PřF:Bi6340 Macro- and community ecology - Course Information
Bi6340 Community ecology and macroecology
Faculty of ScienceAutumn 2011
- Extent and Intensity
- 2/0. 2 credit(s) (fasci plus compl plus > 4). Type of Completion: zk (examination).
- Teacher(s)
- prof. RNDr. Milan Chytrý, Ph.D. (lecturer)
- Guaranteed by
- prof. RNDr. Milan Chytrý, Ph.D.
Department of Botany and Zoology – Biology Section – Faculty of Science
Contact Person: prof. RNDr. Milan Chytrý, Ph.D. - Timetable
- Mon 14:00–15:50 BR2
- Prerequisites (in Czech)
- Bi5080 Basics of ecology
- Course Enrolment Limitations
- The course is also offered to the students of the fields other than those the course is directly associated with.
- fields of study / plans the course is directly associated with
- Botany (programme PřF, N-EB)
- Systematic Biology and Ecology (programme PřF, N-BI)
- Systematic Biology and Ecology (programme PřF, N-BI, specialization Botany)
- Systematic Biology and Ecology (programme PřF, N-BI, specialization Zoology)
- Zoology (programme PřF, N-EB)
- Course objectives
- The course explains basic structures and processes occurring in multi-species assemblages at local, regional and global scales, with focus on variation in species diversity and its causes.
- Syllabus
- 1. Community: delimitation, structure and methods of description (classification and gradient analysis), relationship between local and regional processes, aims of community ecology and macroecology, individualistic and organismal concept of community, assembly rules;
- 2. Community changes in time: types and mechanisms of succession, climax, early and late successional species and their traits, cyclical changes of communities;
- 3. Measuring diversity: species richness, indices of diversity, equitability and beta diversity;
- 4. Local species richness: niche theory and competitive exclusion, relationship between species richness, productivity and disturbance, regional effects on local species richness, species pool;
- 5. Global biodiversity: estimations of the number of species on the Earth, stability vs. increase, mass extinctions and adaptive radiations, current global change of biodiversity;
- 6. Biodiversity of islands: theory of island biogeography and its generalizations;
- 7. Relationship between number of species and area;
- 8. Latitudinal and altitudinal biodiversity gradient: hypotheses explaining large tropical biodiversity, altitudinal gradient and mid-domain effect, gradients of habitat heterogeneity;
- 9. Relative abundance distributions: statistical and biological models, species rarity;
- 10. Null models in macroecology: Hubbell's neutral theory;
- 11. Metabolic theory of ecology: relationship between energy and speed of biological processes including evolution and succession;
- 12. Biological invasions: basic terms of invasion ecology, differences in invasibility of large areas or habitats, theory of invasibility, species richness vs. invasibility.
- Literature
- required literature
- KREBS, Charles J. Ecology :the experimental analysis of distribution and abundance. 5th ed. San Francisco: Benjamin Cummings, 2001, xx, 695 s. ISBN 0-321-04289-1. info
- BEGON, Michael, John L. HARPER and Colin R. TOWNSEND. Ekologie : jedinci, populace a společenstva. Translated by Bronislava Grygová - Barbara Köberleová - Zdeněk Brandl. 1. vyd. Olomouc: Vydavatelství Univerzity Palackého, 1997, xxiv, 949. ISBN 8070676957. info
- Teaching methods
- lectures
- Assessment methods
- written or oral exam
- Language of instruction
- Czech
- Further Comments
- Study Materials
The course is taught annually. - Listed among pre-requisites of other courses
- Bi4061 Biogeography for Zoologists
Bi5080||Bi6340 - Bi7253 Ecology of birds
Bi2090&&(Bi6340||Bi5080) - Bi7370 Fundamentals of Ecology
Bi6340 || NOW(Bi6340) - Bi7680 Animal Population Ecology
(Bi6340||Bi5210)&&Bi5080 - Bi8370 Readings in Conservation Biology
Bi6340 - Bi9160 Ichthyology
(Bi2090)&&(Bi5080)&&(Bi6340||NOW(Bi6340))
- Bi4061 Biogeography for Zoologists
- Enrolment Statistics (Autumn 2011, recent)
- Permalink: https://is.muni.cz/course/sci/autumn2011/Bi6340