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Chapter 6 RAD Guide. October 25, 2010. Provide an example of a predator & a prey. Predator: lion, coyote Prey: zebra, sheep. What’s the connection between population sizes of predators & their prey?. Large population of prey can support more predators
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Chapter 6 RAD Guide October 25, 2010
Provide an example of a predator & a prey. • Predator: lion, coyote • Prey: zebra, sheep
What’s the connection between population sizes of predators & their prey? • Large population of prey can support more predators • If prey population grows or shrinks, affects predator population
What’s the relationship between a parasite & it’s host? How are populations similar? • Parasite depends on host for food and “shelter” • Large host population can support more parasites (thrive in crowded host population)
Describe each type of symbiotic relationship & give example of each. • Parasitism: one organism feeds off another • Example: tapeworm and human • Commensalism: benefits one species and does not harm or help the other • Example: barnacle on a whale • Mutualism: both species benefit • Example: flower and insect
VOCABULARY • Predator: • Prey: • Parasitism: • Symbiosis: any relationship in which two species live closely together See notes above for definition!
Describe primary succession. • Sequence of communities forming in an originally lifeless habitat 1 2 3 Bare rock Lichens Soil 6 4 5 Grasses Trees w/shallow roots Hardwood Forest (ex. Pine Trees)
How is a pioneer community different than a climax community? • Pioneer community is the first community to colonize a new area • Climax community is a final community that does not undergo succession
Describe secondary succession. • Succession occurs where a disturbance eliminates most organisms but does NOT destroy the soil • Like steps 4-6 in primary succession 6 4 5 Grasses Trees w/shallow roots Hardwood Forest (ex. Pine Trees)
Contrast primary & secondary succession. • Primary succession occurs in environment that’s very low in nutrients • Secondary succession occurs after a disturbance destroys community, but leaves the soil unharmed
What’s the sequence of ecological succession in a lake? (1)Reeds/water plants grow near shore (2)Starts to fill with sediment (3)Water plants grow on surface (4)Full of sediment (5)Marsh (6)Land plants (7)Meadow …. (8) Forest
What is the sequence of ecological succession on an island? • Bare island … • similar to primary succession on land, but species must come from ancestors carried by: • Water • Wind • Other organisms because island surrounded by water
Explain the concept of ecosystem stability. • Ecosystems exist in a state of equilibrium. If an event causes changes, the ecosystem will balance itself back out. • Some disruptions destroy whole ecosystems however.
How is stability measured in an ecosystem? • Measured by a pattern of energy flow and nutrient cycling • Evolutionary, food-web, and abiotic environmental changes vs.
What factors contribute to the stability of the ecosystem? • Abiotic and biotic factors • Community structure • More connections in a food web
What is chaos theory? • Chaos theory is one way to try to predict how changes in an ecosystem affect another part • Similar to Butterfly Effect
What is a biome? • Major type of ecosystem with distinctive temp, rainfall, and organisms
Name & describe 8 major land biomes. • Desert • >250mm rain per yr • 25o -40o N + S latitude • High temp during day • Cold at night • Tundra • >250mm rain per yr • 60o N and above latitude • Permafrost=frozen soil • Very cold yr round
Coniferous Forest (Taiga) • 300-500mm rain per yr • 45o -57o N latitudes • Cool summer, cold winter • Deciduous Forest • 600-2500mm rainfall per yr • 30o N-60o N latitude • Mild winter, warm summer
Grassland • 250-600mm rain per yr • 30o N – 50o N and 30o S – 40o S latitude • Wet, warm summer • Cold, dry winter • Chaparral (Shrubland) • 300-750mm rain per yr • 32o -40o N + S latitude • Dry fall, summer, spring • Wet winter
Savanna • 900-1500mm rain per yr • 10o N – 30o S latitude • Hot yr round • Wet and dry seasons • Rainforest • 2000-2500mm rain per yr • 20o N – 20o S latitude • Temp and humidity high year round