Env science

Subdecks (1)

Cards (434)

  • What is succession in ecology?
    The sequence of changes in species types
  • What are the two types of seral stages mentioned?
    Xerosera and Hydrosera
  • What limits xerosera?
    Limited by water availability
  • What initiates hydrosera?
    Starts in water environments
  • What is psamosere associated with?
    Coastal regions and sand dunes
  • What drives succession?
    Organisms altering environmental conditions
  • What factors are altered during succession?
    Soil pH, nutrients, salinity, stability
  • What is primary succession?
    Colonization of a new site after total removal
  • What events can cause primary succession?
    Lava flows and glaciation
  • What are pioneer species?
    Plants that adapt to new soil conditions
  • What happens to organic material in primary succession?
    It enters the soil after decomposition
  • How do new species establish in primary succession?
    By outcompeting existing species
  • What is a climax community?
    The final stable community in succession
  • What changes occur in soil during succession?
    Changes in pH, nutrients, and moisture
  • What is secondary succession?
    Succession in an environment with existing soil
  • What can cause secondary succession?
    Disturbances like forest fires or droughts
  • Why is secondary succession faster than primary succession?
    Soil already contains nutrients
  • What are primary colonisers in secondary succession?
    Weeds that grow on pre-existing soil
  • What characterizes a climax community?
    It is balanced and self-sustaining
  • What are the features of climax communities?
    High biodiversity and complex food webs
  • What influences succession?
    Climate, edaphic, and biotic factors
  • What are abiotic factors in succession?
    Non-living environmental factors like soil type
  • What are biotic factors in succession?
    Living factors like competition and predation
  • What is a food web?
    A diagram showing energy relationships among organisms
  • What is the original source of energy in food webs?
    The Sun
  • What do arrows in a food web represent?
    The direction of energy flow
  • What is the decay process in a food web?
    Recycling nutrients from dead material
  • What are the two main types of decomposers?
    Fungi and bacteria
  • What is the role of detritivores?
    They consume dead organic matter
  • What are autotrophs?
    Organisms that produce their own food
  • What are heterotrophs?
    Organisms that must consume others for energy
  • What are the stages of primary succession?
    1. Coloniser/Pioneer species
    2. Intermediate Community
    3. Climax Community
  • What are the stages of secondary succession?
    1. Primary colonisers (weeds)
    2. Intermediate communities
    3. Climax community forms
  • What are the differences between primary and secondary succession?
    • Primary: starts on bare rock, no soil
    • Secondary: starts with existing soil and nutrients
    • Primary: slower process
    • Secondary: faster due to pre-existing conditions
  • What does primary productivity measure?
    Rate of new organic matter development
  • What are the two key types of primary productivity?
    Gross primary productivity and net primary productivity
  • What does gross primary productivity (GPP) measure?
    Rate of biomass production by autotrophs
  • How is net primary productivity (NPP) calculated?
    NPP = GPP - energy used in respiration
  • What fraction of GPP do plants typically use for respiration?
    About half of their GPP
  • What happens to the rest of the GPP after respiration?
    It is stored or used for biomass production