Read More
Date: 30-10-2016
3567
Date: 16-10-2016
1864
Date: 30-10-2015
2863
|
Introduction to Populations and Ecosystems of Plants
Ecology is the study of organisms in relation to all aspects of their surroundings. Throughout this book, emphasis has been placed on the importance of analyzing structure, metabolism, and diversity in terms of adaptation and fitness. Mutations result in new alleles that alter the phenotype; then natural selection eliminates those that are less well-adapted but retains those that increase fitness. Most factors have been discussed individually—for example, the effect of trichomes in deterring insects from chewing leaves and the ability of carotenoids to protect chlorophyll from excess sunlight. But most factors that affect a plant's health and survival are present together in the habitat, acting on the plant simultaneously. We must try to understand the plant in relation to its entire habitat, to all components of its surroundings.
An individual plant never exists in isolation in a habitat; instead, there are other individuals of the same species and together they constitute a population (Fig. .1). Individuals of plant populations often do not interact strongly, but the biology of (he population is more than just the sum of all the biologies of individuals. In a species
FIGURE .1: The numerous individuals of one species constitute a population. They depend on each other for gametes during sexual reproduction and also support a healthy population of pollinators and seed dispersers. Because there are several species, the photograph shows a community of several populations. When the soil and atmospheric components are added, an ecosystem results.
That consists of either dioecious or self-sterile individuals, a population can carry out successful sexual reproduction, but an individual cannot. If pollinated by animals, a single individual usually cannot produce enough nectar or pollen to keep even one pollinator alive, but a population of plants can sustain a population of pollinators. On the negative side, a population may be dense enough that spores from a pathogenic fungus are ensured of landing on at least one susceptible individual and then spreading to others, whereas if an individual could exist in isolation far removed from others, it might be safe from pathogens, predators, and natural catastrophes such as fires (Fig. .2).
FIGURE .2: Trees in dense populations were killed by fire. Identical trees in sparse populations survived.
A population also does not exist in isolation, but rather coexists with numerous populations of other plant species as well as populations of animals, fungi, protests, and prokaryotes. All the populations together constitute a community, which when considered along with the physical, nonliving environment is an ecosystem. These contribute additional levels of interactions and complexity and make it more difficult to be precisely certain of the effects of factors on individuals. The presence of trichomes may deter leaf- eating insects, but those insects might have frightened away more damaging egg-laying insects. Besides, the leaf-eating insects might have had a beneficial role by dropping nutrient-rich fecal pellets to the soil where they might have encouraged the growth of mycorrhizal fungi. The structure, metabolism, and diversity of plants cannot be fully understood without understanding the ecosystem.
|
|
دراسة يابانية لتقليل مخاطر أمراض المواليد منخفضي الوزن
|
|
|
|
|
اكتشاف أكبر مرجان في العالم قبالة سواحل جزر سليمان
|
|
|
|
|
اتحاد كليات الطب الملكية البريطانية يشيد بالمستوى العلمي لطلبة جامعة العميد وبيئتها التعليمية
|
|
|