ecology test 1
Symbiosis
A close relationship between two species that benefits at least one of the species.
Ecosystem
A community of organisms and their abiotic environment (has water and the sun. basically a rainforest . it has it all).
glomalin
A glycoprotein that is abundant in the hyphae of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi; when hyphae decay, it is an important component of soil.
population
A group of individuals that belong to the same species and live in the same area
Photorespiration
A metabolic pathway that consumes oxygen, releases carbon dioxide, generates no ATP, and decreases photosynthetic output; ((generally occurs on hot, dry, bright days, when ((stomata close)) and the oxygen concentration in the leaf exceeds that of carbon dioxide)).
abiotic factors
Abiotic factors are the non-living parts of an organism's habitat.
what happens with CO2 and O2 in photorespiration? is the stomate open or closed
CO2 enters and O2 leaves. - stomate is open
what happens with CO2 and O2 in photosynthesis? is the stomate open or closed
CO2 leaves and O2 enters. - stomate is closed
when the sun is directly overhead it means: Rainy or Dry?
Rainy
adaptations for depth: what are the advantages?
Red: can conduct photosynthesis from very deep in the ocean because it absorbs green light the best. green light penetrates more than 150 meters. Green: it takes in red light and blue light best meaning it can conduct photosynthesis either on the surface or very deep.
why are animals different from plants (nitrogen related)
- ANIMALS: get nitrogen by eating. they have excess nitrogen that they gain from nucleic acids as amino groups. - PLANTS: get nitrogen from the soil
what are causes of climate change
- asteroid impacts - volcanoes - continental drift - orbital "wobbles" - ecology
what is a biome
- climate - community - adaptations
soil structure has:
- mineral particles - organic matter - pores (air & water) - organisms
Soil Nutrient Availability depend on
- soil type - abiotic factors - biotic factors
why dont all plants do C4?
- takes too much energy - if you dont have cells, you cant do C4 so it would be considered a constraint
what does an experiment need:
- treatments (manipulations) - replicates - experimental units
soil pH depends on:
-moisture -parent rock -organic matter
soil nutrient availability depends on:
-soil type -abiotic factors -biotic factors
tropic zone
23.5
community
All the different animals that live together in an area
biotic factors
All the living organisms that inhabit an environment
Adhesion
An attraction between molecules of different substances
natural experiment
An experiment in which nature, rather than a scientist, manipulates an independent variable.
field experiment
An experiment set up in the real world, meaning a experiment outside with human manipulation
lab experiment
An experiment that takes place in a "controlled environment" where the researcher manipulates the experiment.
organism
An individual living thing
Niche
An organism's particular role in an ecosystem, or how it makes its living.
Cohesion
Attraction between molecules of the same substance
Photosynthesis
Conversion of light energy from the sun into chemical energy. ((stomates open)).
when the sun is at its lowest it means: Rainy or Dry?
Dry
If biochemical cycles change, for example when cyanobacteria created the O2 rich atmosphere 2.3 billion years ago that killed most anaerobic life, that would be an example of:
Ecological Filtering
In photosynthesis, the O2 released as waste comes from ________ and the O in starch molecules in a potato comes from ___________.
H2O, and CO2
what are the advantages of a lab experiment
High control over extraneous variables. Replication is more possible
A budding ecologist wants to measure the effect of light on sex expression in Begonia. He compares the gender of plants already growing in the forest under dense canopy with those growing under a light gap in the canopy. As described, this design is a(n):
Natural Experiment - nothing is being manipulated by the ecologist
directional selection
Natural selection in which individuals at one end of the phenotypic range survive or reproduce more successfully than do other individuals.
