Species, courtship, classification, and biodiversity Flashcards

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1
Q

What is a species?

A

can interbreed to produce fertile offspring, and will be similar to each other while being different to other species

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2
Q

When can hybrid offspring be produced?

A

when different species (rarely!) can interbreed to produce hybrid offspring, but these are infertile- such as a mule, from a horse and a donkey

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3
Q

Why are hybrid offspring infertile?

A

they have an odd diploid number

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4
Q

What is courtship?

A

animal activity that results in mating and reproduction. it may involve chemical, visual, or auditory stimuli

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5
Q

Why is courtship important?

A

-enables animals to recognise own species
-allows animals to approach each other without triggering aggression
-enables choice of a strong and healthy mate that is capable and ready for breeding

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6
Q

What is a sign stimulus?

A

something that indicates that an animal is ready to mate

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7
Q

What is the classification system we use?

A

the phylogenetic system

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8
Q

What is phylogeny?

A

the study of how closely related organisms are in terms of evolution

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9
Q

Why is the phylogenetic system described as a hierarchy?

A

-it has groups contained within larger groups
-with NO OVERLAP between groups

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10
Q

What are organisms grouped according to?

A

-common features
-common ancestors

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11
Q

Why do we need a system?

A

to understand relationships between organisms and to keep track of changes

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12
Q

What are some evidences for classification?

A

evolutionary history, similar features, biochemical differences, number and form of chromosomes, fossil records

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13
Q

What is the order of the taxa?

A

(Domain)
Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus/genera
Species

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14
Q

How do you know the scientific/binomial name of an organism?

A

the Genus species

-should be italicised/underlined and the genus should always have a capital letter

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15
Q

If organisms are part of the same order, what other taxonomic groups are they also all part of?

A

anything ABOVE order- domain/kingdom/phylum/class

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16
Q

What is a phylogenetic group?

A

a group that has common ancestors and common features

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17
Q

Explain genome sequencing to classify evolutionary relationships

A

-you can determine entire base sequences of an organisms DNA, which you can then compare to the DNA base sequence of another organism to see how closely related they are
-closely related organisms will have a higher % of similarity in their DNA base sequence

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18
Q

Explain comparing amino acid sequences in classifying evolutionary relationships

A

-proteins are made from amino acids
-the sequence of amino acids in a protein is coded for by the base sequence in DNA
-therefore more closely related organisms have similar DNA sequences so more similar amino acid sequences in their proteins

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19
Q

How can you test for DNA similarity?

A

by combining one DNA strand from each species-
-heat to break the hydrogen bonds between bases and separate strands
-mixing and cooling of the strands will let new hydrogen bonds reform between complimentary bases
-non-complimentary bases will not be able to join
-then you can measure the temperature required to separate the strands again
-this is because in hybrid strands where the two species are closely related, they have a more similar base sequence, so there are more bases that are complementary and form hydrogen bonds
-hence a higher temperature is needed to separate the two strands again

-hybrid strands where the two species are not closely related, they have fewer bases that are complementary so less hydrogen bonds so require lower temperatures to separate the two strands again

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20
Q

Explain immunological comparisons in classifying evolutionary relationships

A

-similar proteins will bind the same antibodies, just one is less efficient if they don’t fit quite as well
-proteins that bind antibodies will often form a precipitate in solution, so the more antibodies a protein binds, the more precipitate will form, so the density of the precipitate can be used to determine how similar the two proteins are, so how similar their base sequence DNA and ultimately how closely related the two species are

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21
Q

What is biodiversity?

A

a measure of how varied an ecosystem is

22
Q

What is species diversity?

A

a measure of how many different species are present in an area, and how many individuals of these species there are

23
Q

What is a population?

A

a group of organisms of the same species living in a habitat

24
Q

What is a community?

A

all the populations of all the species within a particular habitat

25
Q

What is species richness?

A

the number of different types of species in a particular area. the greater the number of species, the richer the area

26
Q

What is species evenness?

A

this is a comparison of the size of the population of different species in a particular area

27
Q

Species diversity within an area increases as…

A

both species richness and species evenness increases

28
Q

What is Simpson’s index of diversity, and what does each part stand for?

A

D = N(N-1) / Σ n(n-1)

N = add all the members of all species together
n = number of organisms in a particular species

find out N by adding all species numbers together
find out Σ n(n-1) by adding a new column, finding n(n-1) for each species, then add them all to place on the bottom of the formula

29
Q

What is the lowest possible value of D and what does this mean?

A

lowest possible value of D is 1, and the larger the value of D the greater the diversity

30
Q

What is conservation?

A

the study and protection of biodiversity and natural resources

31
Q

What two measurements are needed to calculate biodiversity index?

A

number of individuals of each species, total number of species

32
Q

Why is protecting biodiversity important?

A

-prevents extinction of species
-some species may be useful for medicine or agriculture

33
Q

What is the difference between the two measures of biodiversity?

A

species richness only measures the number of different species, not the number of individuals in each one

34
Q

Why is the index of diversity more useful in measuring biodiversity?

A

-also measures the number of individuals in a species
-this is important as some species may be present but only in very low numbers

35
Q

How does deforestation affect biodiversity?

A

-decreases variety of plants
-decreases habitats
-decreases variety of food sources

so the biodiversity is decreased

36
Q

How can we reduce the impact of deforestation?

A

sustainable logging/ carefully choosing which trees to cut down and replacing trees cut down

37
Q

How does planting hedgerows affect biodiversity?

A

-increased variety of plants
-more habitats
-increased variety of food sources

so the biodiversity is increased

38
Q

How does monoculture affect biodiversity?

A

-decreases biodiversity as only one species of crop is being grown
-less variety of habitats and food sources
-more susceptible to being wiped out entirely by disease

so the biodiversity is decreased

39
Q

How does the use of pesticides affect biodiversity?

A

-excessive use of pesticides contaminate the surrounding soil and water sources which causes a loss in biodiversity

40
Q

How can we combat the problems with monoculture?

A

yearly crop rotation

41
Q

How can we combat the problems with pesticides?

A

use biopesticides, like ladybirds, as they are non-toxic and effective, safe and sustainable

42
Q

State 4 biological advantages of farmers planting hedgerows

A

-increases biodiversity
-greater amounts and more varied food sources
-reduced need to pesticides
-provides more habitats

43
Q

Why is monoculture beneficial to farmers?

A

less farming equipment needed
cheaper food

44
Q

Why are pesticides beneficial to farmers?

A

raises productivity per hectare by keeping crops healthier and more protected

45
Q

Describe how you would collect a random sample of….?

A

-use a computer to generate random coordinates
-place quadrat in that random location
-collect all of ….. in the quadrat

46
Q

How could you estimate the number of …. in an area?

A

-split areas into squares using a grid
-use a computer to randomly generate coordinates
-place quadrats in this random location
-count the number of …. in the quadrat present
-figure out the mean per quadrat

47
Q

Why is it important that data is collected from random samples?

A

to remove bias

48
Q

Why is it important to use a large number of samples?

A

-to ensure the sample was representative
-to produce a more reliable mean
-allows you to see anomalous results more easily

49
Q

Why does biodiversity increase?

A

more varieties of plants
so more habitats
so more varieties of food sources

50
Q

Explain when you would use different types of stats tests

A

chi squared- categories
t- test- means
spearman rank- correlation

51
Q
A