Ecology is defined “as a scientific study of the relationship of the living organisms with each other and with their environment.”
The classical texts of the Vedic period such as the Vedas, the Samhitas, the Brahmanas and the Aranyakas-Upanishads contain many references to ecological concepts .The Indian treatise on medicine, the Caraka- Samhita and the surgical text Susruta-Samhita. contain classification of animals on the basis of habit and habitat, land in terms of nature of soil, climate and vegetation; and description of plants typical to various localities.
Caraka- Samhita contains information where air, land, water and seasons were indispensable for life and that polluted air and water were injurious for health.
The environment is defined as ‘the sum total of living, non-living components; influences and events, surrounding an organism.
Components of Environment
- Abiotic – Energy, Radiation, TEMP, Water, etc.
- Biotic- plants, animals, man, DECOMPOSER ETC.
Diesel engine exhaust fumes can cause cancer, humans” and it belong to the same potentially deadly category as asbestos, arsenic and ‘mustard gases.
Six main levels of organisation of ecology are:
- Individual- Organism is an individual living being that has the ability to act or function independently.
- Population-Population is a group of organisms usually of the same species,
occupying a defined area during a specific time,
- Community- Communities in most instances are named after the dominant plant form
(species). A community is not fixed or rigid; communities may be large or small.
Types of Community-
On the basis of size and degree of relative independence communities may be divided into two types-
(a) Major Community
These are large-sized, well organized and relatively independent. They depend
only on the sun’s energy from outside and are independent of the inputs and
outputs from adjacent communities.
E.g: tropical ever green forest in the North-East
(b) Minor Communities
These are dependent on neighbouring communities and are often called societies.
They are secondary aggregations within a major community and are not therefore completely independent units as far as energy and nutrient dynamics are concerned.
e.g: A mat of
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