B6.1-2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is biodiversity?

A

the variety of living organisims in a habitat

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2
Q

How have humans affected biodiversity (4 Reasons)

A
  • Deforestation
  • Agriculture (pesticides, monoculture, fertilisers)
  • Pollution (algae growth due to fertilisers, water eutrophication)
  • Hunting and Overfishing (loss in numbers/extinction)
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3
Q

What are 5 ways to conserve biodiversity?

A
  1. Captive breeding programs (then reintroduce them into the wild)
  2. Ecotourism — educate public and use money to fund habitats and poacher patrol
  3. Local Agreements - nature reserves and national parks, restrict human access
  4. Seed Banks - so you can grow the plants back after extinction
  5. International Agreements - WWF, etc
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4
Q

Evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of ecotourism

A

Advantages:
- money generated can be used to fund conservation efforts for the habitat
- poacher patrols can be funded
Disadvantages:
- by drawing more people to the place, there will probably be more trampling than before
- pollution from cars and human infrastructure for tourists

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5
Q

Evaluate advantages and disadvantages of captive breeding programs

A

Advantages:
- they can stabilise populations of near extinct species
- they can reintroduced to the wild, increasing biodiversity
Disadvantages:
- they do not know how to hunt/ are not integrated with the wild
- there is difficulty finding suitable reintroduction sites

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6
Q

What is eutrophication?

A
  • fertilisers from the soil used too much
  • the rain causes it to run off into a nearby pond/lake
  • algae uses these fertilisers and grows rapidly
  • this blocks the lake from oxygen and photosynthesis that the organisms in the lake need
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7
Q

What is the capture - recapture method of sampling?

A
  • the animals in a certain sample area are trapped
  • you count them and mark them
  • come back after a suitable period of time to the same area
  • trap the animals
  • count them and see how many are marked
  • use this formula to find population size

Pop Size = Count1 x Count2 / No. in 2nd count that were tagged

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8
Q

What are 5 capturing methods?

A
  1. Pooter - air blowing for bugs
  2. Pitfall Trap
  3. Tree - Beating
  4. Sweep Net
  5. Kick Sampling
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9
Q

How can you test for water pollution in a river?

A
  • you can test the type of organisms up and downstream of the suspected pollutant
  • e.g stone nymphs need clean oxygenated water, but a sludgeworm does not
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10
Q

How can you detect air pollution?

A
  • lichen is very senstive to sulfur dioxide
  • you can test by seeing the concentration of lichens from a suspected pollutant
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11
Q

What are 5 threats to food security?

A
  1. Developing nations population increases
  2. Changing diets (e.g quinoa)
  3. New pests and pathogens
  4. Conflicts
  5. Drought/Flooding
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12
Q

How can you sustainably fish?

A
  • fishing quotas to allow pop to recover
  • bans on fishing in breeding season + ground
  • nets with larger gaps to allow offspring to escape
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13
Q

How are chickens intensively farmed?

A
  • they’re movement is restricted so biomass is optimised
  • they have antibiotics mixed in with their feed to stop illness
  • theyre kept in warm enclosures
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14
Q

How to maximise crop production?

A
  • maximise photosynthesis
  • use hydroponics
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15
Q

What are some negatives of intensive farming?

A
  1. Overuse of fertilisers which is not sustainable
  2. Pesticides and insecticides
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16
Q

What are some solutions to intensive farming?

A
  1. Manure/ Animal dung instead of fertilisers
  2. crop rotation so minerals in soil can regenerate
  3. biological control instead of pesticides
17
Q

What is selective breeding?

A

This is where humans artificially select the animals or plants they want to breed together so that the genes for a desired characteristic can remain in the population

18
Q

What are some problems with selective breeding?

A
  • Inbreeding is quite common so gene pool is limited
19
Q

What is genetic engineering?

A
  • a process which involves modifying an organisms genome by introducing a gene from another organism to give a desired characteristic
20
Q

What are some advantages and disadvantages of GM crops?

A
  • they increase the yield of the crop
  • they could make a whole new species/we dont know enough
21
Q

How do you produce GM insulin: 11 Steps

A
  1. You get an insulin producing donor cell
  2. You remove the DNA from the cell
  3. You identify the gene for insulin in the DNA
  4. You cut the gene out with a restriction enzyme
  5. You remove a plasmid from a bacteria
  6. You cut open the plasmid with another restriction enzyme
  7. You put in the insulin gene and a antibiotic resistance gene in the plasmid with a ligase enzyme (now called a recombinant plasmid)
  8. You put the plasmid back in the bacteria
  9. You allow the bacteria to reproduce via binary fission
  10. You put antibiotic on the bacteria and those that survive have had the plasmid successfully
  11. You extract the insulin once it has been produced and purify it and give it to diabetics
22
Q

What are some advantages and disadvantages of GM insulin

A

A:
- supply the growing demand of insulin
- less side effects as before pigs insulin was used, people disagreed with it
D:
- Only works if bacteria can produce the human insulin

23
Q

How do you produce a GM plant? 5 Steps

A
  1. Pest resistant gene from donor plant cut out using restriction enzyme
  2. gene is inserted into virus (used as a vector) using ligase enzyme into DNA
  3. this virus infects the host cell and inserts this gene into the hots DNA
  4. The transgenic resistant plant grows, which is then clone by scraping some meristem off
  5. This is then grown into a series of pest resistant plants