25 BOT 101 Ecology Lecture 2
25 BOT 101 Ecology Lecture 2
25 BOT 101 Ecology Lecture 2
UNITS)
FIRST SEMESTER, 2019/2020 SESSION.
LECTURE 2
HABITAT, MICROHABITAT, ECOLOGICAL NICHE.
• More than just occupying space, the population of each species in the
community performs some function.
• What the organism does or to say it somewhat
anthropomorphologically, its occupation in the community is called its
niche.
• Thus, ecological niche is the functional role and position of the
organism in its community.
Some species occupy a very broad ecological niche.
• They may feed on many kinds of food, plant and animal, or if strictly
herbivorous they may feed on a wide variety of plants.
• Other organisms occupy highly specialized niches.
• Organisms have arrived at their respective niches through long
periods of evolution.
• Because no two species in the community occupy the same niche,
each more or less compliments the other.
HABITATS OR ECOSYSTEMS OF THE WORLD
• The concentration of water divides the environment into
aquatic and terrestrial habitats.
• NATURAL HABITATS
Terrestrial Aquatic
(forest, grassland, desert)
Freshwater
Marine Lotic(running water) Lentic(standing water) (ocean,
sea) (River, spring, stream) (Lake, pond,swamp)
TERRESTIAL/LAND HABITATS
DESERTS.
• Deserts may be caused by extreme and nearly continual cold (arctic,
antarctic, and alpine area) or by dryness as in the Sahara.
• They are found in areas with high rainfall and occurs both in
temperate (temperate forest) and tropical regions (tropical
forest).
– (b) Herbs
– (d) Stranglers
– (e) Epiphytes
– (f) Saprophytes
– (g) Parasites.
• The animals can be divided into a number of
ecological groups according to their ways of life.
GRASSLANDS.
• A grassland is a type of vegetation consisting
predominantly of grasses.
AQUATIC HABITATS
Aquatic habitats are divided into freshwater and marine ecosystems
defined by salinity.
FRESHWATERS
Freshwater ecosystems, the study of which is known as Limnology ,
are divided into two groups: lentic or standing water habitats
(lake, pond, swamp) and lotic or running water habitats(river,
spring, stream).
• Freshwater rivers and lakes comprise innumerable bodies of
water varying in size and depth and spread across the continents
of the world.
• Most of them are comparatively isolated.
• The life span of ponds ranges from a few weeks or months in the case of
small seasonal ponds to several years for larger ponds.
DELTAS
• Many rivers flow eventually into the sea or a lake,
where they deposit sediment when velocity falls
below that required to keep particles in motion.
• This sediment often builds up into a delta composed of fine-
grained deposits.
• The large delta at the mouth of the river Niger is a classic example.
• Deltas are usually very fertile areas and are extensively used for
agriculture.
• They contain good soils, have abundant water supplies available for
irrigation and –in natural rivers that are not controlled upstream –are
frequently flooded, which brings regular inputs of nutrients and fertile
silt.
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
• Environmental pollution is the unfavourable alteration of our
surrounding wholly or largely as a by-product of man’s actions,
through direct or indirect effects of changes in energy patterns,
radiation levels, chemical and physical constitution and the
abundance of organisms.
• Biologists define pollution more broadly as ‘ the addition to an
environment of any