Difference between revisions of "Ecology"

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The study of relationships among [[organism|organisms]] in [[ecosystem|ecosystems]].<ref>Wile, Dr. Jay L. ''Exploring Creation With Biology''. Apologia Educational Ministries, Inc. 1998</ref> The term comes from the German "oekologie."
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'''Ecology''' is 'the study of the interrelationships between organisms and their natural environment, both living and non-living'<ref>Martin, E. and Hine, R. (2008) 'A Dictionary of Biology' Oxford University Press, Oxford, U.K.</ref>
Ecology is the study of how humanity learns that they are not ruled by god or mythological texts such as the Bible. Ecology states how the balance of life is based on scientific principals. In the [[biosphere]], each part is connected and dependent on all the other parts so that when corporations dump poisonous substance or radioactive waste into our neighborhoods, those toxins will end up killing life or creating diseases such as [[cancer]].
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Neoconservative corporate stooges and Christian nutcases insist that unregulated capitalism is good for humans but this ignores the basic reality of ecology. Unregulated capitalism and greed kill many people by ignoring the basic ecological principal that what you put into the environment stays in the environment.
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Prayer will not stop poison from causing cancer. Money will not protect you if the air is so polluted that you will die.
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A popular aspect of ecology is the relationship of the relative proportions of predator and prey. When more predators are introduced to an environment, they eat more prey animals. This tends to increase the population of predators, since they get more food and can thus live longer to reproduce more. But it also reduces the food supply of the predators, which contrariwise causes the predators to live shorter lives and to reproduce less. However, since predators tend to eat herbivores, increased predation of herbivores will allow [[plants|primary producers]] to increase in popularion, creating a phenomenon called a Trophic Cascade <ref>Estes, James A. and Terborgh, John, ''Trophic Cascades: Predators, Prey, and the Changing Dynamics of Nature''. Island Press, 2010. ISBN 10597264873.</ref> In some ecosystems, the populations of predator and prey cycle up and down wildly, but usually they reach an equilibrium.<ref>Rockwood, Larry L. ''Introduction to Population Ecology''. Wiley Blackwell, 2006. ISBN 9781405132633. Chapter 10.</ref>
Global warming is an example of how capitalism and neoconservative greed are destroying the planet you live on and the one your children will grow up in. Global warming is caused by human industrialist practices such as polluting factories and automobiles. By burning fossil fuels, carbon dioxide is released into the biosphere. Previous to the industrialist revolution of capitalism the atmosphere was balanced with life affirming concentrations of atmospheric gases. With the huge addition of carbon dioxide from factories and automobiles the balance of atmospheric gases has become disrupted. Remember, everything is connected to everything else. So ExxonMobil makes billions of dollars and your children are doomed to live in a far different world than the one we now inhabit, one that will be far less productive and hungrier.  
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Ecology is a branch of science. Praying will not make global warming go away. Huge corporations will continue to lie and corrupt our system of politcal representation to make money. And the ecology of our biosphere, which supports human life, will erode.  
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{{quotebox|The first significant contribution to the theory of population ecology was that of [[Thomas Malthus]], an English clergyman, who in 1798 published his  Essay on the Principle of Population. Malthus introduced the concept that at some point in time an expanding population must exceed supply of prerequisite [[natural resources]], i.e., population increases exponentially resulting in increasing competition for means of subsistence, food, shelter, etc. This concept has been termed the "Struggle for Existence". [http://ipmworld.umn.edu/chapters/ecology.htm]}}
  
The best way to protect the environment is to pay attention to how you affect the ecology of the system of planet Earth.
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Ecology is an established [[science]], but the term is often confused with or used interchangeably with [[environmentalism]].
Pay attention to how much you are consuming junk. Do not purchase usesless products from giant corporations. Buy locally produced goods. And above all, stop allowing religious nuts and neoconservatives to tell you that dumping poison into the environment is necessary for America. Read James Lovelock and E. O. Wilson rather than watch Fox News.==References==
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==References==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
<ref>Lovelock, James ''Gaia: A New Look at Life on Earth '' </ref>
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<ref>Wilson, E.O. ''The Creation: An Appeal to Save Life on Earth'' </ref>
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[[Category:Biology]]
[[Category:Science]]
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[[Category:Ecology]]
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Revision as of 12:44, June 23, 2016

Ecology is 'the study of the interrelationships between organisms and their natural environment, both living and non-living'[1]

A popular aspect of ecology is the relationship of the relative proportions of predator and prey. When more predators are introduced to an environment, they eat more prey animals. This tends to increase the population of predators, since they get more food and can thus live longer to reproduce more. But it also reduces the food supply of the predators, which contrariwise causes the predators to live shorter lives and to reproduce less. However, since predators tend to eat herbivores, increased predation of herbivores will allow primary producers to increase in popularion, creating a phenomenon called a Trophic Cascade [2] In some ecosystems, the populations of predator and prey cycle up and down wildly, but usually they reach an equilibrium.[3]

The first significant contribution to the theory of population ecology was that of Thomas Malthus, an English clergyman, who in 1798 published his Essay on the Principle of Population. Malthus introduced the concept that at some point in time an expanding population must exceed supply of prerequisite natural resources, i.e., population increases exponentially resulting in increasing competition for means of subsistence, food, shelter, etc. This concept has been termed the "Struggle for Existence". [1]

Ecology is an established science, but the term is often confused with or used interchangeably with environmentalism.

References

  1. Martin, E. and Hine, R. (2008) 'A Dictionary of Biology' Oxford University Press, Oxford, U.K.
  2. Estes, James A. and Terborgh, John, Trophic Cascades: Predators, Prey, and the Changing Dynamics of Nature. Island Press, 2010. ISBN 10597264873.
  3. Rockwood, Larry L. Introduction to Population Ecology. Wiley Blackwell, 2006. ISBN 9781405132633. Chapter 10.