functional property - ορισμός. Τι είναι το functional property
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Τι (ποιος) είναι functional property - ορισμός

BRANCH OF ECOLOGY
Functional Ecology; Functional traits; Functional trait
  • Bees serve the ecological function of pollinating flowers, maintaining flora reproduction and density in the ecosystem.

property         
PHYSICAL OR INTANGIBLE ENTITY, OWNED BY A PERSON OR A GROUP OF PEOPLE
Legal property; Land owner; Property (ownership right); Rights to property; Res privata; Proprietary right; Property theory
n. anything that is owned by a person or entity. Property is divided into two types: "real property," which is any interest in land, real estate, growing plants or the improvements on it, and "personal property" (sometimes called "personalty"), which is everything else. "Common property" is ownership by more than one person of the same possession. "Community property" is a form of joint ownership between husband and wife recognized in several states. "Separate property" is property owned by one spouse only in a community property state, or a married woman's sole ownership in some states. "Public property" refers to ownership by a governmental body such as the federal, state, county or city governments or their agencies (e.g. school or redevelopment districts). The government and the courts are obligated to protect property rights and to help clarify ownership. See also: common property community property personal property personalty public property real property separate property
property         
PHYSICAL OR INTANGIBLE ENTITY, OWNED BY A PERSON OR A GROUP OF PEOPLE
Legal property; Land owner; Property (ownership right); Rights to property; Res privata; Proprietary right; Property theory
n.
1.
Quality, attribute, peculiarity, characteristic.
2.
Wealth, estate, goods, possessions, one's own, thing owned.
3.
Ownership, exclusive right.
4.
Character, disposition.
5.
Participation.
property         
PHYSICAL OR INTANGIBLE ENTITY, OWNED BY A PERSON OR A GROUP OF PEOPLE
Legal property; Land owner; Property (ownership right); Rights to property; Res privata; Proprietary right; Property theory
(properties)
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
Someone's property is all the things that belong to them or something that belongs to them. (FORMAL)
Richard could easily destroy her personal property to punish her for walking out on him...
Security forces searched thousands of homes, confiscating weapons and stolen property.
N-UNCOUNT: usu with poss
2.
A property is a building and the land belonging to it. (FORMAL)
This vehicle has been parked on private property.
N-VAR
3.
The properties of a substance or object are the ways in which it behaves in particular conditions.
A radio signal has both electrical and magnetic properties.
N-COUNT: usu pl

Βικιπαίδεια

Functional ecology

Functional ecology is a branch of ecology that focuses on the roles, or functions, that species play in the community or ecosystem in which they occur. In this approach, physiological, anatomical, and life history characteristics of the species are emphasized. The term "function" is used to emphasize certain physiological processes rather than discrete properties, describe an organism's role in a trophic system, or illustrate the effects of natural selective processes on an organism. This sub-discipline of ecology represents the crossroads between ecological patterns and the processes and mechanisms that underlie them. It focuses on traits represented in large number of species and can be measured in two ways – the first being screening, which involves measuring a trait across a number of species, and the second being empiricism, which provides quantitative relationships for the traits measured in screening. Functional ecology often emphasizes an integrative approach, using organism traits and activities to understand community dynamics and ecosystem processes, particularly in response to the rapid global changes occurring in earth's environment.

Functional ecology sits at the nexus of several disparate disciplines and serves as the unifying principle between evolutionary ecology, evolutionary biology, genetics and genomics, and traditional ecological studies. It explores such areas as "[species'] competitive abilities, patterns of species co-occurrence, community assembly, and the role of different traits on ecosystem functioning".