, a member of the woodland ecotype •
Tundra reindeer and woodland reindeer are two ecotypes of
reindeer. The first migrate (travelling 5,000 km) annually between the two environments in large numbers whereas the other (who are much fewer) remain in the forest for the summer. In North America, the species
Rangifer tarandus (locally known as caribou), was subdivided into five subspecies by Banfield in 1961. Caribou are classified by ecotype depending on several behavioural factors – predominant habitat use (northern, tundra, mountain, forest, boreal forest, forest-dwelling), spacing (dispersed or aggregated) and migration (sedentary or migratory). For example, the subspecies
Rangifer tarandus caribou is further distinguished by a number of ecotypes, including
boreal woodland caribou, mountain woodland caribou, and
migratory woodland caribou (such as the migratory George River Caribou Herd in the Ungava region of Quebec). •
Arabis fecunda, a herb
endemic to some
calcareous soils of Montana, United States, can be divided into two ecotypes. The one "low elevation" group lives near the ground in an arid, warm environment and has thus developed a significantly greater tolerance against drought than the "high elevation" group. The two ecotypes are separated by a horizontal distance of about . In 2022, the
common bottlenose dolphin (
Tursiops truncatus), which had been considered to have two ecotypes in the western North Atlantic, was separated into two species by Costa et al. based on morphometric and genetic data, with the near-shore ecotype becoming
Tursiops erebennus Cope, 1865, described in the nineteenth century from a specimen collected in the Delaware River. • The
warbler finch and the
Cocos Island finch are viewed as separate ecotypes. •
an ecotype of Artemisia campestris The aromatic plant Artemisia campestris'' also known as the field sagewort grows in a wide range of habitats from North America to the Atlantic coast and also in Eurasia. It has different forms arccoding to the environment where it grows. One variety which grows on shifting dunes at Falstrebo on the coast of Sweden has broad leaves, and white hairs while exhibiting upright growth. Another variety that grows in Oland in calcareous rocks displays horizontally expanded branches with no upright growth. These two extreme types are considered different varieties. Wormskiold's northern wormwood,
Artemisia campestris var. wormskioldii is generally shorter and hairy with large leaves surrounding the flowers. • The
Scots pine (
Pinus sylvestris) has 20 different ecotypes in an area from Scotland to Siberia, all capable of interbreeding. • Ecotype distinctions can be subtle and do not always require large distances; it has been observed that two populations of the same
Helix snail species separated by only a few hundred kilometers prefer not to cross-mate, i.e., they reject one another as mates. This event probably occurs during the process of courtship, which may last for hours. ==See also==