ENVS200 Chapter Notes - Chapter 5: Life Table, Survivorship Curve, Semelparity And Iteroparity

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A major part of ecologists tasks is to study the changes in the size of populations. The processes that change the size of populations are: birth, death, movement (either into or out of a population). Birds, insects, reptiles, and mammals (humans too): modular organisms: those that grow by the repeated iteration of parts, e. g. the leaves, shoots, and branches of a plant. Organisms grow by the repeated production of modules" (leaves, individual cells, coral polyps, etc. ) Most are rooted or fixed, not motile. trees, shrubs, and herbs, chain-forming bacteria and algae, corals, sponges, and very many other marine invertebrates. Genet: genetic individual developed from a single-celled zygot and considered dead only when all its component modules have died. Most of living matter (biomass) on earth and a large part of that in the sea is composed of modular organisms: the forests, grasslands, coral reefs, algal mats and colonies, and peat-forming mosses.

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