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Related Concept Videos

Keystone Species01:39

Keystone Species

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Measures of species biodiversity, such as richness (i.e., the number of species present) and evenness (i.e., their relative abundance), describe an ecological community’s structure. Many factors affect community structure, including abiotic factors (e.g., sunlight and nutrients), disturbances (e.g., fire or flood), species interactions (e.g., predation or competition), and chance events (e.g., foreign species invasion). Certain species—such as keystone species—also play a...
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Ecological Niches02:02

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All organisms have a position within an ecosystem. The complete set of living and nonliving factors—including food resources, climate, and terrain—that define the position of a given organism are collectively referred to as the organism’s ecological niche.
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Ecological Succession02:17

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Ecological succession is influenced by the processes of facilitation, inhibition, and toleration. Facilitation occurs when early successional species create more favorable ecological conditions for subsequent species, such as enhanced nutrient, water, or light availability. In contrast, inhibition happens when early successional species create unfavorable ecological conditions for potential successive species, such as limiting resource availability. In some cases, later successional species...
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Ecological Disturbance02:26

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An ecological disturbance is a temporary disruption in the environment resulting from abiotic, biotic, or anthropogenic factors, causing a pronounced change in an ecosystem. The impact of an ecological disturbance, which can depend on its intensity, frequency, and spatial distribution, plays a significant role in shaping the species diversity within the ecosystem.
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Symbiosis00:58

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Symbiotic relationships are long-term, close interactions between individuals of different species that affect the distribution and abundance of those species. When a relationship is beneficial to both species, this is called mutualism. When the relationship is beneficial to one species but neither beneficial nor harmful to the other species, this is called commensalism. When one organism is harmed to benefit another, the relationship is known as parasitism. These types of relationships often...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 9, 2025

Coral Reef Arks: An In Situ Mesocosm and Toolkit for Assembling Reef Communities
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Coral Reef Arks: An In Situ Mesocosm and Toolkit for Assembling Reef Communities

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Assembly archetypes in ecological communities.

Hugo Flores-Arguedas1, Omar Antolin-Camarena2, Serguei Saavedra3,4

  • 1Institute of Mathematics, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Juriquilla, Queretaro, Mexico.

Journal of the Royal Society, Interface
|November 28, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Scientists discovered general principles, called assembly archetypes, that explain how biological systems organize. These archetypes apply to body plans, ecological communities, and even human gut microbiota, revealing universal design rules.

Failed At:

2026-06-19T13:40:29.060525+00:00

Keywords:
archetypeassembly rulescommunity ecologygut microbiotastructural stability

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