In the Niche
Symbiotic Relationships
Succession
Biodiversity
Human Impacts
100

the behaviors and physical characteristics that allow organisms to live successfully in their environment 

adaptation

100

any relationship in which two species live closely together

symbiosis

100

the series of changes that occur in an area where no soil or organisms are 

primary succession

100

The number and variety of different species in an ecosystem

biodiversity

100

Why is deforestation hurting the ecosystems?

Causing CO2 levels to rise (lack of trees), taking away habitats from animals, reducing resources avaiable. 
200

how an organism makes it living and interacts with the biotic and abiotic factors in its habitat 

niche

200

What are the 3 symbiotic relationships?

Commensalism, Mutualism, and Parasitism

200

the series of predictable changes that occur in a community over time

succession 

200

What is a direct, economic factor of diversity?

Farmer using crops to feed his family, herbs used to create medicine that can be sold for a profit.

200

Give an example of the positive impact humans are making on biodiversity in ecosystems.

Conservation projects, Natural Parks, Catch and Release Breeding Programs 

300

What two interactions happen inside a niche?

competition and predation

300

Give an example of commensalism.

Bird building a nest -- bird gets place to live, tree is not harmed

300

the first species to populate an area during succession

pioneer species

300

What does it mean to say an organism lives in a narrow niche?

They usually only depend on one or two resources for survival.

300

How are humans hurting the ecosystems through pollution?

Burning --> hurts the air (oxygen and CO2 levels)

Ocean --> kill animals, destroy habitats

Land --> destroy habitats

400

List an adaptation of predators and prey.

predators -- fast, sharp teeth and claws

prey -- camouflage, warning colors

400

Explain the relationship between a zebra and an oxpecker.

mutualism; oxpecker gets food and zebra gets cleaned of harmful parasites.

400

Give an example of a pioneer species.

mosses and lichen

400

What is a threatened species?

A species that may become endangered.

400

Define invasive species

species that are not native to a habitat and can out-compete native species in an ecosystem

500

How have animals adapted so that they don't all compete for the same limiting factors?

Feed off of different areas in the environment so that they don't need to fight.

500

Why are frees parasites?

They get onto a host and harm them.

500

Explain how a mature community forms from a pioneer species

Pioneer species grow. Animals or erosion bring seeds into the area. If the seeds grow to mature plants, new organisms will start to come into the area. Over time, more organisms will inhabit and the ecosystem will flourish. 

500

Explain how the keystone species discussed in class impacted its environment.

Without the gray wolf, elk and coyote populations increased. Beavers virtually disappeared because the elk were eating them. Once they were reintroduced, coyote numbers decreased and beavers re-appeared. 
500

What impact do the feral pigs have on their environment; why are they so "invasive?"

transfer parasites to humans or livestock, hurt the habitats in the savannah or forests