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Ecology final

Ecology

Relationships between organisms and their environment (both biotic and abiotic)

Natural history

Predecessor to ecology (knowledge of organisms in thier environment, and describing patterns)

population ecology

studies ecological factors that influence structure and dynamics of a group of organisms

Community ecology

studies how interactions between species influence each other's distribution, abundance, structure, and demography

Ecosystem ecology

studies how entire ecosystems work through the biotic and abiotic components of the system. (nutrient cycling & energy flow)

Landscape ecology

studies ecological process of large heterogenous areas with multiple ecosystems present. Scale is very important

Macroecology

Studies the interactions between organisms and environment at large scales (biomes). E.g latitudinal changes in species richness and

global ecology

ecological study of the entire biosphere. Includes climate change, plate tectonics, extinction events and El Nino

Ecological community

2 or more species inhabit the same geographical area

Eltonian Niche

an animals place in its relationship to food and enemies (biotic environment)

ecological niche

an organisms ecological niche refers to the biotic and abiotic factors required to allow the organism to thrive

Fundamental niche

an organisms potential niche

Realized niche

the organisms actual niche that can be occupied by the organism (they can only thrive in the actual niche)

Ecological community

group or association of populations of two ir more different species occupying the same geographic area at a particular time

Interdependent and Independent distribution

Interdependent: community where species depend on each other in order to exist (common in harsh environments)

Independent: Communities where species don't depend on each other to exist; species co-exist bc they have similar adaptations and habitat reqs

Bottom-up control

Nutrients control plant numbers, which control herbivore abundance, which control pred numbers, the availability of prey limits predator abundance

Top-down control

Predation limits herbivore abundance and structure the community

Kick-it-and-see ecology

Field manipulation on ecological systems that help ius understand ecological processes

How is community structure shaped

By the top predator in the ecological community (keystones species)

Trophic Cascades

Top-down: addition or removal of a predator influences lower trophic levels

Bottom-up: when primary producers or herbivores influence higher trophic levels

Mesopredator release

populations of medium-sized predators start rapidly increasing after removal of the top carnivores. Changes ecosystem structure

Keystone species

unusually strongly interacting species that have a huge effect on community structure than predicted by their abundance/biomass

Ecosystem engineers

Organisms that directly or indirectly modulate the availability of resources by other species by causing physical state changes in biotic or abiotic materials (modify, maintain, and create habitats) e.g Beavers modify water with dams

Mutualistic keystone

Species that have a mutualistic relationship with other species in the system and have a large impact

keystone prey

preferred prey species that can maintain its abundance in the face of predation (via high reproduction)

Disturbance

temporary change in environmental conditions that causes a pronounced change in an ecosystem. Can be natural or human caused, and can vary greatly in temporal and spatial scale. May leave ecosystem in altered but stable state

Ecological succession

Gradual change in plant and animal communities in an area following the creation of new substrate or disturbance

Primary succession

Succession of newly exposed geological substrates not significantly modified by organisms (newly formed volcanic lava)

Secondary succession

Succession where a disturbance has destroyed a community without destroying the soil (forest succession after fire). The system often (not always) returns to its state pre-disturbance

Resistance

Ability of a community or ecosystem to maintain its structure in the face of potential disturbance

Resilience

Ability of a community or ecosystem to return to its original structure following a disturbance

Life History

Significant features of an organism's life cycle, particularly relating to survival and reproduction

Life history strategy

specific suite of traits shaped by natural selection to maximise reproductive output (not conscious decision making)

Trade offs

Organisms cannot maximize all traits simultaneously

Recruitment

The addition of new individuals to a population through survival of juveniles to a critical life stage (eg. sexual maturity)

Semelparity

Reproducing only once per lifetime. They have large litters, smaller offspring and little parental care

Iteroparity

Repeated reproduction. They have smaller litters, larger offspring and more parental investment

Parental Investment

Any investment by a parent in individual offspring increases the offsprings chance of survival at the cost of future reproduction for the parent (trade off)

R selected species

- Fast life history
- Reproduces early

- Produces many offspring

- Unpredictable environments

K selected species

- Delayed reproduction
- Produce few offspring

- Reproduce often

- Predictable environments

Nutrient and Elemental Recycling

All common elements have global cycles that include biotic & abiotic factors

What causes elements to move from one pool to another

Ecological actions and chemical processes, the rate at which this happens can take minutes to millenia

Nutrient cycling at local and global levels

Nutrient cycling at the local level occurs largely through the actions of the decomposers

