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The ecological success of a plant species in a specific environment may be quantified by its [[Abundance (ecology)|abundance]], and depending on the life form of the plant different measures of abundance may be relevant, e.g. density, [[Biomass (ecology)|biomass]], or [[plant cover]].
The ecological success of a plant species in a specific environment may be quantified by its [[Abundance (ecology)|abundance]], and depending on the life form of the plant different measures of abundance may be relevant, e.g. density, [[Biomass (ecology)|biomass]], or [[plant cover]].


The change in the abundance of a plant species may due to both abiotic factors, e.g. [[climate change]], or biotic factors, e.g [[herbivory]] or [[interspecific competition]].
The change in the abundance of a plant species may be due to both abiotic factors, e.g. [[climate change]], or biotic factors, e.g [[herbivory]] or [[interspecific competition]].


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 18:52, 16 December 2010

Plant ecology is a subdiscipline of ecology which studies the distribution and abundance of plants, the interactions among and between members of plant species, and their interactions with their environment. Plant ecology has its roots both in plant geography and in studies of the interactions between individual plants and their environment.

Broadly speaking, the scope of plant ecology encompasses plant ecophysiology, plant population ecology, community ecology, ecosystem ecology, landscape ecology and global ecology.

Most plants are rooted in the soil, and often they reproduce vegetatively in a way that makes it difficult to distinguish individual plants of the same species. These characteristic features of plants necessitate a somewhat different scientific methodology than used in e.g. animal ecology, but the different subdiciplines of ecology is integrated in ecosystem ecology studies.

Structure and function

Life forms

Strategies

Herbivory

Distribution

Abundance

The ecological success of a plant species in a specific environment may be quantified by its abundance, and depending on the life form of the plant different measures of abundance may be relevant, e.g. density, biomass, or plant cover.

The change in the abundance of a plant species may be due to both abiotic factors, e.g. climate change, or biotic factors, e.g herbivory or interspecific competition.

See also