Spatial Ecology
Spatial ecology represents the ultimate distributional or spatial unit occupied by a species. In a particular habitat shared by several species, each of the species is usually confined to its own micro habitat or spatial niche because two species in the same general territory cannot usually occupy the same ecological niche for any significant length of time. In spatial environment, scale alludes to the spatial degree of biological procedures and the spatial elucidation of the information. The reaction of a living being or animal categories to the earth is specific to a particular scale and may react distinctively at a bigger or littler scale. Picking a scale that is fitting to the biological procedure being referred to is essential in precisely speculating and deciding the basic cause. In spatial condition, scale insinuates the spatial level of organic systems and the spatial illustration of the data. The response of a living being or a creature classification to the earth is particular to a specific scale and may respond unmistakably at a greater or tinier scale.
- Geospatial Modelling
- Predation
- Spatial pattern
- Fragmentation
- Predator-prey interactions
Related Conference of Spatial Ecology
Spatial Ecology Conference Speakers
Recommended Sessions
- Biosphere
- Climate Change
- Disaster Management
- Dynamics of Land cover change
- Ecological and Evolutionary Genomics
- Ecology and Natural Resource Management
- Ecology in Freshwater Management
- Ecosystem Habitats
- Environmental Genomics
- Freshwater Algae
- Landscape Conversation and sustainability
- Marine Ecosystems and Conservation
- Restoration Ecology
- Spatial Ecology
- Species Interaction
- Sustainability, Ecosystems, and Environment
- Urban Ecology