ecology

Cards (76)

  • What is an ecosystem?
    The relationship between all living and non-living parts of a habitat
  • What are the 3 levels of organisation in an ecosystem?
    Individual organisms, populations, communities
  • What is a population in an ecosystem?
    Groups of individuals of the same species
  • What is a community in an ecosystem?
    Made of many populations living together
  • What is competition in an ecosystem?
    Organisms competing for resources
  • What do plants compete for?
    Light, water, minerals from soil and space
  • What do animals compete for?
    Food, mates and territory
  • What is interdependence?

    When species rely on each other for food, shelter, pollination, seed dispersal etc
  • Why would removing one species from an ecosystem be bad for an ecosystem?
    Because of interdependence, it can affect the whole community
  • What happens in a stable community?
    All species and environmental factors are in balance so that population size stays fairly constant.
  • What is an example of a stable community?
    A rain forest or ancient oak woodland
  • What is an abiotic factor?
    A non-living factor that effects the community
  • What is a biotic factor?

    A living factor that effects a community
  • What do abiotic factors include?
    Light intensity, temperature, moisture levels, soil pH and mineral content, wind intensity and direction, carbon dioxide levels (Plants), oxygen levels (Aquatic animals)
  • What do biotic factors include?
    Availability of food, new predators arriving, new pathogens, one species out-competing another
  • What are adaptations?

    Features that allow an organism to survive in the conditions that they normally live in
  • What is a structural adaptation?

    A physical adaptation. Features an organism has such as fur, beaks etc
  • What is a behavioural adaptation?

    Something an organism does to allow it to survive
  • What are functional adaptations?

    An internal working or body process that allows an organism to survive
  • What are extremophiles?

    Organisms that can live in extreme conditions such as high pressure, high salt concentration, or high temperatures
  • What is an example of an extremophile?
    A tardigrade
  • What method can be used to study an ecosystem?
    Transect line and a quadrat
  • What are decomposers?

    Organisms that break down dead or waste material
  • What type of organisms are decomposers?
    Fungi and bacteria
  • What do decomposers need?
    Oxygen, moisture, a suitable temperature ans suitable pH
  • How do decomposers break down the waste?
    They secrete enzymes which partly digest the waste
  • What do decomposers do with the small molecules produced by their enzymes?
    They take up the small, soluble molecules by diffusion
  • What can decomposers be used for?
    Compost heaps
  • Why do gardeners stir their compost heaps?
    Because oxygen is needed. In anaerobic conditions, methane gas is produced
  • What is the carbon cycle?
    It describes how carbon is recycled in nature
  • Why does the carbon cycle depend on decomposers?
    To return carbon to the atmosphere as carbon dioxide through respiration
  • What is the water cycle?

    Describes how fresh water circulates between organisms, rivers and the sea.
  • What is a producer in a food chain?

    It synthesises molecules
  • What is an example of a producer?
    A green plant, which produces glucose molecules by photosynthesis
  • What are producers eaten by?
    Primary consumers
  • What are consumers eaten by?
    Secondary consumers
  • What are secondary consumers eaten by?
    Tertiary consumers
  • What is each level of a food chain called?
    A trophic level
  • What is a predator?

    Consumers that eat other animals
  • What is prey?
    The animals that are eaten by predators