Nutrient cycling at the global level occurs largely through geological processes, such as atmospheric circulation, erosion and weathering

Nutrients

Elements req for development, maintenance and reproduction in living organisms

Nutrient cycling

The transformation, movement and reuse of nutrients within and among ecosystems

Biogeochemical cycle

The path atoms take from the living (biotic) to the non-living (abiotic) world and back again

Macro and micronutrients

Macro: essential elements req in LARGE concentrations within ecosystem (oxygen, carbon, hydrogen)

Micro: Essential elements that are req in SMALL concentrations

Nutrient cycling is important because...

physiological importance and relative scarcity influence on primary production

Nutrient cycling in terrestrial vs aquatic ecosystems

Terrestrial: plants bridge the separation between the zone of primary productivity and zone of decomposition

Aquatic: no direct link between the zone if primary productivity and decomposition

How does energy travel through ecosystems

Energy makes a one way trip through ecosystems while essential nutrients may be recycled

Nutrient pools in terrestrial vs aquatic

For both:
- Organic pool: consists of living organisms and their detritus

- The available nutrient pool: consists of nutrients held to the surface of soil particles

- Nutrients that are held in soils or roots that are unavailable to living organisms


Terrestrial only:

- The air which can be found in the atmosphere or in the ground

What is the main path of all nutrients (not including CO2 and O2)

From the soil through the roots of producers

Most abundant nutrient in atmosphere, and what is the atmosphere a source of?

Nitrogen, inorganic nutrients

Most abundant nutrient in marine sediments

Phosphorus

What can moderate rates of elemental cycling and move elements across ecosystems

Activities of animals

Phosphorus cycle in an ecosystem

Follows a sedimentary cycle
1. Tectonic uplift and exposure of phosphorus bearing rocks due to the forces of weathering

2. Physical erosion and chemical weathering of rocks producing soils and providing dissolved and particulate phosphorus to rivers

3. Riverine transport of phosphorus through lakes and oceans

4. Sedimentation of phosphorus associated with organic and mineral matter and burial in sediments

Nitrogen cycle in an ecosystem

- Living things cannot use atmospheric nitrogen and are dependent on nitrogen fixing bacteria

Nitrogen fixation: nitrogen is assimilated into organic compounds (ammonia)


Nitrification: Bacteria in the soil transforms ammonia into nitrates and nitrites


Ammonificstion: Conversion of nitrates back into ammonia by bacteria and plants


Denitrification: Return of nitrogen gas back into the atmosphere by certain bacteria

Landscape

A heterogenous area consisting of distinct patches organized into a mosaic-like pattern. Each patch is referred to as a "landscape element" that we can map and quantify.

* Not defined by specific sizes but a spatially heterogenous area relevent to the study

Grain

Size of sample, unit or resolution

Extent

Size of the study area

Corridor

Narrow strips of land which differ from the matrix on either side. Corridors may connect patched

Kinds of corridors

Linear: continuous uniform strip connecting patches

Stepping stone corridor: patches of land facilitating dispersal


Landscape Mosaic corridor: Patches connected by a mosaic of interconnected habitats across a permeable matrix


Habitat corridor: linear landscape element that provides for survivorship, natality and movement


Facilitated movement corridor: linear landscape that allows for survivorship and movement but not necessarily natality

Can humans unintenionally create corridors?

Yes, ex. roadwork connecting two patches

Network

An interconnected system of corridors

Circutscape

A tool for evaluating connectivity across the landscape

Matrix

"Background ecological system" of a landscape with a high degree of connectivity (opposite to patches)

Mosaic

Pattern of patches, corridors, matrix

Fragmentation

A reduction in the connectivity of a landscape mosaic

Conspecifics

The same species

What happens when there's an absence of juveniles and more older numbers of an organim?

Decline of population

Key biological processed often change with

Age

When are geometric, exponential, and logistic growth models used?

Geometric: Abundance of resources and discrete generations

Exponential: Used when there is an abundance of resources and overlapping generations


Logistic: When there is limited resources and overlapping generations

Simpsons Diversity Index

Smallest value is 1
Max value is = to species richness

Species richness

The number of species found in a given community or study area

Shannon Diversity Index

Min value of 0
Max value = natural log of species richness

Evenness (Pielou's J)

Ranges from 0 to 1, lower J value indicates lower evenness

Allopatric and Sympatric

Allopatric: Just one species alone
Sympatric: Multiple species occupying an area

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