community
Group of populations interacting with one another forms a community.
A group of the same species living in the same area is called a population. Populations are characterized by their size, density, and distribution, and they interact with one another and their environment. Studying populations helps ecologists understand species dynamics, reproduction, and survival rates.
Group interaction is two or more people, who for longer than a few moments, interact with and influence one another
A population is a group of organisms belonging to the same species that live in the same area and interact with one another. A community is all of the populations of different species that live in the same area and interact with one another. A community is composed of all of the biotic factors of an area.
A sociologist would refer to two or more people who identify or interact with one another as a "social group." This term encompasses various types of relationships, from casual acquaintances to close-knit communities.
A community is a group of many different species, while a population is made up of individuals of one particular species.
The sum of all populations of different species living in a habitat is called the community. It includes all the organisms that interact with one another and with the physical environment in that specific area.
All the organisms in a forest interact with one another through various relationships such as competition, predation, mutualism, and commensalism. These interactions help maintain the balance of the ecosystem by regulating populations, cycling nutrients, and shaping the community structure.
by hunting one another helping one another and even decomposing one another
The Great Lakes is an example of a geographic barrier, isolating populations from each other. Populations can become separated (isolated) from one another, as one group expands northward of the lakes and another expands southward of the lakes. Mountain ranges are geographic barriers that isolate populations from one another, in much the same way as the great lakes. Oceans geographically isolate land masses, and their respective populations, from one another. This includes islands as well as continents. Examples: the Galapagos Islands, Madagascar, and Australia. *Geographic isolation is the chief mechanism of allopatric speciation, considered by some to be a theory.
A group of species occupying a particular area at a given time is referred to as a "community." In ecology, a community encompasses all the different populations of organisms, including plants, animals, fungi, and microorganisms, that interact with one another and their environment in that specific location. These interactions can include competition, predation, and symbiosis, shaping the dynamics and structure of the community.
A population is a group of one type of species. A community is several different populations together.