Botany_Invasives_and_Biomes Flashcards

1
Q

Pollination Ecology

A

-wind
-bee
-bird
-butterfly
-beetle
-fly
-moth
-bat

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2
Q

Wind pollinated

A

– Grasses and trees
– Flowers drab, small

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3
Q

Bee pollinated

A

– Fragrant
– Blue or yellow, not red

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4
Q

Bird pollinated

A

red

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5
Q

Butterfly pollinated

A

Blue, yellow, sometimes orange

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6
Q
  1. Beetle pollinated
A

– Strong, spicy, fruity odors
– White or dull in color

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7
Q
  1. Fly pollinated
A

– Dull red and smell like rotten meat = carrion
flowers
– E.g. Stapelia

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8
Q
  1. Moth pollinated
A

white, fragrant, open at night

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9
Q
  1. Bat pollinated
A

Dull flowers that open at night

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10
Q

Rafflesia arnoldii

A
  • Largest flower in world,
    – c. 1 meter in diameter
  • Parasitic plant with no leaves, stems, roots
  • Sometimes called the corpse flower (smells like
    rotten meat)
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11
Q

Purple Loosestrife:

A

Wetlands Menace
* Native to Eurasia; introduced into US in early 1800’s
and has spread through much of North America
* Outcompetes natives and provides poorer habitat for
native wildlife.
* Noxious weed in many states (PA Included).
* Up to 3 millions seeds per plant per year; lacks
natural predators
* Releasing insects (beetles) from Europe for biological
control

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12
Q

Kudzu

A

PA Noxious Weed
* Member of legume family; native to Asia
* Introduced into US in 1876 in Philadelphia
* Encouraged as ornamental, forage crop, and
for erosion control
* Spreads rapidly by runners, rhizomes, and
vines; lacks natural predators
* Hard to remove deep roots

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13
Q

Mile-a-minute

A

= PA Noxious Weed
* Native to India and Eastern Asia
* Established from a PA nursery site in the
1930’s
* Can grow up to 6 inches a day.
* Produces lots of seeds.
* Chokes out other vegetation
* Wear gloves to remove.

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14
Q

Asiatic Bittersweet

A

Serious threat
* Vine native to Asia; introduced into the US in the
mid-1800’s as an ornamental plant.
* Overgrows other vegetation, strangling shrubs
and tree limbs.
* Produces many seeds dispersed by birds.
* Also reproduces by stolons (above ground stems)
and by rhizomes.
* Plants should be removed before fruiting.
* Hawk Mt. has been using goats to control it.

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15
Q

Japanese Stilt Grass: Serious threat

A
  • Annual grass native to Asia and India
  • Found growing in Tennessee in early 1900’s
  • Used as packing material for imported porcelain
    and probably introduced that way.
  • Grows rapidly following a disturbance.
  • Spreads by seed and by rooting of stem segments.
    One plant can produce 1000 seeds.
  • Best to remove by hand before seed production.
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16
Q

Japanese Barberry

A
  • Native to Japan
  • Started planting it as ornamental in late 1800’s
  • Was promoted as it is resistant wheat stem rust that infects native
    barberry.
  • Grows in forests, wetlands, pastures, fields (and on the KU
    campus)
  • Outcompetes native species that provide superior wildlife habitat
    and food; habitat for ticks.
  • Reproduces by seeds spread by birds and small mammals as well
    as by root fragments.
  • Remove before seed set.
17
Q

Tundra

A

=Almost treeless (tiny trees up to 2 feet tall)
* Dwarf shrubs, sedges, grasses, lichens, mosses, flowering
perennials
* Permafrost (permanently frozen soil) restricts root growth
* Average of less than 10 inches per year precipitation
* Short growing season
* Very fragile

18
Q

Taiga
(e.g. in Alaska)

A
  • From Russian, means wet forest
  • Northern coniferous or boreal forest
  • Located south of the tundra
  • Harsh winters
  • 10 to 39 inches of precipitation per year
  • Evergreens: spruce, fir, larch, and pine
  • Some birch, aspen, and willow in wetter areas
    – Adapted to cold and permafrost
19
Q

Temperate Deciduous Forest

A
  • Mostly on large continents in Northern hemisphere
  • 20 to 65 inches of precipitation per year on average
  • Appalachian Region before European colonization
20
Q

Mountain and Coastal Forest
(Coniferous Forests)

A
  • E.g. Pacific northwest and California coast
  • Very tall trees (e.g. Coastal redwoods)
  • Rainfall can be > 100 inches per year
  • Many species well adapted to forest fires
21
Q

Grassland
(Prairies)

A
  • Found in the interior of continents
  • Rainfall from 10 to 39 inches per year
  • Prairies were home to herds of buffalo
  • Many of our prairies have been destroyed
    – They have been turned into fields of corn and
    wheat
22
Q

Desert
(e.g. Sonoran Desert)

A
  • Less than 5 inches of rain per year
  • Hot days, cool nights
  • CAM plants
  • Succulent plants
  • Perennials from bulbs
  • Annuals germinate after rainfall