How Humans Influence Biodiversity Flashcards

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1
Q

What is direct exploitation?

A

When humans directly exploit a population for their own gain. Often causes harm to that species.

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2
Q

Why is exploiting a habitat not always bad?

A

If it is done sustainably do that population won’t be negatively affected

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3
Q

List the main things humans exploit ecosystems for

A

Traditional medicines
Ornaments
Furniture
Pets and entertainment
Products
Food
Fashion

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4
Q

What is deliberate eradication

A

When a species is killed because they threaten or interfere with human life

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5
Q

Examples of why a species might be eradicated?

A

If they cause a threat to human life (sharks)
A vector for disease (mosquitoes)
Forestry pests (squirrels)
Agricultural pests (insects)
Predators to livestock (wolves)
Wild herbivores (deer)

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6
Q

What is an abiotic factor!

A

A non living essential pet of an ecosystem

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7
Q

Give examples of abiotic factors and how humans affect them?

A
  1. Reduction in water availability (ground water exploited cause wetland to dry.
  2. Reduction in dissolved oxygen (hot water discharge from power plants)
  3. Changes in temperature ( combustion GHG’s cause warming)
  4. Change of pH in water and rain (Smelting metals produce acidic conditions)
  5. Increased water turbidity (mining)
  6. Physical harm to wildlife (littering)
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8
Q

Why are insect populations in decline?

A

Urbanisation means that are less areas for the to love and less flowers to feed off

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9
Q

What are the consequences of a reduction in pollinators?

A

3/4 of crops require pollination if pollinators die then they won’t be able to reproduce affecting food security

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10
Q

Why do elephants make excellent seed dispersers?

A
  1. They travel over large distances
  2. They don’t chew he seeds meaning the plants are till able to germinate
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11
Q

What is an example of how over exploitation of one species caused an increase in another?

A

For example, if every time someone found a spider they killed it over time this would have a negative affect on spider populations but a positive affect on the populations of their prey (insects).

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12
Q

6 ways human activities are causing habitat destruction

A
  1. Deforestation
  2. Urbanisation
  3. Farming
  4. Mining
  5. Littering
  6. Ploughing
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13
Q

What are the downsides of introducing a species?

A

Could and has have negative affects on the native population

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14
Q

What is an example of how Introduced predators have affected a native population

A

The European water vole was affected by the American mink
Livestock for farming affect vegetation which many other species rely on

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15
Q

What is a Uk example of an Introduced competitor

A

Grey squirrel over powered and put complete for food over red squirrel.

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16
Q

What is an example of how an Introduced pathogen affected the native population

A

Grey squirrel bought squirrel pox which the red squirrel isn’t immune to

17
Q

Hybridisation examples

A

Wildcats is Scotland hybridised by domesticated cats
Native red deer hybridised with introduced Sikka deer

18
Q

Examples of how a species can control abiotic factors

A

Elephants create clearings and water holes which the species rely upon for water
Beavers create dams which create mini lakes for aquatic life to live in

19
Q

What is commensalism

A

When one species benefits another without harming it but it does not benefit

20
Q

Give an example of commensalism

A

Remoras fish attaches to sharks using suckers eating sharks dead skin

21
Q

What is a symbiotic relation

A

When both organisms benefit from there interactions together

22
Q

What is mutualism

A

A relationship in which each species benefits from interactions with each other

23
Q

Name 5 ways of habitat destruction

A

Deforestation
Urbanisation- growth of city
Agriculture and fishing
Mining and mineral extraction
Reservoir creation