BIOB50H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 15: Foundation Species, Keystone Species, Trophic Cascade

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Lecture 15 november 1 the nature of communities. There is a lot of complexity in a community and communities are groups of interacting species that occur together at the same place and time. These interactions give communities their character and function. In practical terms, ecologists define communities based on physical or biological characteristics. A community based on physical traits may include all species in a sand dune, a mountain stream, or a desert. A community based on biological traits may include species associated with a kelp forest or a coral reef. Focal subsets of species can be defined by: Taxonomic affinity (e. g. , all bird species in a community) guild group of species that use the same resources. Functional group species that function in similar ways (but do not necessarily use the same resources) Food webs allow ecologists to organize species based on their trophic or energetic interactions.

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