Habitat
Place where an organism lives
spatial dimension
Where things are and why they are there.
bottleneck effect
a reduction in the genetic diversity of a population caused by a reduction in its size within the same area
environmental filtering
abiotic factors that prevent the establishment or persistence of species in a particular location.
how is the ability to store fat an adaptation?
able to use the stored fat as energy.
temperate zone
above or below 23.5
to minimize absorption
absorbtion
what is the advantage of glomalin
allows roots of plants to grow better
What are trade-offs?
alternative choices
above sea level means
fresh water
Freshwater teleost fish tend to
gain water
what lives inside protists of soil
bacteria
how are biomes defined by climate?
by the temperature and moisture
"The predation of snakes on chipmunks will increase the abundance of mice because of release from competition." This is an example of a hypothesis from which perspective?
community
what would be an animals niche?
consuming other animals
to maximize heat transfer:
convection
phenotypic variation
differences in appearance or function that are passed from generation to generation
the average beak size increased with
drought
when systems are in balance and changing it is called:
dynamic equilibrium
the flow of carbon from gas to rabbits is studied from the perspective of the
ecosystem
what are the main levels of organization in ecology
ecosystem, community and population
change over generations is called
evolution
when closer to the equator it means
fast winds
in the CAM cycle, when the stomata is open, what is happening
fix CO2
disruptive selection
form of natural selection in which a single curve splits into two;. favors individuals in two extremes
founders effect
genetic drift that occurs after a small number of individuals colonize a new area
in the great oxygen event, is it easier or harder to obtain Fe?
harder
what would be bacteria and archaea's niche?
help animals digest, nutrient cycling, and help produce photosynthesis
proximate
how
Ecology is the study of
how organisms interact with each other and the nonliving environment
Freshwater fish are
hyperosmotic
Marine(salt water) fish are
hypoosmotic
stablizing selection
individuals with the average form of a trait have the highest fitness
energy is or is not limited
is limited
if a plant does not appear to be green, then what does it mean?
it does not contain chlorophyll
when iron reacts w oxygen
it rusts
what are the advantages of a natural experiment
its all natural and real without man manipulations
an organisms role in the ecosystem depends on:
its body form, what it consumes, its size, whether or not it is a plant.
Semelpartiy
large numbers of offspring produced once
what are some examples of environmental gradients
light, temperature, oxygen levels, vegetation, salt concentration.
marine teleost fish tend to
lose water
short gut are used for:
meat
what type of fungus is found in soil
mycorrhizae
natural selection is
not random
ecological filtering
occurs when biotic or abiotic factors limit the membership of species in a local community
Osmoregulators
organisms that maintain their internal water balance and solute concentration within narrow limits
what would be a plants niche?
photosynthesis, food for animals, remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, provide habitats, provide humans oxygen
ecological systems of energy and matter follow the laws of ________ and _________.
physics and chemistry
long guts are used for:
plants
O2 is produced by ________ using __________.
produced by using CYANOBACTERIA using PHOTOSYNTHESIS.
in the temperate zones, rising moist air again produces
rain
Genetic Drift is
random
Iteroparity
reproduce little offspring, but often
what caused the ice age?
rise of CO2
below sea level means
salt water
when closer to temperate zones it means
slow winds
what is climate?
temperature and moisture
surface tension
the force that acts on the surface of a liquid and that tends to minimize the area of the surface. its what allows flowers or insects to stay afloat.
what is the trade off of animals (nitrogen related):
the more complex the nitrogen waste is the longer it can be held within animals body but takes more energy to create more complex molecules.
community assembly
the process by which species come to coexist in a common area
what does pH afffect
the shape and functions of protiens
energy comes from _______ and converted to ________.
the sun and converted to heat.
what would be a bee's niche?
to pollinate
why don't all plants do C4
too expensive
in the CAM cycle, when the stomata is closed, what is happening
transport of C4
where would you expect photorespiration to be most severe in: A. temperate forest B. the everglades C. tropical rainforest D. tropical savanna E. artic tundra
tropical savanna (its the driest place of all).
A budding ecologist thinks that sex expression in begonias is a trade-off between attracting bees (more male flowers) and reproducing reliably (more female flowers). This is an example of a(n)
ultimate hypothesis, because it does not describe HOW, it only describes his WHY.
what is predation
when one organism kills another organism to eat it
when do organisms compete?
when organisms need to use the same resources
what is the definition of hyperosmotic
when organisms with body fluids with a lower concentration of water and a higher solute concentration than the external environment. meaning water goes out of the fish. - hypEr = frEsh = Exit
temporal dynamics
when the habitat changes. Ex: from a pond turning into a meadow of trees and grass.
an organisms role LEAST depends on:
whether or not it is a protist. (because protists can perform several jobs, therefore its can be used for various things.
ultimate
why