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  2. Microenvironment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microenvironment

    Microenvironment (biology), a small or relatively small usually distinctly specialized and effectively isolated biophysical environment (as of a nerve cell) Microenvironment (ecology) , also known as a microhabitat, a very small, specific area in a habitat, distinguished from its immediate surroundings by factors such as the amount of incident ...

  3. Microclimate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microclimate

    A microclimate (or micro-climate) is a local set of atmospheric conditions that differ from those in the surrounding areas, often slightly but sometimes substantially. The term may refer to areas as small as a few square meters or smaller (for example a garden bed , underneath a rock, or a cave) or as large as many square kilometers.

  4. Micro-sustainability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micro-sustainability

    Micro-sustainability is the portion of sustainability centered around small scale environmental measures that ultimately affect the environment through a larger cumulative impact. [1] Micro-sustainability centers on individual efforts, behavior modification , education and creating attitudinal changes, which result in an environmentally ...

  5. Microecosystem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microecosystem

    These include the buccal region (especially cavities in the gingiva), rumen, caecum etc. of mammalian herbivores or even invertebrate digestive tracts.In the case of mammalian gastrointestinal microecology, microorganisms such as protozoa, bacteria, as well as curious incompletely defined organisms (such as certain large structurally complex Selenomonads, Quinella ovalis "Quin's Oval ...

  6. Microsite (ecology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsite_(ecology)

    A microsite is a term used in ecology to describe a pocket within an environment with unique features, conditions or characteristics. Classifying different microsites may depend on temperature, humidity, sunlight, nutrient availability, soil physical characteristics, vegetation cover, etc. Being a sub environment within an environment, we will examine the qualities that differentiate a ...

  7. Market environment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_environment

    The micro-environment consists of customers, partners, and competitors. [3] The most important aspect of micro-environment is the customer market. [5] There are different types of customer markets include consumer markets, business markets, government markets, globalization international markets, and reseller markets.

  8. Ecological niche - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_niche

    The availability of the limiting resources (nitrogen and phosphorus in the above example) in the environment are equivalent. These requirements are interesting and controversial because they require any two species to share a certain environment (have overlapping requirement niches) but fundamentally differ the ways that they use (or "impact ...

  9. Microecology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microecology

    It is the study of the interactions between living organisms and their environment, and how these interactions affect the organisms and their environment. Additionally, it is a multidisciplinary area of study, combining elements of biology, chemistry, physics, mathematics and urban planning. It focuses on the study of the interactions between ...