Species richness Essays

  • Ponderosa Pine Species Observation Report

    640 Words  | 3 Pages

    Introduction The number of plant species inhabiting Earth keep our planet highly diverse as well as play a vital role in sustaining our environment and our population. The understanding of plant species and their diversity and abundance is important because plants are vital to maintaining Earth and its atmosphere. In our research project, we addressed the question: How does the abundance of the ponderosa pine species vary within different elevation levels on the Bear Peak Trail? The article by Wathen

  • Comparison Between Community A And Community B

    820 Words  | 4 Pages

    parking lot a "species". We classified the parking lots into Community A and Community B. Community A represented the athletic parking lot and Community B represented the band parking lot, both lots hold students and factuality cars. Our class split in half, one group attained data for Community A while the other attained data for Community B. We acquired our data by counting and writing down the make of each car in the parking lot. After this each group tallied the same "species" together

  • Jane Goodall In The Gombe Stream National Park

    1296 Words  | 6 Pages

    change in physical and biological characteristics. Evolutionary theory attempts to explain why we see so many species in world that seem so diverse and yet, have enough similarities that imply a common origin. There are various mechanisms by which evolution occurs, including natural selection, artificial selection, gene drift, etc., but in the end, evolution is process by which every single species that exists today, was derived from the last universal ancestor. This perpetual system of change and advancement

  • Unit 1 Biodiversity Research Paper

    1865 Words  | 8 Pages

    Biodiversity is simply defined as the number and variability of organisms within a defined area. The amount of biodiversity that is present can help to define an area’s richness and productivity. Several factors that help an influence over biodiversity include climate, an area’s isolation, the vegetation structure, and size of the area. Generally, there are more organisms in a warm and moist environment and biodiversity will decline as the climate moves away from the ideal range of conditions. Isolation

  • Coyote Species Case Study

    1333 Words  | 6 Pages

    The Case Study of the Declining Biodivesity between Coyote Species and Rodent Species. What is Biodiversity? Biodiversity can be referred to as a variety of life on Earth at all its levels, from genes to ecosystems, and the ecological and evolutionary processes that sustain it (What is Biodiversity? n.d.). Biodiversity includes all living things such as rare, threatened, or endangered species, the microbes, fungi and invertebrates. Maintaining biodiversity is important because most of our food

  • Biodiversity Lab Report

    793 Words  | 4 Pages

    Biodiversity is important for all living organism including plants and animals. Without biodiversity, there would be no balance between organism and their environment. Biodiversity helps to maintain the balance of nature to sustain all life on earth; one species will not overpower another because of the effect of biodiversity. Not only does biodiversity maintain the balance of nature it is also used to indicate health in the aquatic community. Dissolved-oxygen is measured in the aquatic environment to test

  • Califorestation In The Amazon Rainforest

    1272 Words  | 6 Pages

    The amazon rainforest is home to various different kinds of species ecosystems that work equally separate and together to perform their roles that are vital to humans and wildlife that have adapted to its uses and benefits. The interlinking web of ecosystems and creates a unique biological richness that cannot be compared across the globe which is an accurate representation of how truly magnificent and important the Amazon is. Because the climate is not the same across the world, biodiversity is

  • Importance Of Host-Pathogen Interactions

    1614 Words  | 7 Pages

    hidden manner, to that of all other organic beings, with which it comes into competition for food or residence, or from which it has to escape, or on which it preys… Charles Darwin ECOLOGY is the branch of science dealing with the classification and richness of organisms in the ecosystem and their kind of interactions with the

  • Sirenia In Humans

    1872 Words  | 8 Pages

    Sirenia is a small order consisting of two major families namely Dugongidae and Trichechidea. The family Trichechidea has three species namely : West Indian Manatees (Trichechus Manatees) , African Manatees ( Trichecus senegalensis ) , Amazonian manatees (Trichechus inunguis). There is stand out surviving part of family Dugongidae, dugongs (Dugong dugon). They are large aquatic mammals with tapering to paddle like dorsoventrally flattened bilobed tails .The order Sirenia is based on sirens i.e

  • Essay On Keystone Species

    716 Words  | 3 Pages

    A keystone species is an organism that enhances the habitat and helps all species around them thrive and evolve. In class we examined the wolves of yellowstone and their reintroduction into the habitat. This re-introductory helped organisms around them by reducing species that have dominated the habitat like the deer and this helped plant life and animal life thrive and created a richer environment. The wolves are the keystone species of their environment being the organism enhancing biotic and abiotic

