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324 results for "deep ecology" — page 2 of 17
ZB_1_17 — Cognitive Ecology and Animal Decision-Making
Cognitive ecology — the study of how animals' cognitive abilities (perception, learning, memory, decision-making) have been shaped by the ecological challenges they face — bridges behavioral ecology, comparative psycholo
ZB_1_16 — Acoustic Ecology and Bioacoustics
Bioacoustics — the study of sound production, transmission, and reception in animals — and acoustic ecology (the study of organisms' relationships with their sonic environment) have revealed that the natural world is sat
ZB_5_11 — Chemical Ecology: The Language of Molecules
Chemical ecology investigates the role of naturally produced chemical compounds — allelochemicals, pheromones, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and secondary metabolites — in mediating interactions between organisms, e
ZB_5_06 — Mass Extinction Ecology: Catastrophe, Recovery, and Evolutionary Reset
Mass extinctions — episodes in which >75% of species disappear within a geologically brief interval — have profoundly shaped the history of life on Earth, acting as ecological and evolutionary resets that eliminate domin
ZB_5_10 — Disturbance Ecology: Fire, Flood, and Forest Dynamics
Disturbance ecology investigates how natural and anthropogenic perturbations — fire, wind, flood, drought, volcanic eruption, logging, grazing, landslides, and insect outbreaks — influence ecosystem structure, species di
ZB_4_10 — Cave Ecology: Life in Perpetual Darkness
Cave ecology (speleobiology) investigates life in subterranean environments — caves, groundwater aquifers, lava tubes, and interstitial spaces — habitats characterized by permanent darkness, near-constant temperature, hi
ZB_4_09 — Canopy Ecology: Life in the Forest Roof
The forest canopy — the aggregate of tree crowns forming the uppermost vegetative layer of a forest — is among the most species-rich, least explored, and most ecologically dynamic habitats on Earth, harboring an estimate
ZB_4_14 — Acoustic Ecology: Soundscape Science and Biophonic Monitoring
Acoustic ecology — the study of the relationship between living organisms and their sonic environment — has evolved from an artistic and philosophical discipline into a quantitative ecological science with major conserva
ZB_4_06 — Alpine and Arctic Ecology: Life at the Extremes
Alpine and Arctic ecosystems — the treeless biomes occurring above the climatic treeline in mountains (alpine) and above ~60–70°N latitude where mean temperature of the warmest month is <10°C (arctic) — share fundamental
ZB_4_05 — Urban Ecology: Nature in the City
Urban ecology studies the distribution, abundance, and interactions of organisms within cities and urbanized landscapes — environments that now house over 56% of humanity (projected ~68% by 2050) and cover ~3% of Earth's
ZB_4_12 — Landscape Ecology: Patches, Corridors, and Mosaics
Landscape ecology studies how spatial patterns of ecosystems — the arrangement, size, shape, and connectivity of habitat patches within a heterogeneous landscape mosaic — influence ecological processes including species
ZB_4_13 — Historical Ecology: Human-Ecosystem Co-Evolution through Time
Historical ecology investigates how human land use, management, domestication, exploitation, and settlement over centuries to millennia have shaped contemporary ecosystems, landscapes, and biodiversity patterns — reveali
ZB_3_06 — Fire Ecology
Fire ecology studies fire as a natural ecological process — a fundamental disturbance agent that shapes vegetation structure, species composition, nutrient cycling, and landscape patterns across much of Earth's terrestri
ZB_3_18 — Mycorrhizal Networks and Forest Ecology
Mycorrhizal networks — underground fungal networks connecting the roots of multiple plants — are among the most ecologically important symbioses on Earth, associating with ~90% of land plant species and mediating nutrien
ZB_3_10 — Wetland Ecology: Nature's Kidneys and Carbon Vaults
Wetlands — ecosystems where water saturation of soils is the dominant factor controlling plant and animal community composition, soil development, and biogeochemical cycling — encompass a vast diversity of habitat types
ZB_3_08 — Freshwater Ecology
Freshwater ecosystems — rivers, streams, lakes, ponds, wetlands, and groundwater systems — cover only ~0.8% of Earth's surface and contain ~0.01% of the world's water, yet they support a disproportionate ~6% of all descr
ZB_3_13 — Estuary and Mangrove Ecology: Where Rivers Meet the Sea
Estuaries — semi-enclosed coastal water bodies where freshwater river discharge meets and mixes with saline ocean water — and mangrove forests — tropical and subtropical intertidal forests dominated by salt-tolerant tree
ZB_3_12 — Soil Ecology: The Living Skin of the Earth
Soil — far from inert dirt — is the most biologically diverse habitat on Earth, containing an estimated 25–30% of all species on the planet. A single gram of healthy soil harbors approximately 1 billion bacteria (from 10
O_3_12 — Cenote and Sinkhole Ecology — Surface-Groundwater Connections
Cenotes (from the Maya ts'onot) and sinkholes — natural depressions or holes formed by the dissolution of soluble bedrock (limestone, dolostone, gypsum) in karst landscapes — are far more than geological curiosities. The
O_5_03 — Wildfires, Fire Ecology, and Pyrogeography
Fire is one of Earth's most powerful and pervasive ecological forces — not an aberration but a fundamental natural process that has shaped terrestrial ecosystems for at least 420 million years (the earliest charcoal evid
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