Lecture 5 - Intraspecific interactions Flashcards

1
Q

Give examples of biotic interactions.

A
  • Competition
  • Commensalism (an association between two organisms in which one benefits and the other derives neither benefit nor harm)
  • Mutualism (an interaction between individuals of different species that results in positive (beneficial) effects on per capita reproduction and/or survival of the interacting populations)
  • Predation
  • Succession
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2
Q

Give the differences between sexual and asexual reproduction.

A

Asexual - offspring identical to parent (clone)
- genetic differences arise through mutation
Sexual - offspring combination of both parents - genetic variation

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3
Q

Give the different forms of asexual reproduction.

A
  • Budding
  • Fission
  • Fragmentation
  • Regeneration
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4
Q

Give the different forms of sexual reproduction.

A
  • Dioecious (separate sexes)
  • Hermaphrodite gametes (male and female gametes produced simultaneously or sequentially)
  • Hermaphrodite self-fertilisation
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5
Q

Methods in which organisms compete for a mate.

A
  • Behaviour
  • Chemistry
  • Sexual selection
  • Sexual competition
  • Mate guarding
  • Sperm competition
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6
Q

Sexual competition example.

A

Case study: Penis of male damselfly’s secondary genitalia has spines on it; used to scrape sperm of rival male out of female’s reproductive tract

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7
Q

Reproduction pairings.

A
Dioecious  No Pairing
plants  
Insects 
Fish and 
amphibia 
Birds and
 mammals  Pairing through                            reproductive  life
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8
Q

Intraspecific competition definition.

A

Between members of the same species.

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9
Q

Interspecific competition definition.

A

Between members of different species.

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10
Q

What is exploitation competition?

A

Organisms utilise limited common resources.

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11
Q

What is interference competition?

A

Organisms exploiting a resource which harms another in the process.

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12
Q

What is a resource depletion zone?

A

A zone which occurs within soil when a resource is used up faster than it can be replaced.

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13
Q

What occurs when a resource is not mobile.

A

The RDZ is narrow and there is no overlap of RDZ’s.

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14
Q

What occurs when the resource is mobile.

A

RDZ is wide, overlap occurs.

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15
Q

Territoriality.

A

Linked to population regulation
Individuals without a territory make little or no contribution to future generations.
E.g. oystercatchers

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16
Q

What is carrying capacity?

A

When birth rate = death rate of a population

The max number of individuals the environment can support

17
Q

When you plot intraspecific competition what kind of graph is displayed?

A

When plotted on a graph a sigmoidal growth curve is visible.

18
Q

What is an r selected species?

A

A species which reproduces rapidly, have a high r value eg. mice

19
Q

What Is a k selected species?

A

K selected species reproduce more slowly, populations close to carrying capacity eg. elephants