Biodiversity & Genetic Variation
Ecosystem Services
Island Biogeography
Generalist/Specialist
Succession
Life Strategies/Survivorship Curves
Random
100

This term describes the variety of different species. 

biodiversity

100

What are regulating services?

Natural processes that help regulate the environment (e.g., flood control, climate regulation).

100

Why did finches on the Galápagos Islands evolve to be specialists?

Limited food sources forced them to adapt to specific diets.

100

This type of species can live in many different environments and eat a variety of foods.

Generalist species

100

What are pioneer species? Give examples

First species to colonize new or disturbed environments (e.g., lichens, mosses, fungi, bacteria).

100

Which has more offspring, r-selected or K-selected species

r-selected species.

100

What is an ecosystem engineer and give an example.

organisms that create, change or destroy a habitat.

Example: Beavers 

200

a description of the distribution of abundance across the species in a community.

Species evenness

200

This type of service includes food, water, timber, and fiber. 

Provisioning services

200

Why are small island populations more prone to extinction?

They are more vulnerable to unpredictable events and have limited genetic variation.

200

This type of species has a very narrow niche and depends on specific food or habitat requirements.

Specialist Species

200

What is primary succession?

Succession starting from bare rock or lifeless area with no soil.

200

Which type provides more parental care: r-selected or K-selected?

K-selected species.

200

what is an indicator species?

A plant or animal that shows how healthy or unhealthy an environment is.

300

What can happen to populations with low genetic diversity?

They are more susceptible to disease and unpredictable events.

300

The natural water cycle and soil formation are examples of this type of service.

Supporting Services

300

The highest species richness will be found on _______________ islands ________________ the mainland.

Large, near

300

Cockroaches, and rats are examples of this type of species. (generalist/specialist)

Generalist Species

300

What is secondary succession?

Succession that occurs in areas where soil and nutrients remain after disturbance.

300

Fill in the survivorship curve types: (K/r-selected) (Type I, II, III)

Wolves

Rabbits

Mosquitoes

  • Wolves: K-selected, Type I

  • Rabbits: r-selected, Type III

  • Mosquitoes: r-selected, Type III

300

What is a keystone species and give an example

Key species in maintaining balance in the environment and determining structure. sea otter, wolf examples given in class

400

An event that drastically reduces the size of a population and what causes this?

population bottleneck-disease & natural disasters

400

Recreational, aesthetic, and spiritual benefits are considered this category of ecosystem services.

Cultural Services

400

The lowest species richness will be found on _______ islands _________ from the mainland

small, far

400

Pandas, which eat almost only bamboo, are an example of this type of species.

Specialist species

400

Describe the difference between early and late stages of succession what plant life would you see in both

  • Early: mosses, lichens, grasses

  • Late: shrubs, trees

400

Describe characteristics of r-selected species.

Small, many offspring, little to no parental care, short life span.

400

Hurricanes, floods, and wildfires are examples of this type of environmental disruption.

Natural disruptions

500

Why is high genetic diversity important for species survival in a changing environment?

It increases the chances that some individuals will have traits allowing them to adapt to changes, such as disease, climate shifts, or habitat loss, which helps the species survive over time.

500

Wetlands filtering pollutants is an example of this type of service.

Regulating Services

500

What can anthropogenic activity can cause habitat fragmentation?

freeways, housing developments, logging, agriculture, bike path, cattle raising

500

Why are specialists more vulnerable to environmental changes than generalists?

Because they rely on a narrow range of resources or conditions and cannot easily adapt.

500

Name 2 natural and 2 anthropogenic-caused event that can trigger secondary succession.


  • Human: clearcutting or human-caused forest fire

  • Natural: Forest fire (lightning), tornado

500

What type of survivorship curve do K-selected species follow?

Type I, because most individuals live long lives with few dying young due to high parental care.

500

Name 2 natural disruptions to the environment 

Ex. Wildfires, Hurricanes / Cyclones / Typhoons, Tsunamis, Earthquakes, Volcanic eruptions, Flooding, Drought, Disease outbreaks

600

What are stressors that can affect biodiversity?

Competition, predation, disease, global warming, humans, etc. 

600

Ecotoursim (Regulating, Provisioning, Cultural, etc)

Cultural 

600

Who is known as the father of the theory of evolution?

Charles Darwin

600

Classify the following species as a generalist or a specialist:

Raccoon

Salamander

Deer


  • Raccoon: Generalist

  • Salamander: Specialist

  • Deer: Generalist

600

Name 2 natural and 2 anthropogenic-caused event that can trigger Primary succession.

Anthropogenic: Nuclear explosion, mountain top removal

Natural: Glacier retreat, volcanic eruption

600

A population of sea turtles lays hundreds of eggs on the beach, but only a few survive to adulthood. Once adults, they can live for decades and reproduce many times over their lifespan.
Do sea turtles fit better as r-selected or K-selected species, and why is it complicated?

Sea turtles show a mix — they produce many offspring with little parental care (r-selected), but adults live long and reproduce repeatedly (K-selected). They don’t fit neatly into one category, showing the r/K continuum.

600

Name 2 anthropogenic disruptions to the environment

Logging, mining, Combustion of Fossil Fuels, Deforestation, Air pollution, Water pollution, Soil pollution, Climate change, Habitat destruction / Urbanization, Overfishing / Overhunting, Invasive species introduction, Resource overuse