Ecology and Key Ideas

Cards (239)

  • What is ecology primarily concerned with?
    Organisms and their environment interactions
  • What are the key terms to understand ecology?
    • Habitat
    • Population
    • Community
    • Abiotic factors
    • Biotic factors
    • Ecosystem
  • What is a habitat?
    The place where an organism lives
  • What defines a population?
    All organisms of one species in a habitat
  • What is a community in ecology?
    All organisms of different species in a habitat
  • What are abiotic factors?
    Non-living factors of the environment
  • What are biotic factors?
    Living factors of the environment
  • What is an ecosystem?
    Interaction of biotic and abiotic components
  • Why do organisms compete for resources?
    To survive and reproduce
  • What do plants need to survive?
    Light, space, water, mineral ions
  • What do animals need to survive?
    Space, shelter, food, water, mates
  • What is interdependence in a community?
    Species depend on each other for resources
  • What can happen if one species is removed from an ecosystem?
    It can have far-reaching effects
  • What is a food web?
    A diagram of what eats what
  • Why are stonefly larvae important in a food web?
    They are sensitive to pollution
  • What effect does pollution have on stonefly larvae?
    It can kill them
  • What are the effects of losing stonefly larvae on other organisms?
    • Black fly larvae: Less competition for algae
    • Water spider: More likely to be eaten by predators
    • Stickleback: Less food
  • What characterizes stable communities?
    Population sizes are roughly constant
  • What can happen to population sizes in stable communities?
    They may go up and down in cycles
  • What do organisms compete for in an ecosystem?
    • Light
    • Space
    • Water
    • Food
    • Shelter
    • Mates
  • What are the two types of factors that affect the environment of organisms?
    Abiotic and biotic factors
  • How do abiotic and biotic factors affect a community?
    They can significantly impact population sizes
  • What happens when there is an increase in temperature in an ecosystem?
    It can affect the size of populations
  • How does a decrease in light intensity affect plant species?
    It decreases the rate of photosynthesis
  • What could a decrease in mineral content in soil lead to?
    Nutrient deficiencies affecting plant growth
  • How can the introduction of a new biotic factor affect a community?
    It can change population sizes and interdependence
  • What effect can a new predator have on prey populations?
    It can cause a decrease in prey population
  • What happened to the population size of Species A after 1985?
    It decreased rapidly
  • What does the graph suggest about the arrival of the new pathogen for Species A?
    It arrived around 1985
  • What trend is observed in the population size of Species A after 1990?
    The population started to rise again
  • What are the interdependencies between abiotic and biotic factors in an ecosystem?
    • Abiotic factors influence biotic factors
    • Changes in abiotic factors affect population sizes
    • Biotic factors can alter abiotic conditions
  • Why does life exist in various environments?
    Organisms have adapted to different environments
  • What are adaptations in organisms?
    Features that allow survival in environments
  • What are the three types of adaptations?
    • Structural
    • Behavioral
    • Functional
  • What do structural adaptations refer to?
    Features of an organism's body structure
  • How does the Arctic fox's thick fur help it?
    It prevents heat loss in extreme cold
  • What adaptation helps whales retain heat?
    A thick layer of blubber
  • How do camels adapt to desert conditions?
    They store water in their hump
  • What are behavioral adaptations?
    Ways that organisms behave to survive
  • Why do swallows migrate during colder months?
    To avoid problems of cold conditions