Exam 3: Chapter 35
Which of the following tends to happen as a population approaches its carrying capacity?
All of the above
Choose the best definition of a community
All organisms in an area
When a nontoxic viceroy butterfly has come to resemble the distasteful monarch butterfly, the relationship can best be called:
Batesian mimicry
Why don't many successions reach the climax community status?
Because the local climate keeps changing and human activities have an impact
A tropical forest and desert would be examples of:
Biomes
Major terrestrial assemblages with similarly adapted plants, animals, and microorganisms that occur over wide geographical areas with distinct physical characteristics are referred to as ______________.
Biomes
The ________________ of a habitat is the number of individuals the habitat has the resources to support indefinitely.
Carrying capacity
When the growth rate of a population tapers off at a certain point and remains at the same point indefinitely, the population is said to have reached the:
Carrying capacity
When organisms change their behavior to avoid competition, it is called ____________________________.
Character displacement
The back-and-forth evolutionary adjustments species make to each other are examples of _________________.
Coevolution
A type of symbiosis in which one species benefits from the relationship while the other neither benefits nor is harmed is called:
Commensalism
Cattle egrets have a ________ relationship with African Cape Buffaloes.
Commensalistic
Populations of different species that live together in the same place are called ________
Communities
All of the different kinds of interacting organisms living within a certain area make up a:
Community
______________ serves to narrow niche breadth.
Competition
An experiment that was conducted by Gause in the 1930s with Paramecium clearly demonstrated:
Competitive exclusion
Factors of weather and climate that operate on a population regardless of its size are called _____________________ effects.
Density-independent
To determine how well a population is doing in a given area, ecologists will determine population ________________, which is a measure of the scatter of individuals within the habitat.
Dispersion
________________ is defined as the percentage of the original population that survives to a given age.
Survivorship
_____________ species avoid competition by living in different portions of the habitat or using different resources.
Sympatric
A _____________ ecologist would be interested in how biological communities interact with their physical environment.
Systems
The rate at which a population can increase when food and habitat are limitless is called:
The biotic potential
If a plant species grows where no life existed before, this is a:
Primary succession
Predators can drive their prey to extinction unless the prey has:
Refuges in which to hide
Succession that occurs on abandoned agricultural fields is best described as:
Secondary succession
The number of different kinds of species inhabiting an ecosystem is called _________________.
Species richness
Lice and their relationship with mammals is an example of what type of relationship?
Parasitism
A community and the nonliving factors with which it interacts is called a(n):
Ecosystem
______________ are the fundamental units of ecology
Ecosystems
The term "ecology" was first used by:
Ernst Haeckel
When population growth rate = rN, this type of growth can be called:
Exponential growth
All of the following are characteristics of an r-selected population EXCEPT:
Extensive homeostatic capacity
Species richness on islands is a dynamic equilibrium between colonization and _____________.
Extinction
. A biome is a community and the nonliving factors with which it interacts
False
A camouflaged animal uses aposematic coloring to hide from predators.
False
In true commensalism, both partners benefit.
False
Which type of symbiosis would exist between a tapeworm living in a human host using its nutrients for its own gain and detriment to the host?
Parasitism
The entire range of factors an organism has available to exploit in its habitat is its:
Fundamental niche
According to the logistic growth model, as N approaches K:
Growth rate begins to slow
All of the members of an interbreeding group of organisms in a local area make up a(n):
Population
A snake that has evolved to look similar to a branch will probably be able to avoid:
Predation
_______________ is the consuming of one organism by another.
Predation
When a population reaches the carrying capacity of its habitat, the effects of crowding can be felt. Which of the following is NOT a density-dependent effect?
Increased rate of reproduction
If you remove mountain lions from their habitat and the diversity of other species decreases, the mountain lion was likely a:
Keystone species
From the list that follows choose the adaptation characteristic of K-selected populations
Late age of first reproduction
______________ occurs when one organism physically resembles another
Mimicry
Biologically diverse ecosystems are ____________ than less diverse ecosystems.
More stable
A symbiotic relationship in which both species benefit is called ___________.
Mutualism
The role an organism plays within its ecosystem is called its _______________.
Niche
After much study, ecologists have come to the conclusion that competitive exclusion:
Occurs very rarely in nature
Species that live in the same geographical area are called sympatric.
True
The principle of competitive exclusion states that no two species with the same niche can coexist indefinitely when resources are limiting.
True
When a lion competes with a zebra for water it is an example of interspecific competition.
True
What type of survivorship curve is typical of many oyster species?
Type III
