Showing posts with label Bio 12 Ecology Notes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bio 12 Ecology Notes. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

UPD Bio 12 4th Exam Notes


Fourth Exam- Bio 12

Ecology: interaction between organisms and envi
-       Determines abundance and limits distribution

Components
  1. ABIOTIC FACTORS: nonliving and physical factors
  2. BIOTIC FACTORS: living; all the organisms in the individual’s environment
-       ecological time determines evolutionary time leading to evolutionary change

MAIN AREAS
  1. Organismal Ecology: morpho, physio and behavioral adaptations of individual organisms in order to meet the challenges posed by their abiotic and biotic envi.
-       abiotic usually determines g.distribution
  1. Population Ecology: how many individuals of a particular species live in a particular area
  2. Community Ecology: focus on interaction of the community which affect its’ structure and organization

** ecosystem: all abiotic factors plus the entire community of species that exist in a certain area ( more than one)

  1. Ecosystem Ecology: energy flow and cycling of chemicals among the various biotic and abiotic components
  2. Landscape Ecology: how arrays of ecosystems are arranged in a geographic distribution
** landscape: consist of several ecosystems linked by change in material, energy and organisms.
** biosphere: global ecosystem
** use the precautionary principle

FACTORS AFFECTING THE DISTRIBUTION OF ORGANISMS

Biogeography: the study of the past and present distribution of individual species

  1. dispersal: barriers to moving out
** specie transplant: potential and control range
** tens rule: one of ten introduced species manage to be a success and one out of ten to be common pests
  1. behavior
-       insect oviposition biased on corn plants
-       key point is the evolution does not produce perfect organisms for every suitable habitat
-       environmental change may cause present adaptive behaviors to be maladaptive.
  1. biotic factors
-       limitation on the successful reproduction of species when transplanted ( lack of negative or positive interaction )
  1. abiotic factors
  1. temp
  2. water- osmolatrity of cells
  3. sunlight
-       animals depending on photoperiod cues
  1. wind
-       wind+ temp= windchill factor ( heatloss increased due to evap and convection
-       induces morphological limitation on plants
  1. rocks and soil
 BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY

Behavior: what a animal does and how it does it
-       has proximal and ultimate causes which always is related to Darwinian fitness
-       innate behavior: developmentally fixed regardless of environmental factors


Demography: study of the vital statistics that affect population size

  1. life table: age-specific summary of survival pattern of a population
  2. survivorship curve: graphic way to display the life table
-       a plot of the proportion or numbers in a cohort still alive at each age.
-       TYPE 1: low death rate-drops eventually
-       TYPE 2: continuous death rate
-       TYPE 3: sharp death rate curve but eventually levels out ( invertebrates)


K and R strategists
R: unstable envi, cheap and lots of offsprings
K: stable envi, few viable offsprings


 POPULATION ECOLOGY

Population: group Of 1 specie occupying a general area

2 characteristics
a. density: # of individuals per unit or area or volume
-  mark-recapture method: for fish and wildlife populations
b. dispersion: pattern of spacing among individuals within the geographic distribution of the population
- dispersion patterns
a. clumped in patches: most common
b. uniform- due to interaction of individuals
c. random spacing- lack of repulsion and interactions

Population growth

Change= birth-death in a time interval
êN/êT= bN-dN
r=b-d: to measure if a population is growing depending on value if its negative or positive
r=0 means ZPG, equilibrium
êN/êT=Rn

-       IDEAL CONDITIONS: exponential population growth which is characterized by intrinsic growth of increase, rmax
-       J –shaped curve
-       Usually if populations are new or unfilled envi, rebounding from catastrophe

CARRYING CAPACITY: maximum population size that a particular environment at a particular time with no degradation of the habitat ( K)
-       fluctuates with limited resources
-       energy limitation is the most significant determinant

LOGISTIC POPULATION GROWTH- incorporates the effect of population density on

POPULATION LIMITING FACTORS
-       look at the changes in b,d,e,I as population density rises
  1. density dependent: birth rate that falls with increasing density or death rate that increases with increasing density
-       negative feedback
  • intraspecific competition
  • territoriality
  • predation as prey # increases
  • accumulation of waste product
  1. d-independent:
-       why are certain habitats favorable to living and not?
** cyclic rise and fall of populations
linx and hare

human population

demographic transition
-       to keep zpg in 2 methods
-       age structure
-      importance

COMMUNITY ECOLOGY

Species richness: the number of species contained
Relative abundance: commonness and rarity of species

Individualistic vs. interactive hypothesis
-       abiotic vs. biotic dependency

INTERSPECIFIC INTERACTIONS AND COMMUNITY STRUCTURE

  1. COMPETITION
-       Competitive exclusion principle, two similar species cannot coexist in the same place when they compete for the same limiting limited resources.

ECOLOGICAL NICHE: sum total of a species’ use of the biotic and abiotic resources in its environment
-       ecological role of organism
-       address plus occupation

RESOURCE DIFFERENTIATION: enables similar species to co-exist by shifting to other resources by one specie


  1. PREDATION
-       extended to herbivory and parasitism
-       fleeing ( energy expenditure), active self-defense and alarm calls
-       camouflage or cryptic coloration
-       aposematic coloration: animals with effective chemical defenses are often brightly colored, a warning to predators
-       batesian mimicry: a palatable or harmless specie mimics an unpalatable or harmful model
-       mullerian mimicry: two or more unpalatable species mimic each other.

  1. PARASITISM
-       host
-       endo, ecto ( mosquito/aphids), parasitoidism ( small wasps) laying eggs inside the host, eventually killing the host.
-       Pathogens

  1. MUTUALISM
-       interspecific interaction that is beneficial to both
-       insect on narra tree, legume and nitrogen fixing bacteria

  1. COMMENSALISM

TROPHIC STRUCTURE ( feeding relationships)
-       food chain: energy transfer between pp,pc, s and tc to d.
-       length is usually divided into 4 or 5 links called trophic levels

food chain length dependent on
  1. energetic: inefficiency in energy transfer
  2. dynamic stability: the longer the food chain, the less stable
-       recovery rate and setbacks from environmental shocks makes it difficult for top predators to recover

DOMINANT SPECIES: species with the heighest abundance pr highest biomass ( the sum weight of all the individuals in a population)

KEYSTONE SPECIE: dominance by ecological niche but not in numbers

-       bottom up model/top down model

ecological succession
-       lifeless place with no soil formation, autotrophic bacteria present at first ( primary succession)
-       secondary- devastated place but with soil intact, herbaceous species first, compared to primary that have mosses and lichens

biodiversity/species diversity
-       depends on size and geographic location

2 components of biodiversity
- specie richness: total number of different species in the community
- relative abundance: