Adaptive radiation: it’s a cluster of closely related species that are each adaptively specialized to a specific habitat or food source.
Adaptive zone: it’s the part of a habitat that can be occupied by a group of species that use the same resources in a similar way.
Chapter 18
Explain the three modes of speciation (that make them become reproductively isolated).
1. Allopatric speciation: it’s the most common mode of speciation in large animals, and it occurs in two stages. First, a population becomes geographically separated by a barrier that seperates the initial population into smaller subpopulations. Second, as the populations experience different mutations, as well as different patterns of natural selection and genetic drift, they accumulate genetic differences which end up isolating …show more content…
1. Organismal ecology: researchers study organisms to determine their genetic, biochemical, physiological, morphological, and behavioural adaptations to their abiotic environment
2. Population ecology: researchers focus on groups of individuals of the same species that live together. They study how size and other characteristics of a population change in space and time.
3. Community ecology: biologists examine populations of different species that occur together in one area (the community). They study interactions between species, and analyze how predation, competition, and environmental disturbances influence a community’s development, organization, and structure.
4. Ecosystem ecology: they study how nutrients cycle and energy flows between the biotic and abiotic components of the community.
Desribe the seven different kinds of population characteristics.
1. Geographic range: every population has a geographic range, which is the overall spatial boundaries where it lives. Geographic ranges vary greatly between species. Every population occupies a habitat, which is characterized by biotic and abiotic