[OLD] Populations - Ecosystems: Exam Questions Flashcards
What is an ecosystem?
All the living and non-living components of a particular area
New Zealand Pygmy weed has been introduced into many garden ponds and has spread to some natural ponds. Here, it competes with naturally occurring plants. Suggest how the introduction of Pygmy weed may lead to a reduction in the diversity of the community in a natural pond. (3)
1) Pygmy weed competes for CO2, light, or nutrients
2) This causes a reduction in numbers of original plants
3) Some original plants species are lost
4) This loss or habitats, niches, shelter or food sources
5) causes the consumers to die
Give one advantage of calculating the index of dives
rainy rather than just recording the number of species present. (1)
It also takes abundance of each species into account as biodiversity is also affected by population sizes.
Explain what is meant by the ecological term community (1)
All the living organisms in an ecosystem at a given time.
Suggest and explain one advantages to different species of fish occupying different depths in a lake (2)
1) They will occupy different niches (food, prey or oxygen)
2) So there will be less competition
What is meant by an abiotic factor?
An ecological factor making up part of the non-biological environment of an organism.
Other than temperature, suggest one abiotic factor that is likely to affect the position of the tree line on a mountain (1)
pH of the soil, water, light, CO2, incline, wind (speed)
NOTE: don’t talk about oxygen in relation to limiting photosynthesis/growth of a plant
The population of trees in a forest evolved adaptations to a mountain environment. Use your knowledge of selection to explain how. (3)
There is variation in all organisms.
The trees with advantageous characteristics are more likely to survive in the mountain environment.
So are more likely to reproduce and pass on their genes that allow them to survive.
4) Allele frequencies change.
Ecologists studied a community of fish in a lake.
The ecologists could have used the mark-release-recapture method to estimate the number of one species of fish in the lake. Describe how. (3)
1) Capture fish and release them back in the same place
2) Before releasing them, mark them by e.g attaching a tag
3) Recapture fish and count the number that had been marked
4) Use the Lincoln Index to estimate total population size: population = (no in sample 1 X no in sample 2)/(no marked in sample 2)
A species of fish breeds at a certain time of the year. During this fish-breeding season, the mark-release-recapture technique might not give a reliable estimate. Suggest one reason why. (1)
(If there is a large amount of births between the first and second sample) the proportion of marked to unmarked animals would not be the same in the second sample as in the population as a whole.
Ecologists found that different species of fish had adaptations to its niche. One of these adaptations was the shape of its mouth.
Suggest how the shape of mouth is an adaptation to its niche. (2)
1) The shape of its mouth may allow it to feed on things that the other species of fish cannot.
2) Interspecific competition is reduced.
Explain the meaning of the ecological term population. (1)
A group of individuals of the same species that occupy the same habitat at the same time.
Give two conditions necessary for results from mark-release-recapture investigations to be valid. (2)
1) The mark is not lost or rubbed off.
2) The marked individuals have sufficient time to redistribute themselves evenly.
3) No immigration.
4) No reproduction.
5) Sample large enough.
Two similar species of birds feed of slightly different side insects and have slightly different temperature preferences.
These two species are thought to have evolved as a result of sympatric speciation. Suggest how this might have occurred.
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Describe a practical technique which you could use to find the mean population density of daisies on a lawn. (3)
1) Use 2 tape measures to create a study area on the lawn. Use a random number generator to find a point in the area to place a quadrat. Identify which plants are daisies using a field guide.
2) Repeat until the running mean no longer changes from quadrat to quadrat.
3) Count the abundance of daisies in each quadrat and divide by area.