Lecture 1 - Ecology Flashcards

1
Q

What is ecology?

A

The study of interactions between organisms and their environment.

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2
Q

Name the hierarchy of scales at which ecology can be studied.

A

Macromolecules - Cells - Tissues - Organs - Organism - Population - Community - Ecosystem - Biosphere.
Ecologists tend to skip to the organism level however not always as DNA can be studied in ecology.

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3
Q

Why is the hierarchy subjective?

A

The levels are hard to define.

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4
Q

What is a biological population?

A

A group of individuals of the same species in a given area that have the potential to interbreed and interact.

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5
Q

What is a community?

A

A unit of the natural World comprising of 2 or more different species, in a given area at a given time.

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6
Q

What is a statistical population?

A

Individuals within a specified time and space about which inferences are to be made.

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7
Q

What is an ecosystem?

A

The biological community together with it’s physical environment.

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8
Q

Why are populations not evenly distributed?

A

Due to factors such as:

  • Immigration and emigration
  • Resource availability
  • Natural barriers eg. mountains
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9
Q

Endemic species

A

A species which only occurs in one place.

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10
Q

Example of a metapopulation.

A

Edith’s checkerspot butterfly

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11
Q

What problems occur with categorising communities?

A
  1. How do we know where a community begins and ends?

2. It’s a unit categorised by humans and therefore lacks relevance to the organisms within it.

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12
Q

What is the biological species concept?

A

“Species are groups of actually or potentially interbreeding natural populations which are reproductively isolated from other such groups.” Mayr 1942

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13
Q

State the problems with the biological species concept?

A
  • asexual reproduction
  • fossils
    physical barriers to organisms interbreeding
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14
Q

State the other species concepts.

A
  • recognition: do they recognise each other?

- morphological: do they look the same, display the same behaviour?

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15
Q

What are the problems with the morphological species concept?

A

Organisms that look similar but are different species and organisms that look different but are members of the same species.

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16
Q

What is the ecological species concept?

A

A group of individuals adapted to a particular niche.

17
Q

What are methods of species identification?

A
  • often based on morphology
  • animal behaviour
  • molecular biology
  • cell biology
  • ecology (abiotic + biotic interactions etc)
18
Q

Autotrophic organisms

A

Can synthesise their own resources

19
Q

Heterotrophic organisms

A

Consume/use the resources produced by autotrophs

20
Q

Competitive exclusion principle

A

Absolute competitors cannot occupy the same niche

21
Q

Fundamental niche

A

The widest range of conditions a population could occupy in the absence of competition, in reality this range is much smaller