Responses to the Environment
Energy Flow Through Ecosystems
Population Ecology + Population Density
Community Ecology + Biodiversity
Disruptions to Ecosystems
100

What are diurnal organisms? 

Organisms that are most active during the day

100

“Maintaining a stable internal environment despite external changes” – What is the term for this definition?

Homeostasis

100

Why do abiotic factors help to determine what species can live in what environment?

Animals have adapted and evolved to be able to live in certain conditions that other animals could not thrive in.

100

Name at least two threats to biodiversity 

Habitat loss 

Introduced species (invasive species)

Over harvesting

Large scale environmental change 

100

What is the effect of greenhouse gases?

Climate change → extreme weather and climate shifts; increase in temperature (warming).

200

Bees are known for using a waggle dance in order to communicate where a food source is to other bees. What kind of communication are these bees using?

Tactile Cues

200

Describe the difference between Endotherms and Ectotherms.

  1. Endotherms → internal heat, stable temperature, need more energy

  2. Ectotherms → external heat, variable temperature, less energy needed

200

Distribution is where the animals in a population interact with each other. What is the rarest form of distribution

Random distribution

200

What does trophic structure refer to?

The feeding relationships between organisms

200

Rapid environmental change is occurring in today’s world. The main issues of this are nutrient enrichment, toxins, and climate change. What is the main driver of this environmental change?

Humans

300

Torpor is the daily reduction of metabolic rate used to conserve energy in animals. What animals typically use this process?

Migrating birds

300

Elements move through biotic and abiotic parts of the ecosystem. What are the major cycles?

Water, Carbon, Nitrogen, and Phosphorus Cycles

300

When will a population exponentially increase in size?

When the birth rate is greater than the death rate and the population is not constrained by resources

300

What does Simpson’s Index of Diversity do, and what does a higher index value mean?

It quantifies diversity instead of relying on intuition, and a higher value means more diversity in the community.

300

Evapotranspiration is the water evaporation from soil/plants. Where is evapotranspiration  high, and what does this mean for species richness?

It is high in warm, wet climates, and it means a higher species richness.

400

Define kinesis and taxis. Why are they important in animal behavior?

Kinesis - the undirected movement of an animal based on external stimulus 

taxis - directed movement towards or away from a stimulus

Both taxis and kinesis are important because they are innate behaviors that animals are born with.

400

What is the average percentage of energy transferred between trophic levels?

10%

400

What are density dependent limiting factors?

Competition, predation, disease

400

There are three different kinds of species that have disproportionately large effects on community structure: Foundation Species, Keystone Species, and Ecosystem Engineers. Which of these three is a dominant species?

Foundation Species

400

Larger geographic areas have more species as they contain more habitats and resources. What is the name of this relationship?

Species-area curve

500

Ethology is the study of organisms in their natural environment. In 1973 the founder won a Nobel Prize for studying the instincts and genetically programmed behaviors in fish, insects, and birds. What are at least two of the four focuses of ethology?

  • Causation 

  • Development 

  • Function /adaptive value 

  • Phylogeny

500

What type of survivorship curve do r-selected species show, and what curve do K-selected species show?

  1. R-selected → Type III

  2. K-selected → Type I

500

What happens when a population goes over carrying capacity and why?

The population will decline again until it is under the carrying capacity. There are enough resources to sustain the amount of animals in the population about carrying capacity

500

What is another name for Gause’s Law and what does it propose?

It is the competitive exclusion principle that proposes that two species competing for the same limited resources cannot coexist.

500

Due to evolutionary history and climate, species diversity differs from place to place. Where is species diversity the highest and why?

It is highest in the tropics, and it decreases towards the poles. Tropical regions are older and less disrupted, so they have had more time to develop speciation. They also have more sunlight and precipitation, which increases productivity.

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