Key Concepts in Ecology
Key Concepts in Ecology is a series of reading lists designed to help ecologists in learning the key topics in ecology! Take a look below at the list of key topics you might typically find in an ecology textbook, each providing a quick introduction to the topic, and a list of suggested ̨ÍåÁùºÏ²Ê×ÊÁÏ papers for students to refer to:
         Adaptations to variable environments
Evolution of variable phenotypes ~ Traits to deal with enemies ~ Traits to deal with variable abiotic environment ~ Migration, storage, and dormancy ~ Optimal foraging theory ~ Trait-based ecology
         Community structure
Describing communities ~ Rank-abundance plots ~ kinds of diversity – alpha, beta, gamma diversity ~ Drivers of local diversity – disturbance, resources, interactions
         Community succession
Examples of succession ~ Resilience, resistance, stability, and Alternative stable states ~ Woody encroachment and biome shift
         Competition
Intra- and interspecific competition ~ Lotka-volterra competition models ~ Types of competition ~ Context dependent competition
         Complex interactions and foodwebs
Foodwebs, ecological networks ~ Indirect interactions
~ Trophic cascades
         Conservation of global biodiversity
Ecosystem services and functions ~ Rates of extinction ~ Drivers of extinction ~ Conservation efforts and successes
         Ecosystem structure and energy flow
Drivers of primary production ~ Trophic pyramids ~ Biodiversity-ecosystem function
         Landscape ecology and macroecology
Species-area relationships ~ Island biogeography theory ~ Elevational and latitudinal gradients ~ Macroecological patterns
         Life and the physical environment
Climate and Biomes ~ Terrestrial biomes ~ Aquatic biomes ~ Small-scale variation in climate
         Life histories
Population demography ~ Life history traits and trade-offs ~ Reproductive life history
         Movement of elements in ecosystems
Carbon cycle ~ N cycle ~ P cycle ~ Interactions among species and the C, N, and P cycle
         Mutualism and facilitation
The benefits of mutualisms ~ Defense mutualisms ~ Plant-pollinator mutualsims ~ Plant-seed disperser mutualisms ~ Plant-fungi mutualisms ~ Context dependent mutualisms
         Parasitism and infectious disease
Parasites affect abundance of hosts ~ Simple models ~ Parasite and host population fluctuations ~ Parasite-host coevolution
         Physiological ecology
Water & Salt balance ~ Exchanging gases ~ Obtaining nutrients ~ Dealing with temperature ~ Niche
         Populations
Distribution & abundance ~ Estimating abundance ~ Abundance, occupancy, range size, & body size relationships ~ Dispersal limitation & habitat corridors ~ Small populations ~ Metapopulations
         Predation and herbivory
Predators and herbivores limit abundance ~ Consumers and prey population fluctuations ~ Functional and numerical responses ~ Predator-prey/Herbivore-plant coevolution
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