Term
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Definition
Ecology is the study of how organisms interact with their environment. |
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Definition
A poplation is a group of individuals of the dame species that live in the same area at the same time. |
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What are the four main levels that ecology researchers work on? |
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Definition
1) organisms 2) populations 3) communities 4) ecosystems |
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Term
What kind of adaptations do organismal ecologists study? |
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Definition
the morphological, physiological, and behavioural adaptations that allow individuals to live successfully in a particular area |
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Term
Give an example of behaviour triggering external stimuli |
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Definition
answers include: changes in temperature or moisture, an escape response form prey or a rival challenging for a mate |
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Term
What is the main focus of ecology researchers concerned with population ecology? |
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Definition
They focus on how the numbers of individuals in a population change over time. |
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What is a current application of population ecology research? |
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Definition
mathematical models for population growth are being used to evaluate the fate of endangered species. |
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Definition
a community consists of the species that interact with each other within a particular area |
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What is the main focus of researchers who study community ecology? |
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Definition
Researchers who study community ecology study the nature of the interactions between species and the consequences of the interactions. |
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What is ecosystem ecology? |
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Definition
It is an extension of community ecology. It focuses on all the organisms, as well as the non-living components in a particular area. |
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What is conservation biology? |
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Definition
Conservation biology is the effort to study, preserve and restore threatened populations,communities and ecosystems. |
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Term
What are the key physical factors that shape the environment in an aquatic ecosystem? |
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Definition
water depth and rate of water movement |
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Term
In what ways do water depth and rate of water movement affect organisms living in an aquatic ecosystem? |
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Definition
water depth dictates how much light reaches organisms that live in a certain region. Rate of water movement presents a physical challenge |
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Term
Name the 3 freshwater environments |
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Definition
lakes and ponds, wetlands and streams. |
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Term
Which type of aquatic environment may be either freshwater or marine? |
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Definition
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Term
What is a marine environment? |
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Definition
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Term
How were lakes formed in northern climates? How were lakes formed in tropical climates? |
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Definition
Northern: lakes are formed in depressions made by the movement of glaciers Tropics: formed from old river channels |
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Term
What are the five zones the describe the structure of lakes and ponds? |
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Definition
1) littoral 2) limnetic 3) benthic 4) photic 5) aphotic |
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Term
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Definition
A littoral zone is a zone in a pond or lake that consists of the shallow waters along the shore, where flowering plants are rooted |
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Definition
A limnetic zone is a zone in a pond or lake that is offshore but is shallow enough to support photosynthesis |
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Term
What is a benthic zone? (ponds/lakes) |
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Definition
A benthic zone is a zone in a pond or lake that makes up the substrate |
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Term
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Definition
regions of the littoral, limnetic and benthic zones that receive sunlight |
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Definition
An aphotic zone is comprised of the portions of a pond or lake that do not receive sunlight. |
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Term
What drives water movements in lakes and ponds? |
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Definition
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Term
What is plankton comprised of? |
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Definition
Algae, cyanobacteria and other microscopic organisms. |
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Term
What zones are plankton most common in? |
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Definition
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What zones are animals that eat detritus more commonly in? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
wetlands are shallow water habitats where soil is saturated with water for at least part of the year |
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Term
How are wetlands distinct from ponds and lakes? |
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Definition
they have only shallow water they have emergent vegetation |
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Term
What is emergent vegetation? |
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Definition
emergent vegetation is when plants grow above the surface of the water, such as in wetlands |
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Term
Describe the waterflow in freshwater marshes and swamps |
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Definition
slow but steady flow of water |
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Term
What affect does very low water flow have on the acidity of a shallow body of water? and why? |
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Definition
very low water flow can cause a shallow body of water to become very acidic because 673450136458917238594713289047210894721390847120394719 |
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Term
What affect does low pH have on plant growth? |
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Definition
At a low pH nitrogen becomes unavailable to plants. |
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Term
What are the factors contributing to the lack of productivity in bogs? |
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Definition
1) acidity 2) anoxic conditions 3) lack of available nitrogen |
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Term
What type of plant life is typically found in marshes? |
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Definition
