RNR 316 Lecture Notes - Lecture 18: Ecological Niche, Genetic Drift

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Habitat: an area with the combination of resources (food, shelter, water) and environmental conditions (temperature, precipitation) where individuals of a given species, settle survive and reproduce. Niche: function and position of a species in the environment; how it meets its needs and completes its life history, including all if its biotic and abiotic interactions. Fundamental niche: the range of abiotic conditions where a species can persist. Competitors, predators, and pathogens may prevent a population from persisting in an area. Realized niche: the range of abiotic and biotic conditions where a species can persist. Geographic range: total area inhabited by a population. Variation in the environment often results in geographic ranges that are composed of disjunct habitat patches. Ecological niche modeling= species distribution modeling= species habitat modeling= climate envelope modeling. Ecological niche modeling can predict future species distribution from limited information. Ex: california- high and low dispersal changes.

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