Definitions
Pleistocene Re-wilding
Limitations
Apex Predators
Ecosystem Processes
100

the top predator in a system

apex predator

100

When did the Pleistocene event occur?

11,000 years ago

100

Why do some people not approve of moving modern species to Pleistocene re-wild North America?

They are not the same species as the ones that went extinct during the Pleistocene

100

What has caused most of the apex predator extinctions?

Humans

100

Loss of herbivores causes an increased risk of what in certain areas?

Wildfires

200

Conserving the apex predator specifically those that eat other animals

Carnivore conservation

200

Where would Pleistocene Re-wilding occur?

North America

200

What are people concerned about spreading once new megafauna are introduced?

Disease

200

This foreign individual becomes the apex predator of a system after being introduced

Invasive speices

200

What was the effect of predator loss on a wooded island?

"natural" deforestation

300

a food source for another speices

Prey species

300

Where would species for Pleistocene re-wilding come from?

Asia and Africa

300

what is the major economical limitation on introducing elephants and lions into uninhabited areas of the Great Plains where their ancestors once lived?

Fences

300

_______ has been considered the main role of apex predators for over a century

ecosystem shaping

300

The loss of phytoplankton in lakes turned them from being carbon ____ to carbon _____, leading to an impact on ______?

sinks; sources; the atmosphere

400

the impacts of consumers on their prey, influences that trickle down the food chain/tropic system is called, what?

trophic cascades

400

What species would be able to control the woody plants growing in the desert?

Camels

400

What is an impact that introducing new species could have on existing species regarding habitat/food?

unintentional competition, trophic cascade

400

What apex predator example given increased the nutrients in the soil and plant life once reintroduced

The wolves of Yellowstone

400

Why are certain species (like baboons) more likely to contribute to the spread of disease?

they form very large aggregations (troops), high contact with humans

500

loss of upper trophic position consumers

Trophic downgrading

500

The reintroduction of what species will promote grasslands in the Great Plains region if they were to be introduced

Elephant

500

what is the main habitat limitation that Donlan's Pleistocene re-wilding has faced?

The habitats are not the same as they were during the Pleistocene

500

Why can it be hard to see the impact of apex species loss?

Generation times and life spans can be long, the area can be too large to see immediate impacts.

500

Why do some introduced species cause soil nutrients to decrease?

alter plant community composition by scaring away other animals (birds)