Abundant in grasses Lacks tress |
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Term
What type of plant life is typically found in |
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Definition
Abundant in trees and shrubs |
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Term
TRUE or FALSE: Most bogs, marshes and swamps share many of the same types species |
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Definition
FALSE: because their physical environments are so different, there is little overlap in the types of species found in bogs marshes and swamps |
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Term
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Definition
a stream is a body of water that moves constantly in one direction |
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Term
What is the difference between a river and a creek |
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Definition
a river is a large stream and a creek is a small stream |
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Term
What are the major physical variables in streams? |
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Definition
speed of current and availability of nutrients and oxygen |
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Term
TRUE or FALSE: sunlight is not a limiting factor for organisms in streams |
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Definition
TRUE: because most streams are shallow enough that sunlight reaches the bottom, sunlight is typically abundant |
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Term
TRUE or FALSE: warm water holds more oxygen than cold water |
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Definition
FALSE: cold water holds more oxygen than warm |
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Term
What allows some fish, insects, larvae, molluscs and other animals to live in fast moving streams? |
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Definition
They have adaptations that allow them to maintain their positions in the fast moving portions of streams. |
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Term
What position in a stream is one more likely to find algae and plants? |
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Definition
Algae and plants are found in the wider, slower portions of streams. |
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Term
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Definition
An estuary is where rivers meet the ocean |
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Term
Describe the water depth in an estuary |
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Definition
most estuaries are shallow enough for sunlight to reach the substrate. However it may fluctuate dramatically |
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Term
Why is the fluctuation of water flow in estuaries important? |
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Definition
It is important because it alters salinity, which in turn affects the type of organisms that are present |
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Term
What factors allow estuaries to be among the most productive environments on earth? |
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Definition
- shallow and sunlit water - nutrients are constantly replenished by incoming river water |
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Term
Why are estuaries ideal environments for young fish? |
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Definition
because they can feed on abundant vegetation and plankton, while hiding from predators |
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Term
TRUE or FALSE: Due to the different chemical composition in the oceans, the types of organisms are markedly different |
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Definition
FALSE: the oceans are actually very uniform in their chemical composition, it is the physical characteristics of the oceans that cause variation in species found in certain areas |
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Term
What are the six zones found in an ocean? |
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Definition
1) intertidal 2) neritic 3)oceanic 4)benthic 5) photic 6) aphotic |
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Term
What is an intertidal zone? |
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Definition
An intertidal zone is a zone in an ocean that consists of a rocky, sandy or muddy beach that is exposed to the air at low tide but submerged in water at high tide |
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Term
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Definition
A neritic zone is a zone in an ocean that extends from the intertidal zone to depths of about 200m. Its edge is defined by the end of the continental shelf |
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Term
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Definition
An oceanic zone is the 'open ocean'- the deepwater region beyond the continental shelf. |
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Term
What is a benthic zone? (oceans) |
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Definition
In oceans the benthic zone is the bottom of the ocean |
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Term
What is the major cause of water movement in the intertidal zones of oceans? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the major cause of water movement in the neritic zones of oceans? |
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Definition
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What is the major cause of water movement throughout all the oceans? |
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Definition
large-scale water currents and the earths rotation |
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Term
What are requirements of organisms living in an intertidal zone? |
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Definition
They must be able to stand physical pounding from crashing waves and desiccation at low tide |
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Term
Where is productivity highest in oceans? |
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Definition
In the intertidal zone and the outer edge of the neritic zone. |
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Term
Where are most coral reefs found? |
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Definition
In the shallow areas of the neritic zones in the tropics |
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Term
Describe the nutrient availability in the open ocean and the causes. |
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Definition
There are very little nutrients because when the photosynthetic plankton die their bodies drift downwards, out of the photic zone and are lost. |
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Term
What type of '-vore' (as in eating habits) typically live in the aphotic zones of oceans? |
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Definition
Detritivores. Most organisms living in the aphotic zones of oceans feed on the rain of dead bodies from the photic zones |
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Term
What are the spring and fall turnovers? |
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Definition
A mixing of water in lakes that happens every year. The water form the bottom of the lake mixes with the water form the top of the lake. it causes nutrients and oxygenation to mix. |
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Term
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Definition
the region in a thermally stratified body of water which separates warmer surface water from cold deep water and in which temperature decreases rapidly with depth |
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