Natural Causes of Population Decline and Extinciton Flashcards

1
Q

What is the Theory of Island Biogeography?

A

The number of species of a given taxon represents a dynamic equilibrium between the rate of immigration of new colonizing species and the rate of extinction of previously established ones.

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2
Q

What is an Island characterized by?

A
  • Various Sizes
  • Various Distances
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3
Q

What is the Species-Area curve?

A

A tool used to estimate biodiversity in a habitat, where number of species on an island or patch increases as area increases.

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4
Q

What is the equation for the species-area curve?

A

S = cA (z-superscript)

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5
Q

What are the two factors of Island Biogeography?

A

Island Size & Island Isolation

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6
Q

Larger islands have greater range of ________.

A

Microhabitats

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7
Q

Near islands are more likely to be ___________.

A

Colonized

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8
Q

_______ island populations are more likely to go extinct.

A

Small

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9
Q

True or False: As the number of resident species increases the number of new immigrants decreases because there are fewer new potential immigrants from the source pool.

A

True.

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10
Q

Given a finite resource base, as number of species increases, population size of individual species must _________.

A

decline

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11
Q

What theory does the Turnover Rate apply to?

A

Theory of Island Biogeography

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12
Q

What is the Turnover Rate?

A

The rate at which species are lost and new ones gained.

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13
Q

Define the Rescue Effect:

A

Extinction of a dwindling population may be slowed or halted through immigration of new individuals.

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14
Q

What is turnover rate influenced by?

A
  1. Island Size (Patchy)
  2. Nearness to other sources immigrants
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15
Q

What are some types of islands?

A
  • Mountaintops
  • Bogs
  • Ponds
  • Dunes
  • Insects and their parasites
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16
Q

What is the rule of thumb in the Theory of Island Biogeography?

A

A tenfold increase in area leads to a doubling of the number of species.

17
Q

Define a Metapopulation:

A

If they are far enough apart to exist as distinct, partially isolated sub-populations each possessing its own population dynamics, linked only through dispersal (emigration/immigration).

18
Q

_____ Effect: The loss of genetic variation that occurs when a new population is established by a very small number of individuals from a larger population.

A

Founder Effect

19
Q

Define the Genetic Bottleneck:

A

A sharp reduction in the size of a population due to environmental events such as famines, earthquakes, floods, fires, disease, and droughts; or human activities such as specicide, widespread violence or intentional culling.

20
Q

What is an example of a genetic bottleneck?

A

Elephant Seals

21
Q

Define Random Genetic Drift:

A

The changes that occur in the frequency of alleles in a population due to random chance.

22
Q

Define Inbreeding:

A

The breeding between close relatives.

23
Q

What are the 4 genetic aspects of Metapopulations?

A
  1. Founder Effect
  2. Genetic Bottleneck
  3. Random Genetic Drift
  4. Inbreeding
24
Q

Define the Minimum Viable Population:

A

The minimum number of individuals that will ensure the persistence of a metapopulation for some set period of time (100 years commonly used).

25
Q

What is the 50 / 500 rule for an effective population size?

A

An effective population sizeof 500 is required to offset the effects of genetic drift while a minimum of 50 is needed to avoid inbreeding depression.

26
Q

What is an effective population size?

A

the number of breeding adults that pass gametes on to the next generation, not just those capable of breeding.

27
Q

What are some limitations of a minimum viable population?

A

smaller population sizes are at risk for extinction in a shorter period of time.

28
Q

PRACTICE THE EXTINCTION VORTEX

A

Week 1: Slide 26

29
Q

Define a Niche:

A

A multidimensional space occupied by a species, defined by position along physical, environmental and temporal gradients.

30
Q

What is an example of a niche?

A

Crayfish in MB, its like having a McDonalds in a mall, you won’t often see two in the same place, one will outperform the other.

31
Q

Explain competition in terms of a niche:

A

If two species occupy the same niche, one will eventually eliminate the other through competition.

32
Q

What is Resource Portioning?

A

Similar species usually differ in some habit or feeding requirement that allows them to co-exist.

33
Q

True or False: Disease and Parasitism often work in concert with other factors.

A

True, it either weakens a population so other factors (pollution, climate change, etc.) have a greater impact

34
Q

What type of case is the Chestnut Blight?

A

Disease / Parasitism, a fungus introduced accidentally to NY around 1900 from Asia.

35
Q

What are the Wood Bison an example of?

A

Hybridization