Discuss the ways in which distinctive ecologies can develop along routeways (10 marks) Routeways such as roads‚ railways and canals can provide habitats for many species of plant and insect life because they often act as protected areas in which ecological succession can occur. There are several ways in which this can happen. One way in which ecologies can develop along routeways is that plant seeds‚ e.g. Oxford ragwort or buddleia‚ that have become windborne can be transported along by cars or trains
Premium Ecology Ecological succession Ecosystem
April 19‚ 2010 Imagery in Robert Frost’s “Desert Places” Robert Frost‚ an American poet of the late 19th century‚ used nature in many of his writings. One of the great examples is the poem “Desert Places” that express feelings of a speaker and the meaning of the entire poem through images of nature. The poem describes two different kinds of desert places and clearly emphasizes the most frightening one. To help readers understand the meaning of “Desert Places”‚ Frost uses variety of images to create
Premium Poetry Precipitation Stanza
something extraordinary: The Gobi Desert. Today this geographic land mark takes up an astonishing 1‚000 mi from southwest to the northeast end and 500 miles from north to south. It has many different variations of names from the Chinese‚ sometimes reffered to instead as "Shamo" or as "Hanhai" which translates to endless sea. Today the Gobi desert is home to many different types of wildlife that inhabit its cold climate‚ unlike that of a typical desert. The Gobi Desert is even known for its fossils and
Premium People's Republic of China Qing Dynasty Ming Dynasty
33 FIELD ECOLOGY A field ecology study on an enclosed compound located in Bacong‚ Negros Oriental 1. INTRODUCTION 1.1. Background The world is in a constant change‚ and with it‚ every living being adapts to these changes. Ecology plays a major role in how the world and its inhabitants work. Before we start‚ to have a deeper understanding‚ let us define ecology. So what is ecology? In University of Western Cape’s introduction of their botany course‚ they defined ecology. In their introduction
Premium Ecology Fruit Plant
Lovie M. Aguilar Section 39390 April 05‚ 2012 Mojave Desert‚ what makes it unique? The Mojave Desert occupies a significant portion of Southern California and parts of Utah‚ Nevada‚ and Arizona. Named after the Mohave Native Americans[->0] it occupies roughly 54‚000 square miles in a typical Basin and Range topography. The Mojave Desert is bound in part on the western end by the Tehachapi[->1] together with the San Gabriel[->2] and San Bernardino[->3] mountain ranges. The mountain boundaries
Premium Desert
Dana Phillips‚ who studies ecocriticism and American literature‚ employs his 2003 book The Truth of Ecology: Nature‚ Culture‚ and Literature in America as a critique of mainstream realist forms of ecocriticism. He places emphasis on the need for ecocriticism to be truly more interdisciplinary‚ and that ecocritics need to more fully incorporate the sciences‚ as well as the history and philosophy of those sciences. In its entirety the text suggests‚ in a somewhat defiant tone‚ how ecocriticism has
Premium Cultural studies Science Theory
developed in this region. Even the soul of a deceased had to cross the Nile before he could enter the kingdom of the dead. The Sahara desert covers around 9‚000‚000 square kilometers and the overall area is as large as the continental United States. The Sahara desert also has the reputation of being the world’s largest hot desert. The landforms in this desert often
Premium Nile Egypt Sahara
Child Journal Review I: Infants‚ Toddlers‚ & Television; the Ecology of the Home In the article‚ Infants‚ Toddlers‚ & Television; the Ecology of the Home by Kelly M. Schmitt she discusses her research and findings for a group of twenty typically developing children ranging from ages 7 months to 33 months while they underwent a study focusing on the behavioral and cognitive effects of television as part of the overall ecology of the home (naturally). Schmitt discusses the physical space and
Premium Childhood Child The Child
article “Desert‚ democracy‚ and consumer surplus” wants to show how a society that wishes to give people their just desert‚ there must be some way to determine what would be considered “just” for the contribution of an individual. Dekker argues against the notion that because the market cannot fairly determine what an individual deserves for their actions‚ doesn’t mean it is impossible to determine it through democratic process. Dekker’s article starts with him defining the concept of desert as giving
Premium Household income in the United States Person Democracy
Desert and glacier landscapes contrast and formation process. Desert are created via natural ways‚ through climate changes and natural erosion‚ the wind blowing in those areas carries little or no moisture‚ bringing only fog and mist but no rains also those winds pick up and carry rock particles and those‚ will erode the ground and or the other rocks creating furthermore erosions‚ those desert’s also are the result of human activities such as deforestation‚ when humans deplete an area of the fragile
Premium Erosion Ocean Glacier