Lecture 1 CM Flashcards

1
Q

What are spatially biomes not in uniform with?

A

their composition or productivity

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2
Q

What causes spatial variation in biomes?

A
  • topography (mountains, river valleys, plains)
  • soil type (nutrient content, drainage, depth, structure, microbial activity)
  • exposure (proximity to dominant rain belts)
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3
Q

What are temporal changes?

A

type of change that will occur over a certain period of time to affect the stability of an ecosystem or habitat

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4
Q

Temporally, ecosystems are in a…

A

constant stae of flux due to micro and macro scale changes

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5
Q

Micro-scale changes

A
  • local extent
  • the duration is short-term, annual/seasonal cycle or longer
  • e.g. local flood
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6
Q

Macro-scale changes

A
  • regional extent
  • geological scale processes measured over > 10^5 or 10^6 years
  • e.g. climate change
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7
Q

Disturbance frequency

A
  • consistent over time
  • inversely proportional to magnitude
  • small disturbances are more frequent that larger disturbances
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8
Q

What do plants vary in and what does this determine?

A

plants vary in their ability to exploit the environment and this determines their relative competitive strength (r/K)

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9
Q

What do organisms with good/high K have?

A
  • very strong competitive ability
  • can dominate habitats (if you don’t disturb it at all)
  • e.g. oak (Quercus spp.)
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10
Q

What do organisms with good/high r have?

A
  • rapid intrinsic reproductive rate
  • e.g. dandelion (Taraxacum spp. )
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11
Q

Equation of intrinsic rate of growth

A

R = rN (K-N)/K

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12
Q

What is facilitation?

A

the dominance of one species provides ideal circumstances for other species to become newly established, including species whose competitive advantages are now ideally suited to the habitat.

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13
Q

What is succession?

A

a process where one group of organisms is gradually replaced by another due to biotic interactions between species and environmental changes

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14
Q

What dominates the 1st phase of succession?

A

species with optimal dispersal/colonisation (‘r’) traits

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15
Q

What dominates the later stages of succession?

A

species with optimal competitive (‘K’) traits.

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16
Q

Why does succession arise?

A
  • competition (interspecific, leads to dominance or loss/extinction)
  • facilitation (K-selected species depend on others (mainly r) to prepare habitiat)
17
Q

Ecosystem composition equation

A

f (Biome + Disturbance regime)

18
Q

When the effect of disturbance is catastrophic, destroying all life, what happens?

A

a pioneer stage is formed through the process of primary succession

19
Q

What is primary succession?

A

a new biological habitat is formed

20
Q

What is secondary succession?

A
  • occurs after a disturbance, alters a community greatly but doesn’t destroy all life
  • existing biological habitat is transformed
21
Q

What does intense disturbance cause?

A

at any stage it can reset the community to previous stages