  • Desmond Morris

    1017 Words  | 5 Pages

    This Desmond Morris’s classic takes its place alongside Darwin’s The Origin of Species, presenting man not as a fallen angel, but as a risen ape, remarkable in his resilience, energy and imagination, yet an animal nevertheless, in danger of forgetting his origins. Desmond Morris is an English zoologist, ethologist as well as a popular author in sociobiology. He believes that man needs to be studied in exactly the same way as any other animal, and this requires patience and excellent or and proud

  • Competition Between Species

    812 Words  | 4 Pages

    Species interact with each other in the natural world. Two ways species interact are through competition or cooperation. In this study, the average needle length of Red Pines, Pinus resinosa, was compared to the distance to the nearest tree to see if the trees were interacting via competing or cooperation. It was found that the average needle length was longer when distance between the nearest tree was the closest. Introduction In nature, competition is common. Competition occurs between

  • Essay On Identity Of Animals

    883 Words  | 4 Pages

    There are humans and there are animals that roam this Earth. If we are not that different biologically, why aren’t animals as developed as us? Why aren’t we as simple-minded as our fellow animals? There are many different beliefs as to why we have created technologies, ideas, and a future for ourselves while animals are still at the starting line whether it be scientific or religious. After a few months of book reading and researching, I have found that unlike our animal counterparts, humans have

  • Analysis Of John Hudgins's The Cow

    953 Words  | 4 Pages

    Humans and animals have from the beginning of time always coexisted with nature and invaded each other 's space. Humans, however, rely on animals and nature to provide them with the basic necessities to survive. Our homes, food, water, and even clothing materials all come from these natural resources. As humans, we exploit these animals and disturb their habitats to build homes and to give ourselves everything we need. Hudgins 's "The Cow" asserts what could be an admirable but an evil relationship

  • Pros And Cons Of Animals Essay

    1421 Words  | 6 Pages

    Do you believe that animals can think and have their own emotions just like human beings? It is believed that all animals resemble human in their biological constitution (Beck, 2013). Since a long time, ancient people had a strong connection with animals through using them in hunting, transportation, guard, and providing their food resources. These days, people are witnessing a scientific revolution in various discoveries. In other words, scientists try to study and discover every new and strange

  • Disadvantages Of Mutualism

    1158 Words  | 5 Pages

    crucial to its existence as well as the functioning of the whole ecosystem (Elton 1968).Depending upon the strength, duration, direction of their effects and mechanism of the interaction,these interactions can be further classified and it spans from species interacting only once in their lifetime (e.g. pollination) to those which completes their entire life in another (e.g. endosymbiosis). The interactions may be detrimental as consumption of the other as in the case of predation, herbivory, or cannibalism

  • Mutant Sg At Horn Creek Summary

    894 Words  | 4 Pages

    another. At the Anthropocene epoch, humankind seems to have control over the nature in some extent, despite that nature wait its time and respond how it’s been treated. At this epoch “human-kind has caused mass extinctions of the planet and animal species, polluted the oceans and altered the atmosphere” (Stromberg, np). Moreover in “The Mutant at Horn Creek” the author shows how humankind altered the natural world and its effect in the

  • Plant-Animal Co-Evolution: What Is Coevolution?

    990 Words  | 4 Pages

    This interaction can be found in Central America. The ant protects the Acacia plant against it being eaten and the plant provides the ant with essential proteins, carbohydrates and a place to live. Some Acacia species have chemicals in their leaves to protect them however some lack this chemical and rely on the ants for protection. The plant possesses thorn from which the ants carve their nest which provides them with shelter. The petioles of the leaf have nectars

  • Why Do Dinosaurs Be Extinct

    808 Words  | 4 Pages

    dinosaurs go extinct. Have you ever thought who made the dinosaurs go extinct. First it was not us humans. Well let 's say because a meteor some say from hunting. But for real, no one knows. But right now that is happening to our world. more than 5000 species went extinct and because is humans yes you and me. Like bees if they die who will pollinate and if no one pollinates the plants will die. it is a big thing. Why are the animals going extinct. This is what i am going to be writing about to day. Why

  • The Cow Poem Analysis

    952 Words  | 4 Pages

    Humans and animals have from the beginning of time always coexisted in nature and invaded each other 's space. Humans, however, rely on animals and nature to provide them with the basic necessities to survive. Our homes, food, water, and even clothing materials all come from these natural resources. As humans, we exploit these animals and disturb their habitats to build homes and to give ourselves everything we need. Hudgins 's "The Cow" asserts what could be an admirable but evil relationship between