A community is a group of organisms living and interacting with one another in a specific environment. These interactions can be between the same species (intraspecific) or between different species (interspecific).
Communities can change over time through a process called ecological succession. This can be primary succession, which occurs in an area devoid of soil, or secondary succession, which occurs in an area with existing soil.
Understanding communities and their interactions is crucial for ecologicalconservation and management, as well as for understanding the interconnectedness of ecosystems.
Skills and Processes: Students will demonstrate the thinking and acting inherent in the practice of science.
Applying Evidence and Reasoning: Review data from a simple experiment, summarize the data, and construct a logical argument about the cause-and-effect relationships in the experiment.
Describe the reasoning that lead to the interpretation of data and conclusions drawn.