Topic 14 Flashcards

Succession and Community Ecology

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1
Q

Define Succession

A

It is when the mix of a species in a habitat changes over time

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2
Q

What term describes the unevenness of the distribution of concentrations of species over an area?

A

Spatial heterogeneity

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3
Q

What are the two opposing views of succession?

A

Clement: superorganism perspective
Gleason: Individualistic viewpoint

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4
Q

What is the superorganism perspective?

A

There is a “true equilibrium state” that communities are working towards.

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5
Q

What is Gleason’s individualistic viewpoint?

A

communities were largely a coincidence of:
1. individual species characteristics
2. continuously varying environments
3. different probabilities of a species arriving somewhere

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6
Q

What is the intermediate disturbance hypothesis?

A

It predicts that species diversity will be highest at intermediate levels of disturbance.

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7
Q

How are attendance rates for the class?

A

Pretty Low

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8
Q

Why are attendance rates low?

A

People are tired

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9
Q

What happens to people who don’t show up to class?

A

They get creamed

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10
Q

Is the intermediate disturbance hypothesis effective in its predictions?

A

Not really, every ecosystem is different

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11
Q

In the intermediate disturbance hypothesis, what happens at low and high levels of disturbance?

A

At low levels of disturbance, competition is allowed to reduce diversity, and at high levels of disturbance, diversity is reduced as few species are adapted to all these events.

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12
Q

What is primary succession?

A

The process of change from an event that has effectively zeroed out the diversity. (newly established area)

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13
Q

What is secondary succession?

A

The process of change from an event that creates gaps in diversity, but does not clear all biological matter. (disturbance)

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14
Q

What are “the limits” of disturbance describing?

A

The point of too much or too little disturbance that affects species richness

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15
Q

What can we say about early successional species in forests?

A

They are strong dispersers and competitors for nutrients

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16
Q

What can we say about later successional species?

A

They are less good at dispersal, but are good competitors for light

17
Q

What do early successional species do to nutrient concentrations in soil?

A

They actually increase nutritional value of soil

18
Q

In glacial retreat primary succession, how can we describe the progression of succession?

A

It is stage like, with quickly establishing species opening pathways for different types of later growing populations

19
Q

How does soil change in glacial habitats during primary succession?

A

Nutrient density rises and pH decreases