Species Interactions ( Interspecific Or Multiple Species That Afe Different) Flashcards

1
Q

Competition interaction

A

(-/-) two or more species compete for a resource that is in short supply

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2
Q

Predation

A

(+/-) one species the predator kills and eats the other , prey.

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3
Q

Herbivory

A

(+/-) An herbivore eats part of a plant or alga

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4
Q

Parasitism

A

(+/-)

The parasite derived is nourishment from a second organism the host which is harmed

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5
Q

Mutualism

A

(+-)

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6
Q

Symbiosis

A

Individuals of two or more species live in close contact with one another different types 3 types. Commensalism
Mutualism
Parasitism

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7
Q

Commensalism

A

(+\0)
One species benefits while the other is unaffected by the other

This is the rarest symbiosis

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8
Q

Facilitation

A

(++) (+\0)

Helping out usually a plant that’s a facilitator and has an positive effect on the other without contact.

Not a symbiosis

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9
Q

Niche

A

Originally meant a recess associated with location

In biology it’s location and a complete set of resources that organisms uses and how much along with location

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10
Q

What do niches allow for species

A

For species to minimize competition

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11
Q

Realized niche

A

The actually niche they occupy

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12
Q

Fundamental niche

A

Could be bigger than the realized but depends on some sort of restriction

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13
Q

Cryptic coloration

A

Hard to understand is cryptic

Harder to see coloration in the environment so predators can’t find you

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14
Q

Aposematic okoratoon

A

Easily seen in their environment to indicate something. Can indicate that the species is dangerous like being poisonous. Intentionally standing out

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15
Q

Batesian mimicked

A

A harmless species mimics a harmful one. Like a harmless caterpillar mimicking the aposematic coloration of a venomous snake

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16
Q

Mullerian mimickry

A

Two unpalatable species mimic each other like things telling their predators that they don’t taste well

17
Q

What are the two components to biodiversity

A

Species richness- how many different species live there

Relative abundance -

18
Q

Greater biodiversity

A

Has more relative abundance of species. The ratio is better.

19
Q

Food chains

A

Trophic structure

20
Q

Food chains at the base must have

A

Producers that carbon fixate. So consumers can consume them for the organic material

21
Q

Primary consumers

A

Consumers that eat the producers

Secondary eat primary

Tertiary eat the secondary

Quaternary

22
Q

Food web

A

Food chains hooked together in different ways

More real cause organisms eat different things but at the base is producers

23
Q

Phytoplankton

A

Plankton that use photosynthesis and at the bottom of food chains/ web

24
Q

The top of food chains are

A

Are in the most precarious position because they rely on everything below it, so if something goes extinct they will be effected greatly

25
Q

The dominant species

A

The species that is more abundant.

Very inportant.

Can be good for others or bad but ecologically inportant

26
Q

Keystone

A

Of high importance. Hold things together like the top of an arch

For the health of the ecosystem.

The sphenoid bone in the cranium is considered the keystone

Usually not the dominant species

27
Q

Ecosystem engineer

A

Not conscious thought. Like a beaver that creates a dam. Transforms the ecosystem or changes the landscape

28
Q

Intermediate disturbance hypothesis

A

Disturbance- any unusual occurance in an ecosystem

Intermediate meaning not too low or high

Biodiversity will be maximized at an intermediate level of disturbance

Niches can open up with disturbance so other species can occupy those niches

29
Q

Succession

A

The process of recovery from major disturbances.

30
Q

Categories of succession

A

Primary and secondary.

Primary is for really bad disturbances so not many things. Soil is destroyed

Secondary. Not as bad and the soil is still in place

31
Q

Primary succession example constantly occurring is

A

Glacial movement that scrapes soil away and the things that were there are gone and must start over

32
Q

Lichens

A

Symbiotic relationship between fungus and microscopic producer on bare rock and produces soil. Soil contains particles of rock and organic materials from the producers. Allows plants to grow

33
Q

Human caused disturbances

A

There are becoming more intense

Overfishing and deforestation are examples

Trolling is a type of fishing that includes huge nets that pull everything off the ocean floor. Huge disturbance