Lecture 5 Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the difference between r and k species.

A

R species grow fast and reproduce early - allocate more resources to reproduction than growth so not strongly competitive
K species have vigorous growth, thrive in competition but at the expense of delayed reproduction - produce fewer large progeny.

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2
Q

What characterises discrete environments?

A

individuals / organisms respond in similar ways to environmental factors.

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3
Q

What is Clements view of succession?

A

The evolution of communities over time towards the climax community

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4
Q

What is Gleason’s view of succession?

A

Species respond individualistically to env factors. Environment is constantly changing on all time and space scales, there is no end point to succession, only dynamic equilibrium.

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5
Q

What are vegetation dynamics affected by?

A

Frequency and type of disturbance, area affected

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6
Q

What characterises early succession?

A

biomass small, photosynthetic efficiency low, good seed dispersal, plant longevity short, resource consumption fast, open/rapid biogeochemical cycling, high primary productivity, low ecosystem stability.

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7
Q

What id diversity the product of?

A

Richness (number of species)

Eveness (how evenly these are represented)

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8
Q

What is allopatric speciation?

A

Biological populations separated by a physical barrier, which develop to the extent that is the barrier was removed, they would not be able to interbreed. Most common in animals.

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9
Q

What is sympatric speciation?

A

When a new species develops from an ancestral one, occupying the same geographic area. Most common in plants. May occur rapidly by polyploidy as polyploids are sterile in crosses with parent species.

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10
Q

What is the species richness of an island determined by in the short term?

A

Immigration, extinction

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11
Q

Describe the latitude gradient of organisms species diversity compared to microbes.

A

Organisms diversity decreases from tropics to poles, whilst microbes not affected as disperse and colonise easily.

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12
Q

What is the latitude gradient the result of?

A
  • Lower extinction rate (larger area, stability of climate = higher population number, larger species range, lower chance of extinction)
  • Diversification and speciation rates higher in tropics
  • Time for diversification higher in tropics (env is older and dispersal of clades from tropics relatively recent)
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13
Q

What makes diversification higher in the tropics?

A
  • Genetic drift
  • Climate variation = higher speciation at tropics
  • Sympatric speciation more likely
  • larger area = more likely to be isolated
  • narrower physiological tolerance = reduces dispersal to unfavourable environments
  • higher temps = increased evolutionary speed
  • stronger biotic interactions = faster speciation / greater specialization
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14
Q

What are the three mechanisms of species richness accumulation over time

A
  • Tropics and temps dont differ in diversification rate, but in ecological factors such as niche availability
  • tropics have higher diversification rate so accummulate richness faster
  • tropics have had more time for diversification, as without ice for longer.
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15
Q

What is diversification calculated by?

A

Speciation - extinction

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16
Q

In clements view, what was secondary succession?

A

after disturbance, remnants may alter resulting community

17
Q

What did clements see as the 6 processes to control community development?

A
  • Nudation (creating bare surface)
  • Migration
  • Ecesis (establishment so complete life cycle can occur)
  • competition
  • Reaction (modification of habitat by vegetation)
  • Stabilization (climax community)
18
Q

Why are species poor islands more subject to invasion?

A
  • Less occupied niches

- conservation / farming creates more favourable environment

19
Q

What do short term disturbances create?

A

high species richness

20
Q

Why is competition greatest between similar species?

A

Niches more likely to overlap