Component 2.1 - Biodiversity Flashcards

1
Q

What is biodiversity?

A

1) the number of species

2) the number of organisms within each species

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2
Q

Give an example of how biodiversity can vary?

A

More plants grow at high light intensity, so a bright environment can support more herbivores and therefore more carnivores.

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3
Q

Where would you expect to find biodiversity hotspots?

A

Where there is more energy flowing through an ecosystem, like around the equator you ca produce more species and individuals

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4
Q

What are the three main reasons for increase or decrease of biodiversity?

A

1) Succession
2) Natural selection
3) Human influence

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5
Q

What is succession?

A

When a community of organisms change their habitat, this makes it more suitable for other species. This change in the composition of the community increases animal biodiversity but decreased plant biodiversity

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6
Q

When using simpsons index how do you know which of 2 areas have a higher biodiversity?

A

The higher the numerical value the higher the biodiversity.

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7
Q

What is polymorphism loci?

A

A genes position on a chromosome is its locus. If a locus has two or more alleles at frequencies greater than would occur by mutation alone is polymorphism.

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8
Q

How does the number of alleles alter biodiversity?

A

The larger the number of of alleles of one gene, the greater the biodiversity

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9
Q

What does the proportion of alleles suggest about biodiversity?

A

The wider the spread of alleles of a gene the larger the biodiversity of an area.

For example if there were 50% in one allele and 50% in others it would be a larger biodiversity than if it was 98% in one allele.

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10
Q

What is it called when there’s only one base that differs in DNA?

A

These single base differences are called SNPs - single nucleotide polymorphisms.

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11
Q

What is it called when regions of 20-40 base sequences vary many times in one strand of DNA?

A

These are called HVR - hyper variable regions.

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12
Q

How can DNA fingerprinting be used to investigate biodiversity?

A

Comparing the number and position of the bands in the DNA profiles, the more different SNPs and HVRs a population has, the more differences there are in DNA fingerprints, the greater the biodiversity.

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13
Q

How do you calculate Lincoln’s index?

A

number in 2nd sample x number in 1st sample / number marked in second sample

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14
Q

Why is DNA fingerprinting used to assess biodiversity at a molecular level?

A

Due to the difficulties involved in counting every single allele in a population

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15
Q

What factors are affecting biodiversity?

A

Genetic, environmental and human

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