Heat & Elevated CO2
Phenology
Herbivory
Invasion
Disturbance
100

Name the four morphological adaptations that plants use to adjust to water limitation

Alter leaf shape/size

Alter leaf location/density

Shift leaf orientation

Increase root:shoot ratio

100

Name the order in which physiological components are broken down to recover nutrients during senescence

1.) Chlorophyll

2.) Rubisco

3.) DNA/RNA

4.) Lipid membranes

5.) secondary pigments

100

what is the role of calcium in herbivory signaling

Ca2+ influx occurs after damage/herbivory & sends signals to the plant to increase defenses

100

What are three control methods used for handling invasive species

1.) Biological control (cost-effective, but risky)

2.) Mechanical control (targeted or large-scale removal)

3.) Chemical control (effective, but rate is important)

100

define resilience & common issues with applying it to a system

1. capacity of ecosystems to absorb disturbances while retaining structures, processes, and interactions

2. hard to define the state of a system, what constitutes a disturbance?

200

What are the 5 models used for modeling climate change impacts on plants?

Space for Time

Time

Evolution

Dispersal

Potential for Transient Dynamics

200

What are the general impacts of heat on systems near urban areas

1.) Earlier springs

2.) hotter heat waves

3.) hotter nighttime temperatures

200

What are the 3 ways that plants can respond to herbivory

Defense, escape or accept

200

What are three theories that make a system prone to invasion and why

1.) Low diversity = more niche space

2.) Resource availability = fluctuations in resources open opportunities for invasion due to fluctuating competition

3.) Neutral Theory = pockets of opportunities exist but its by random chance that it would be invasible

200

What are common disturbance characteristics when categorizing its impact

  • Patchiness: patterns in a landscape

  • Intensity: how impactful was the disturbance

  • Size: how widespread is the disturbance

  • Type: biotic or abiotic

300

Name the three functional mechanisms that heat shock proteins have in response to heat stress

Shield dangerous regions

Use ATP cycles to repeatedly release & refold proteins

Prevent irreversible damage by fixing misshapen proteins

300

The order of senescence includes what 3 phases

1.) Abscission zone formation: high auxin masks sensitivity of ethylene to the abscission zone

2.) Abscission induction phase: low auxin increases sensitivity of ethylene to abscission zone

3.) Abscission/post-abscission: enzymes trigger cell separation at the abscission site & a new, protective cuticle layer is formed at the site

300

what is the physiological work flow from wounding happening to defense genes activating

wounding -> linolenic acid -> jasmonic acid synthesis -> transcription factors -> defense genes

300

What are the 3 hypotheses that are thought to enable successful invasion and what do they entail

1.) Novel Weapon Hypothesis- new, unfamiliar strategies make them successful (allelopathy)

2.) Competitive Release- new environments lack natural predators

3.) Propagule Pressure- overwhelm new areas by sheer numbers

300
What is the Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis?

states that biodiversity of competing species is, or should be expected to be, maximized at intermediate frequencies and/or intensities of disturbance or environmental change.

400

Name the positive & negative effects of CO2 enrichment on plants

Pros: increased photosynthesis & improved WUE

Cons: nutrient constraints, heat stress, drought, altered rainfall, increased variability in precipitation extremes

400

How does warming impact dry systems in wet years versus dry years

warming may advance phenology when water is abundant or delay phenology in years of drought; dry systems mostly impacted by water-limitation than temperature

400

What are the 4 primary ways that plants can defend against herbivory

1.) Mechanical (thorns, spines, etc.)

2.) Secondary metabolites (tannins, alkaloids, etc.)

3.) Circadian Rhythms (increase daytime defenses)

4.) Volatile Organic Compounds (warning signals)

400

What are the 4 methods of allelopathy

1.) Passive diffusion (most common, root exudates)

2.) Decomposition of litter

3.) Glandular trichomes

4.) Volatilization

400

what is the differences between alpha diversity, beta diversity & gamma diversity

Alpha: patches and their diversity differ after disturbance depending on surroundings

Beta: looks at dissimilarity between 2 areas of diversity 

Gamma: looks at diversity across everything


500

The 3 three negative impacts in order of sensitivity to heat stress

Decreased photosynthesis

Higher Respiration

Membrane permeability/fluidity

500

Which of these systems is most impacted by warming temperatures & why? 

Temperate forests - Alpine systems- Grasslands - Tropical Forests

Alpine systems: main constraints are snow & photoperiod which dictate growing season so warming would lengthen the growing season and show strong shifts despite persistent photoperiod limitations

500

What is compensatory growth and what category of plant response does it fall under

compensatory growth is when meristems are broken off and there is an activation of dormant meristems. This is an example of tolerance to herbivory

500

What physiological impacts do allelopathic compounds have on plants

1. disruption of cell division

2. interference with mitochondria respiration

3. inhibition of photosynthesis

500

How does community assembly shape the species pool in a system

Enacts different filters that determine species composition (i.e. an island that experiences high winds & flooding)

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