Origins of Biodiversity Flashcards

1
Q

The smaller somthing is the more you can fit into something else.

What kind of Organisms are the most diverse?

A

Smaller organisms (e.g., invertebrates) can take advantage of fewer resources. They have shorter generation cycles and reproduce at a higher rate creating more genetic variation.

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2
Q

You can fit more mice in a hole than you can deer.

What happens to abundance when the weight of organisms decreases?

A

You get higher abundance (e.g., There are more mice compared to deer)

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3
Q

There are so many plant species in this floor crack but that elephant ca

What is Fractual dimension?

A

As surface area gets smaller your habitat gets bigger (more detail)
E.g. an ant’s perspective of its terrain in comparison to us - i.e. A crack in the ground seems insignificant to us compared to an ant that sees the detail.

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4
Q

How do smaller organisms take advantage of their size?

A

They speciate more rapidly and occupy smaller niches (e.g., position on a feather - feather mites).

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5
Q

There are many ants in a colany and some can develope wings to find new

How do insects dominate terrestrial ecology?

A

They have high population sizes and divide and metamorphose (e.g. adapt wings) to occupy diff. niches and encourage dispersal.

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6
Q

There is no food on this island so I will fly to another.

How do wings increase resourceability?

A

Increases accessibility to inaccessible resources, establishes a wider distribution, and allows rapid dispersal.

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7
Q

There is no space on the tail so I will live on the head.

How does Co-evolution with other organisms encourage biodiversity?

A

Allows specialisation, especially on host species and parts of hosts (e.g. feather mites on condors).

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8
Q

If you live in a bog you can’t move but if you live outside you can move

How does the ability to disperse increase survival rates?

A

Less vulnerable to environmental changes (e.g., Monsoon season) and less prone to population fragmentation.

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9
Q

Being able to dig burrows is good but you can dig and fly can you?

How is being a generalist advantageous in a new environment? Give an example.

A

Higher rates of speciation which leads to specialization increased the rate of extinction. Any changes in their environment can lead to loss.
E.g. Melanesian ants - They only had high rates of extinction after they dispersed and speciated.

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10
Q

What is disharmony?

A

Disproportionate representation of some taxonomic groups
e.g. birds of Hawaii.
E.g. Honey creepers will often occupy niches filled by other spp.

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11
Q

Ant on a small island and a elephant in asia.

How does space affect the radiation of organisms?

A

Depending on the size of organisms they may require more or less land in order to radiate.
E.g. insects can radiate on small islands whereas Mammals require continents.

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12
Q

How many Million years ago did South America and Australia break apart from Gondwana?

A

South America joined North America 3 million years ago.

Australia became a large island continent 200 million years ago.

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13
Q

Eggs, pouch and placenta

What groups of spp. radiated during the three radiations in Australia?

A

1st -Monotremes - lay eggs
2nd- Marsupials - Carry young to early stage in the uterus and advanced stage in marsupium (pouch).
3rd- Placental mammals - across from Indonesia.

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14
Q

Pouch and mammary glands.

When did the two radiations occur in South America and what were their outcomes?

A

1st - 40-70 million years ago = Marsupial carnivores and placental herbivores.
2nd - Placental mammals - Island hopped from the world continent. (includes monkeys and rodents).

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15
Q

Panamanian land bridge..

What was the great American exchange?

A

The connection of South America and the world continent via the Panamanian land bridge around 3 million years which allowed the exchange of spp.

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16
Q

Similarities…

Why did biodiversity decline for a while after the Great American Exchange?

A

Due to extinctions caused by competition between organisms occupying similar niches.

17
Q

Why are world-continent species dominant?

A

They have high competitive ability, high dispersal ability, and high potential to speciate and radiate.

18
Q

What are the exceptions from South America that survived extinction due to lack of ecological equivalents?

A

Opposums
Armadillos
Anteaters
Tree sloths
New world monkeys

19
Q

What happens to native when non-native species are introduced?

Why are endemic species vulnerable on islands?

A

Distance from the mainland increases, the number of native species decreases and the number of non-native species increases.

20
Q

Features only found in that location…

What are the main features of remote islands?

A

Few natural colonists, few spp. high endemicity and vacant niches e.g., the Kakapoo (terrestrial parrot) has no terrestrial predators.

21
Q

How can birds escape…

Name some Anti-predator adaptations.

A

Flight
Nest defence
- These are usually costly but with a lack of predators, these adaptations are often lost, leaving them vulnerable to introduced species.