Autecology - Wikipedia Autecology is an approach in ecology that seeks to explain the distribution and abundance of species by studying interactions of individual organisms with their environments
What Is Autecology In Ecology - ecologiclife. com Autecology is an ecological approach that studies the interactions of individual organisms or species with their environment, focusing on the adaptations they undergo to inhabit their specific ecosystem
Autecology - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics Autecology is the study of individual organisms The approach originally focused on the adaptiveness of an organism's physiology to the environment but has since been expanded to include the study of the distribution and dynamics of populations
Autecology - Softschools. com Autecology is a sub-section of ecology primarily dealing with species populations and how these populations exist in the area and environment they are in The main goal is to study population sizes and how they change over space and time
Autecology - grokipedia. com Autecology is the branch of ecology that focuses on the interactions of an individual organism or a single species with the biotic and abiotic components of its environment The term derives from Greek "autos" (self) and "oikos" (household or environment), emphasizing the study of a single entity
Autecology Explained Autecology is an approach in ecology that seeks to explain the distribution and abundance of species by studying interactions of individual organisms with their environments
Autecology | Ecology | Cambridge Aspire website Autecology is the name given to ecological studies which concentrate on one species (autos is the Greek for self) An autecological study aims to answer the questions asked in Chapter 1 and to understand the processes described in Chapter 2 for a chosen species
Autecology Definition and Examples - Biology Online Dictionary Autecology is the study of the environment in relation to only one species in contrast to synecology, which is the study of the environment affecting groups of species coexisting in the area