Unit 1: Ecological concepts

Table of Contents

Basic Concepts and Definitions

This section covers the fundamental vocabulary of ecology.

Major Terrestrial Biomes

Biomes are very large ecological areas on the Earth's surface, defined by the dominant plant life and a shared climate. Climate, particularly temperature and precipitation, is the main factor determining a biome.

Biome Climate Characteristics Dominant Vegetation
Tropical Rainforest High temperature, high rainfall (all year) Broadleaf evergreen trees, dense canopy, lianas, epiphytes. High biodiversity.
Savanna (Tropical Grassland) High temperature, distinct wet and dry seasons Grasses with scattered drought-resistant trees (e.g., Acacia).
Desert Low rainfall (arid), can be hot or cold Succulents (e.g., cacti), drought-deciduous shrubs, annual herbs.
Temperate Grassland Moderate rainfall, hot summers, cold winters Perennial grasses and forbs (e.g., prairies, steppes).
Temperate Deciduous Forest Moderate rainfall, four distinct seasons Deciduous trees (e.g., oak, maple, beech) that lose leaves in winter.
Taiga (Boreal Forest) Low precipitation (snow), long/cold winters Coniferous evergreen trees (e.g., pine, spruce, fir).
Tundra Very cold, low precipitation, short growing season Mosses, lichens, dwarf shrubs, grasses. Permafrost (frozen soil).

Ecological Amplitude

Ecological Amplitude refers to the range of tolerance an organism or species has for a specific environmental factor (e.g., temperature, pH, salinity).

Laws of Limiting Factors

These two laws explain how environmental factors control the growth and distribution of organisms.

Liebig's Law of the Minimum (1840)

"The growth of a plant is dependent on the amount of foodstuff which is presented to it in minimum quantity."

Concept: Imagine a wooden barrel with staves of different lengths. The barrel can only hold water up to the height of the shortest stave.
Application: An organism's growth is not controlled by the total amount of all nutrients, but by the one nutrient that is scarcest (the "limiting factor"). For example, plant growth in a lake is often limited by phosphorus, even if nitrogen and carbon are abundant. Adding more nitrogen won't help; only adding phosphorus will increase growth.

[Image of Liebig's Barrel diagram]

Shelford's Law of Tolerance (1913)

"An organism's success is determined by a range of environmental conditions, with a minimum, maximum, and optimum value for each factor."

Concept: This law expands on Liebig's Law. It states that it's not just "too little" of a factor that limits an organism, but also "too much".
Application: For any factor (like temperature), an organism has:

For example, fish can die if the water is too cold (minimum) or too hot (maximum). Their "ecological amplitude" is the range between these two extremes.

Ecological Niche

The ecological niche is one of the most important concepts in ecology. It describes the functional role and position of a species within an ecosystem.

A common analogy is that the habitat is the species' "address" (where it lives), while the niche is its "profession" or "occupation" (what it does, what it eats, what eats it, and how it interacts).

The niche includes all the biotic and abiotic factors a species needs to survive and reproduce, such as:

Types of Niche