APES UNIT 1 - community ecology

Cards (54)

  • What is a community in ecology?
    Interactions between populations within a specific location
  • What type of factors do community ecology focus on?
    Only biotic (living) factors and how they interact
  • What are all living things made of?
    One or more cells
  • Why do cells require energy?
    To function properly
  • What is the currency of usable energy in all cells?
    ATP
  • What would happen without solar energy?
    No cell would be able to do "work," and therefore, there would be no life on Earth
  • Is solar energy the same as chemical energy (ATP)?
    No, solar energy is not chemical energy
  • What are the two biochemical reactions needed to connect solar energy to cellular energy?
    1. Photosynthesis
    2. Cellular Respiration
  • What is photosynthesis?
    Using the energy of the sun, gaseous carbon is taken out of the atmosphere and "fixed" into a solid as sugar
  • What is the equation for photosynthesis?

    H₂O + CO₂ + light → O₂ + glucose
  • What is an organism that can perform photosynthesis called?
    A producer or an autotroph
  • Can you name some types of producers?
    Plants and protists
  • Why can't cells use glucose directly to do work?
    Glucose stores potential energy like an unused battery
  • How can we unlock the energy stored in glucose for cellular work?
    Through cellular respiration
  • What is cellular respiration?

    A multistep process in which the stored energy in glucose is released in the form of ATP
  • What gas is released during cellular respiration?
    Carbon dioxide
  • What are organisms that are not producers called?
    Consumers or heterotrophs
  • Do plants perform cellular respiration?
    Yes, they must also do cellular respiration
  • How do the equations for photosynthesis and cellular respiration compare?
    They are almost the same except for energy, but backward
  • What is the definition of a consumer?
    Any organism that is not a producer
  • What do herbivores eat?
    Plants
  • What do omnivores eat?
    Plants and animals
  • What do carnivores eat?
    Animals
  • What do detritivores feed on?
    Detritus or dead material
  • What do decomposers do?
    Chemically break down dead material
  • What are examples of decomposers?
    Bacteria and fungi
  • What is the role of decomposers in an ecosystem?
    • Recycle matter and nutrients
    • Obtain energy from all trophic levels upon death
  • What is the role of producers in a food chain?
    Producers are always the first organisms in a food chain
  • Why do producers have the most energy in a food chain?
    They are the first organisms to store and use the sun's energy
  • What do decomposers obtain energy from?
    All trophic levels upon death
  • What do food chains represent?
    • Linear energy transfer from producer to apex predator
    • Direction of arrows indicates "who gives energy to who"
  • Why are food chains typically not longer than 4-5 organisms?
    Energy runs out fast from trophic level to trophic level
  • What is the 10% Rule in ecology?
    There is only a 10% gain from trophic level to trophic level
  • How can you estimate the energy transfer between trophic levels?
    By moving the decimal to the left
  • If the grass contains 849.3 kJ of energy, how much energy will the hawk have?
    84.93 kJ
  • What is the exception regarding phytoplankton in marine food webs?
    • Fewer phytoplankton can still provide sufficient energy for the marine ecosystem
    • Due to higher reproductivity and shorter lifespan of phytoplankton
  • What is a food web?
    • A more realistic interlinked set of food chains
    • More complex than a food chain
    • Animals can fill more than one trophic level
  • What happens if an animal is removed from a food web?

    There will always be effects in the community
  • Why is biodiversity important in an ecosystem?
    • Supports ecosystem resilience
    • Enhances productivity
    • Provides a wider range of resources
  • What is the definition of the atmosphere?
    Layer of gasses surrounding the earth