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Ecology
Chapters 52 and 53
63
Biology
Undergraduate 1
11/16/2010

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Term
Ecology
Definition
The study of the interactions between organisms and their environment.
Term
Environment
Definition
Climate, substrate, disturbance, other organisms
Term
Organismal Ecology
Definition

how it is adapted to the environment

ex) physiological, evolutionary, behavioral ecology

Term
Population Ecology
Definition
Factors that affect population size; how and why it changes through time
Term
Community Ecology
Definition
Interactions between species, predation, competition
Term
Ecosystem Ecology
Definition

How are resources being used and being put back into the environment

ex) energy flow, chemical cycling

Term
Landscape Ecology
Definition
Factors controlling exchanges of energy, materials, organisms across ecosystems
Term
Global Ecology
Definition
Regional exchange of energy, materials, across the biosphere
Term
Basic ecology
Definition

Research on the distribution and abundance of species; how species interact with each other and the environment

 

Helps understand how problems first occured

Term
Applied ecology
Definition

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

Term
Science vs Advocacy
Definition
  • ecology provides scientific understanding of living things and their environment
  • environmentalism is more about conservation and preservation of life on Earth
Term
Who was the first environmentalist whose work led to the ban of DDT use in the US?
Definition

Rachel Carson

  • wrote the Silent Spring in 1962

 

Term
Abiotic factors
Definition

non living things that affect the environment

ex) climate, soil type, periodic disturbances, etc.

Term
Biotic factors
Definition

living things that affect the environment

ex) competitors, predators, pathogens, etc.

Term
Climate
Definition

long term weather patterns

 

temperature, precipitation, sunlight, wind

  • temp and water are the major influence
Term
Macroclimate
Definition
patterns on the global, regional and local level
Term
Microclimate
Definition
very fine patterns encountered by community of organisms
Term
Seasonality
Definition
  • the tilt of the earth on its axis
  • spring and fall equinoxes
  • extent of seasonal variation increases with latitude
Term
Tropics vs. Temperate Regions
Definition
  • near the equator
  • more direct sun
  • no change in day length

 

  • less direct sun
  • large seasonal changes in day length
Term
Biosphere
Definition

the region where we know life exists

 

extends several kilometers into the atmosphere and at least 3000 meters below earth's surface

Term
Biomes
Definition

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
Term
Aquatic biomes
Definition

largest part of the biosphere

  • lakes
  • streams and rivers
  • wetlands
  • estuaries
  • intertidal zones
  • pelagic zone
  • coral reefs
  • deep sea benthos
Term
Thermocline
Definition
layer of temperature change
Term
Turnover
Definition

O2 goes down, nutrients come up

essential for survival and growth of aquatic organisms

Term
Oligotrophic
Definition

nutrient poor, O2 rich

good

Term
Eutrophic
Definition

nutrient rich, O2 poor

bad, tends to be green

Term
Pelagic Zone
Definition

open blue water

extends to greater depths than coastal marine waters

Term
Deep-Sea Benthos
Definition

seafloor below the surface waters of coastal and pelagic zones

no sunlight

continuously cold and high water pressure

Term
Terrestrial Biomes
Definition
  • cover 22% of the earth's surface
  • most important characteristic is vegetation
  • 9 major groups
  1. tropical forest
  2. savanna
  3. desert
  4. chaparral
  5. temperate deciduous forest
  6. temperate grassland
  7. coniferous forest
  8. tundra
  9. polar and mountain ice
Term
Tropical Forests
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
Term
Desert
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
Term
Savanna
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
Term
Chaparral
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
Term
Temperate Grassland
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
Term
Temperate Broadleaf Forest
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

 

Term
Coniferous Forest
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
Term
Tundra
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
Term
Population Ecology definition
Definition

the study of populations in relation to their environment

 

explores how biotic and abiotic factors influence population density, distribution, size, and age structure

Term
Population attributes
Definition
  • size(N)
  • density
  • dispersion
  • genetic characteristics
  • demography(change in N through time)
Term
Population Density
Definition

number of individuals per unit area or volume

determining the density of a population is extremely difficult

sampling methods:

  1. random sampling of a subpopulation
  2. mark recapture

not a static property

  • additions-birth, immigration
  • deletions-death, emigration
Term
Population Dispersion
Definition

pattern of spacing among individuals within the boundaries of the population

  1. clumped
  2. uniform
  3. random
Term
Clumped Dispersion
Definition

individuals aggregate in patches

influenced by resource availability and behavior

 

ex) wolves

 

MOST COMMON

Term
Uniform Dispersion
Definition

individuals are evenly spaces

influenced by social interactions such as territoriality

 

ex) penguins

Term
Random Dispersion
Definition

the position of each individual is independent of other individuals

 

ex) flowers and plants

Term
Population Demography
Definition

study of vital statistics of populations and how they change over time

population ecology focuses on processes

3 tools to measure:

  1. life tables
  2. survivorship curves
  3. reproductive tables
Term
What determines population size?
Definition

ΔN/Δt= B+I-M-E

 

B=births

I=immigration

M=mortality

E=emigration

N=size

t=time

 

The heart of population ecology

Term
Life Table
Definition

an age specific summary of the survival pattern of a population

follow the fate of a cohort

Term
Cohort
Definition
age class
Term
Life History Traits
Definition

the traits that affect an organism's schedule of reproduction and survival make up its life history

3 basic variables:

  1. when reproduction begins
  2. how often reproduced
  3. how many offspring produced

adaptive, presumably derived from natural selection

characteristics that influence population growth:

  • age to maturity
Term
Semelparity
Definition
big band reproduction-reproduce a single time and then die
Term
Iteroparity
Definition
repeated reproduction- produce offspring repeatedly over time
Term
Exponential Growth
Definition

J-shaped curve

typical of populations introduced to new/unfilled environments

 

keeps growing past carrying capacity

Term
Growth Rate
Definition

(r)

birth rate-death rate

r>0 population growth

r<0 population decline

 

effects steepness of growth curve

 

 

Term
r max
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
Term
Logistic Growth
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

Term
Carrying Capacity
Definition
the limit to the number of individuals that can occupy a habitat
Term
r-selected
Definition

exponential growth

max reproductive success

often in disturbed habitats

below carrying capacity

"Big Bang"

pioneer species

ex) rabbits, oysters

Term
K-selected
Definition

near carrying capacity

longer life span

older growth

strong competition among individuals

less offspring

 

ex) humans, oak trees

Term
Density-independent populations
Definition
birth rate and death rate don't change with population density
Term
Density-dependent populations
Definition
death rates rise and/or birth rates fall with population density
Term
Human population
Definition

now 6.8 billion

7.8 to 10.8 billion by 2050

 

began to slow in the 1960s

Term
Ecological Footprint
Definition

one way to calculate K

summarizes land/water area available to each nation to

-produce all resources is consumes

-absorb wastes generated

Term
What factors will limit our growth?
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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