecology News