If you knew nothing about this topic at the outset here are TEN facts you now know.
If you started this series with no prior knowledge of ecology or habitat classification, you have now built a foundation knowledge in how we categorise and protect the natural world.
Here are the ten fundamental "takeaways" you have learned:
Nature Operates on Different “Alarm Clocks”: Plants and animals use different environmental cues to time their life stages (phenology). “Risk Takers” respond to temperature, while “Calendar Keepers” wait for specific day lengths (photoperiodism).
Climate Change Causes “Phenological Mismatches”: Because different species rely on different cues, a warm spring might trigger flowers to bloom before their specific pollinators have hatched, leaving plants unpollinated and insects without food.
The “Meadow Maker” is a Parasite: Yellow Rattle is a hemi-parasite that steals nutrients from vigorous grasses. By weakening these grasses, it creates space for a higher diversity of wildflowers to grow.
Flower Shapes are Evolutionary “User Interfaces”: “Pollination Syndromes” explain why flowers have specific shapes; for example, bees are strong enough to unlock “hidden” nectar in the pea family, while flies prefer flat “landing pads” like wild carrot.
Plants Use “Mixed Strategies” for Reproduction: Many plants use asexual reproduction (clones) to quickly claim local ground and sexual reproduction (seeds) as an “insurance policy” to create genetic diversity for a changing environment
Plants are Master Dispersal Strategists: In autumn, plants move their “offspring” via Autochory (self-dispersal like explosive pods) or Allochory (outside help like wind, water, or “hitchhiking” on animal fur).
Spores Require “The Wet Shift”: Unlike seeds, microscopic spores have no water reserves. They dominate the autumn because they must land on damp surfaces to survive, making the “mists” of Sidmouth a perfect landing strip.
Some Mammals “Shrink” to Survive: To reduce food requirements in winter, common shrews undergo Dehnel’s Phenomenon, where they physically shrink their skeletons, skulls, and even their brains by up to 20%
Hibernation is More Than Just Sleep: True hibernators (hedgehogs, dormice, and bats) “turn off” their bodies. A hedgehog’s heart rate can plummet from 190 bpm to just 20 bpm to conserve energy.
Insects Use Chemical “Anti-Freeze”: To survive freezing temperatures, many insects enter diapause and replace the water in their blood with glycerol, allowing them to remain liquid even below 0°C.
Congratulations on completing the series! If you would like to delve deeper into this subject then why not head to the studio to further your learning?