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  2. Habitat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habitat

    For example, in Britain it has been estimated that various types of rotting wood are home to over 1700 species of invertebrate. [26] For a parasitic organism, its habitat is the particular part of the outside or inside of its host on or in which it is adapted to live.

  3. Marine habitat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_habitat

    Similarly, an organism living in a demersal habitat is said to be a demersal organism, as in demersal fish. Pelagic habitats are intrinsically ephemeral, depending on what ocean currents are doing. The land-based ecosystem depends on topsoil and fresh water, while the marine ecosystem depends on dissolved nutrients washed down from the land.

  4. Ecological niche - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_niche

    For example, the behavior of the California thrasher is consistent with the chaparral habitat it lives in—it breeds and feeds in the underbrush and escapes from its predators by shuffling from underbrush to underbrush. Its 'niche' is defined by the felicitous complementing of the thrasher's behavior and physical traits (camouflaging color ...

  5. Ecology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecology

    Habitat shifts provide important evidence of competition in nature where one population changes relative to the habitats that most other individuals of the species occupy. For example, one population of a species of tropical lizard (Tropidurus hispidus) has a flattened body relative to the main populations that live in open savanna. The ...

  6. Spatial ecology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spatial_ecology

    Spatial ecology studies the ultimate distributional or spatial unit occupied by a species.In a particular habitat shared by several species, each of the species is usually confined to its own microhabitat or spatial niche because two species in the same general territory cannot usually occupy the same ecological niche for any significant length of time.

  7. Aquatic ecosystem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquatic_ecosystem

    For example, they recycle nutrients, purify water, attenuate floods, recharge ground water and provide habitats for wildlife. [16] The biota of an aquatic ecosystem contribute to its self-purification, most notably microorganisms, phytoplankton, higher plants, invertebrates, fish, bacteria, protists, aquatic fungi, and more.

  8. Niche construction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niche_construction

    Niche construction is the ecological process by which an organism alters its own (or another species') local environment. These alterations can be a physical change to the organism’s environment, or it can encompass the active movement of an organism from one habitat to another where it then experiences different environmental pressures.

  9. Category:Habitats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Habitats

    Organisms by habitat (5 C) A. Afromontane (8 C, 23 P) B. Biomes (5 C, 16 P) D. ... Pages in category "Habitats" The following 86 pages are in this category, out of 86 ...