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Despite their diversity, all living organisms share certain characteristics: they all replicate and all use DNA to accomplish the replication process. Based on the structure of their cells, organisms can be classified into two types: eukaryotes and prokaryotes.

The main difference between them is that a eukaryote has a nucleus, which contains its DNA, while a prokaryote does not have a nucleus, but instead its DNA is free-floating in the cell. Bacteria are prokaryotes , and humans are eukaryotes. Organisms can also be classified according to how they acquire energy. Autotrophs are "self feeders" that use light or chemical energy to make food. Plants are autotrophs. Heterotrophs (i.e. “other feeders”) obtain energy by eating other organisms, or their remains. Bacteria and animals are heterotrophs. Groups of organisms that are physically and genetically related can be classified into species . There are millions of species on the earth, most of them unstudied and many of them unknown. Insects and microorganisms comprise the majority of species, while humans and other mammals comprise only a tiny fraction. In an ecological study, a single member of a species or organism is known as an individual .

Populations and communities

A number of individuals of the same species in a given area constitute a population . The number typically ranges anywhere from a few individuals to several thousand individuals. Bacterial populations can number in the millions. Populations live in a place or environment called a habitat . All of the populations of species in a given region together make up a community . In an area of tropical grassland, a community might be made up of grasses, shrubs, insects, rodents and various species of hoofed mammals.

The populations and communities found in a particular environment are determined by abiotic and biotic limiting factors . These are the factors that most affect the success of populations. Abiotic limiting factors involve the physical and chemical characteristics of the environment. Some of these factors include: amounts of sunlight, annual rainfall, available nutrients, oxygen levels and temperature. For example, the amount of annual rainfall may determine whether a region is a grassland or forest, which in turn, affects the types of animals living there.

Each population in a community has a range of tolerance for an abiotic limiting factor. There are also certain maximum and minimum requirements known as tolerance limits , above and below which no member of a population is able to survive. The range of an abiotic factor that results in the largest population of a species is known as the optimum range for that factor. Some populations may have a narrow range of tolerance for one factor. For example, a freshwater fish species may have a narrow tolerance range for dissolved oxygen in the water. If the lake in which that fish species lives undergoes eutrophication, the species will die. This fish species can therefore act as an indicator species , because its presence or absence is a strict indicator of the condition of the lake with regard to dissolved oxygen content.

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Source:  OpenStax, Ap environmental science. OpenStax CNX. Sep 25, 2009 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10548/1.2
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