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The study of the interactions between organisms and their environment. |
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Climate, substrate, disturbance, other organisms |
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how it is adapted to the environment
ex) physiological, evolutionary, behavioral ecology |
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Factors that affect population size; how and why it changes through time |
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Interactions between species, predation, competition |
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How are resources being used and being put back into the environment
ex) energy flow, chemical cycling |
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Factors controlling exchanges of energy, materials, organisms across ecosystems |
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Regional exchange of energy, materials, across the biosphere |
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Research on the distribution and abundance of species; how species interact with each other and the environment
Helps understand how problems first occured |
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Develop conservation and management plans to limit or repair damage to the ecosystem from human actions
The information that can help people solve the practical problems |
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- ecology provides scientific understanding of living things and their environment
- environmentalism is more about conservation and preservation of life on Earth
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Who was the first environmentalist whose work led to the ban of DDT use in the US? |
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Definition
Rachel Carson
- wrote the Silent Spring in 1962
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non living things that affect the environment
ex) climate, soil type, periodic disturbances, etc. |
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living things that affect the environment
ex) competitors, predators, pathogens, etc. |
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long term weather patterns
temperature, precipitation, sunlight, wind
- temp and water are the major influence
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patterns on the global, regional and local level |
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very fine patterns encountered by community of organisms |
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- the tilt of the earth on its axis
- spring and fall equinoxes
- extent of seasonal variation increases with latitude
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Tropics vs. Temperate Regions |
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- near the equator
- more direct sun
- no change in day length
- less direct sun
- large seasonal changes in day length
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the region where we know life exists
extends several kilometers into the atmosphere and at least 3000 meters below earth's surface |
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A type of ecosystem that covers broad regions
- major terrestrial or aquatic life zones
- assemblages of various types of organism in specific climates
- characterized by vegetation types in terrestrial biomes
- characterized by the physical environment in aquatic biomes
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Term
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Definition
largest part of the biosphere
- lakes
- streams and rivers
- wetlands
- estuaries
- intertidal zones
- pelagic zone
- coral reefs
- deep sea benthos
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layer of temperature change |
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O2 goes down, nutrients come up
essential for survival and growth of aquatic organisms |
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nutrient poor, O2 rich
good |
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nutrient rich, O2 poor
bad, tends to be green |
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open blue water
extends to greater depths than coastal marine waters |
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seafloor below the surface waters of coastal and pelagic zones
no sunlight
continuously cold and high water pressure |
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- cover 22% of the earth's surface
- most important characteristic is vegetation
- 9 major groups
- tropical forest
- savanna
- desert
- chaparral
- temperate deciduous forest
- temperate grassland
- coniferous forest
- tundra
- polar and mountain ice
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Definition
- equatorial regions
- rain and dry forests
- warm year round with little variation
- vertically layered
- intense competion for light
- emergent trees, canopy, subcanopy, shrub and herb layer, epiphytes
- population growth
- agricultural development
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Definition
- near 30 N and 30 S
- <30 cm rain a year
- temp is variable
- low, widely scattered vegetation
- cacti, deep rooted shrubs, herbs that grow during moist periods
- reduction of biodiversity
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Definition
- equatorial regions
- seasonal rainfall (30-50 cm/year)
- dry season up to 9 months
- warm year round
- trees are thorny, small leaves, adapted to dry conditions
- fire adapted
- grasses and forbs
- earliest humans lived in savannas
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Definition
- midlatitude coastal regions
- precipitation is highly seasonal, rainy winters, long dry summers
- average seasonal temps
- shrubs and small trees, grasses and herbs
- high plant diversity
- adaption to drought and fire
- heavily developed
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Definition
- temperate zone
- South Africa, Hungary, Argentina, Uruguay, Russia, North America
- precipitation highly seasonal
- dry winters and wet summers
- grasses and forbs, large mammals
- prime agricultural land
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Temperate Broadleaf Forest |
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Definition
- midlatitude in Northern Hemisphere
- precipitation, 70-200 cm/year
- cold winter, hot and humid summer
- vertical layers, understory trees, shrubs layer, herbaceous layer
- mainly deciduous trees
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Definition
- Northern North America and Eurasia
- largest terrestrial biome on Earth
- precipitation 30-70 cm/year
- cold long winters
- cone bearing trees, cone shape plants
- old growth
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Definition
- expansive areas of the Artic
- 20% of Earth's land surface
- precipitation averages 20-60 cm/year
- long cold winters and short cool summers
- mosses, grasses, forbs, dwarf shrubs, lichens
- climate change, mineral and oil extraction
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Term
Population Ecology definition |
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Definition
the study of populations in relation to their environment
explores how biotic and abiotic factors influence population density, distribution, size, and age structure |
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Term
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Definition
- size(N)
- density
- dispersion
- genetic characteristics
- demography(change in N through time)
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Term
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number of individuals per unit area or volume
determining the density of a population is extremely difficult
sampling methods:
- random sampling of a subpopulation
- mark recapture
not a static property
- additions-birth, immigration
- deletions-death, emigration
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Term
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Definition
pattern of spacing among individuals within the boundaries of the population
- clumped
- uniform
- random
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individuals aggregate in patches
influenced by resource availability and behavior
ex) wolves
MOST COMMON |
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individuals are evenly spaces
influenced by social interactions such as territoriality
ex) penguins |
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the position of each individual is independent of other individuals
ex) flowers and plants |
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study of vital statistics of populations and how they change over time
population ecology focuses on processes
3 tools to measure:
- life tables
- survivorship curves
- reproductive tables
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What determines population size? |
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Definition
ΔN/Δt= B+I-M-E
B=births
I=immigration
M=mortality
E=emigration
N=size
t=time
The heart of population ecology |
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an age specific summary of the survival pattern of a population
follow the fate of a cohort |
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the traits that affect an organism's schedule of reproduction and survival make up its life history
3 basic variables:
- when reproduction begins
- how often reproduced
- how many offspring produced
adaptive, presumably derived from natural selection
characteristics that influence population growth:
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Term
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Definition
big band reproduction-reproduce a single time and then die |
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repeated reproduction- produce offspring repeatedly over time |
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J-shaped curve
typical of populations introduced to new/unfilled environments
keeps growing past carrying capacity |
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(r)
birth rate-death rate
r>0 population growth
r<0 population decline
effects steepness of growth curve
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Term
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Definition
maximum growth rate for a population
dN/dt=rmaxN
varies among species
influenced by:
- age of reproduction
- # of young per reproductive effort
- time between production of young
- survival of young
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Definition
the "real world"
limit to number of individuals that can occupy a habitat
begins exponentially, but levels off around carrying capacity
s shaped curve |
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Definition
the limit to the number of individuals that can occupy a habitat |
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exponential growth
max reproductive success
often in disturbed habitats
below carrying capacity
"Big Bang"
pioneer species
ex) rabbits, oysters |
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Definition
near carrying capacity
longer life span
older growth
strong competition among individuals
less offspring
ex) humans, oak trees |
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Term
Density-independent populations |
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Definition
birth rate and death rate don't change with population density |
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Density-dependent populations |
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Definition
death rates rise and/or birth rates fall with population density |
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Definition
now 6.8 billion
7.8 to 10.8 billion by 2050
began to slow in the 1960s |
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Term
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one way to calculate K
summarizes land/water area available to each nation to
-produce all resources is consumes
-absorb wastes generated |
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What factors will limit our growth? |
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Definition
-food
malnutrition and famine is common
-space
few limits on how closely humans can be together
-nonrenewable resources
metals, water, capacity of earth to absorb wastes |
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