Aller au contenu principal
mobile

L'Harmattan Open Access platform

  • Rechercher
  • OA Collections
  • L'Harmattan Archive
Françaisfr
  • Englishen
  • Deutschde
  • Magyarhu
S'identifierS'inscrire
  • Présentation du journal
  • Page
  • Texte
  • Métadonnées
  • Découpage
Aperçu
022_000049/0000

Foundations of Agro-Zoocoenology

  • Aperçu
  • PDF
  • Afficher les métadonnées
  • Afficher le lien permanent
Auteur
Gusztáv Szelényi
Field of science
Ökológia / Ecology (10733), Ökológia (elméleti és kísérleti, populáció, faj és közösségek szinten) / Ecology (theoretical and experimental: population, species and community level) (10734), Rovartan / Entomology (10704)
Type of publication
monográfia
022_000049/0056
  • Présentation du journal
  • Page
  • Texte
  • Métadonnées
  • Découpage
Page 57 [57]
  • Aperçu
  • Afficher le lien permanent
  • JPG
  • TIFF
  • Précédente
  • Suivant
022_000049/0056

OCR

§ The question of balance in the biocoenosis | 55 over-utilised by corrumpent elements. Consequently, one can assume that other corrumpents (e.g. gall wasps, leaf miners) were removed, or, at least, their abundance drastically decreased. These phenomena can be easily explained by the workings of the interaction network. Why would we complicate the explanation by forcibly drawing up this mysterious equilibrium, when the process affected only a part of the biocoenosis and, although the consequences are obvious, it could not have affected those populations that do not use oak leaves as their energy source? The view that the biological equilibrium is manifested by the sustenance of a population around its mean abundance, and this balanced “iron minimum” is maintained by intraspecific competition for food (Nicholson, 1933), is contradicted by the fact that there are large between-generation changes in population densities (Solomon, 1949; Thalenhorst, 1950; Schwedtfeger, 1951). The mean is only a theoretical value, obtained by considering several factors, and it does not reflect the real conditions at all; the competition for food is not a universal phenomenon, either, because the biotic factors that influence populations operate in concert with abiotic ones, and in turn will be prominent as the main regulator of density (Glen, 1954). What several authors call biological equilibrium, based on current knowledge, cannot be more than an interplay among the components of the biocoenosis, i.e. interactions. These interactions occur because no animal is a completely self-dependent organism; it consumes energy which it must acquire externally, thus any animal can satisfy its trophic needs only in the presence of other living things. This need will generate synphysiological relationships and, does it follow from this, that satisfying these needs involves a fixed relationship in densities? The arguments mentioned above indicate that we cannot speak of a balanced, stable density. The view that, due to “environmental resistance’, nearly 100% of every generation must perish (Thomson, 1929) is theoretically plausible, and occasionally occurs (Diaspidiotus pyri [Aspidiotus piri] - Szelényi, 1935), but projected onto the biocoenosis, it does not follow that the abundance of the populations and their ratio would be constant. Widely fluctuating numbers entail that sequential generations always have different starting conditions, and it matters whether, at times with favourable conditions, their numbers are low or high. This may determine whether the starting generation will reach gradational densities, or only a high density that does not threaten the sustenance of the energy source. Density fluctuations can be caused by many factors and, even if in some cases one can establish a causal relationship between fluctuations in food plant densities and those of corrumpent populations relying on them (Melanoplus mexicanus, Scharff, 1954), in most cases, we do not see clear causes of fluctuations in abundance. The importance of a given regulating factor is not equal in space and time, and it is not indifferent which ontopopulation it will affect; therefore, it will never act in isolation but in combination with other factors (Glen 1954).

structurelles

Custom

Image Metadata

Largeur de l'image
1831 px
Hauteur de l'image
2835 px
Résolution de l'image
300 px/inch
Taille du fichier d'origine
1.41 MB
Lien permanent vers jpg
022_000049/0056.jpg
Lien permanent vers OCR
022_000049/0056.ocr

Links

  • L'Harmattan Könyvkiadó
  • Open Access Blog
  • Kiadványaink az MTMT-ben
  • Kiadványaink a REAL-ban
  • CrossRef Works
  • ROR ID

Contact

  • L'Harmattan Szerkesztőség
  • Kéziratleadási szabályzat
  • Peer Review Policy
  • Adatvédelmi irányelvek
  • Dokumentumtár
  • KBART lists
  • eduID Belépés

Social media

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

L'Harmattan Open Access platform

S'identifierS'inscrire

Connexion utilisateur

eduId Login
J'ai oublié mon mot de passe
  • Rechercher
  • OA Collections
  • L'Harmattan Archive
Françaisfr
  • Englishen
  • Deutschde
  • Magyarhu