Measuring distribution and abundance 23.5 Flashcards

1
Q

Why would you need to measure the distribution and abundance of organisms?

A

To measure the biodiversity

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2
Q

What is distribution?

A

Distribution is where organisms are found within an ecosystem

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3
Q

Why is distribution uneven?

A

Organisms will all live where their abiotic and biotic favour them, so where they have the bets chance of survival and where predation is low

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4
Q

How could you measure the distribution of organisms?

A

A line or belt transect can be used where you lay down a line or belt and take samples at regular intervals

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5
Q

Why is a belt transect better than a line transect?

A

Because it provides more information, you mark two parallel lines and take samples within that rectangular area. A line transect is just a sample at intervals on a line

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6
Q

What type of sampling are line and belt transects?

A

Systematic sampling because it’s non-random and it uses a specific system.

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7
Q

Why is systematic sampling better than random sampling in this scenario?

A

Because it can allow scientists to study how abiotic factors affect different areas and how this affects the distribution of the species.

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8
Q

What is abundance?

A

The number of organisms present within an area of an ecosystem at a certain time

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9
Q

Why can abundance change easily?

A

Birth and immigration increase it Death and emigration decrease it

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10
Q

What is the definition of population?

A

Population is a group of similar organisms in a given area.

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11
Q

Why can you rarely count a population and what do you do instead?

A

Populations can rarely be counted because it is too time-consuming, there may be too many organisms or it could damage the environment. Instead, you use sampling

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12
Q

Why can sampling never be completely accurate and how do you increase its accuracy?

A

It can’t be completely accurate as you are only looking at a small selection of the population, it probably won’t be completely representative. The greater your sample size, the more accurate it will be as it’s a closer representation

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13
Q

How do you measure plant abundance?

A

You place quadrats randomly and count the number of organisms inside of them.

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14
Q

The formula for plant abundance

A

Estimated pop no = number of individuals in sample / area of a sample (m^2)

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15
Q

How do you measure animal abundance?

A

You cannot use quadrats so you can use the capture, mark, release recapture technique or pooters, sweep nets etc…

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16
Q

What is the capture-mark-release recapture technique?

A

-You capture as many individuals as you can in your sample area - You tag them or mark them - You release them back into their habitat and allow them to redistribute themselves - You recapture as many as possible and record the number of marked and unmarked individuals - Use the lincoln index to calculate pop size

17
Q

What are the limitations of the capture-mark-release-recapture technique

A
  • Doesn’t represent the entire population - Doesn’t take into account birth or death - Mark could rub off - Makes animals more visible to predators
18
Q

What is the lincoln index?

A

Estimated pop size = no of organisms in sample 1 x no of organisms in sample 2 / no of recaptured

19
Q

How do you calculate the biodiversity once you have found the pop size?

A

You use the Simpsons Index of Diversity which tells you the biodiversity present

20
Q

What is the Simpsons index of biodiversity?

A

D = 1 - sum (n/N) squared D= diversity index N = total organsisms in ecosystem n = no of individuals of each species

21
Q

What do the results of simpsons index represent?

A

If its 0, there’s no biodiversity present, if its 1 there is infinite biodiversity present