AP Notes, Outlines, Study Guides, Vocabulary, Practice Exams and more!

Ecology Flashcards

Population ecology, human population growth community ecology, co-evolution, ecological succession, ecosystems, biogeochemical cycles, biomes, and human impact on the biosphere.

Terms : Hide Images
1062614676PopulationA group of individuals of the same species living in the same area.1
1062614677CommunityA group of populations living in the same area.2
1062614678EcosystemThe interrelationships between the organisms in a community and their physical environment.3
1062614679BiosphereIt includes all the regions of the earth that contain living things.4
1062614680HabitatThe type of place where it usually lives. It includes the other organisms that live there as well as the physical and chemical characteristics of the environment.5
1062614681NicheAll the biotic and abiotic resources in the environment used by an organism which define where it can live. *If niches overlap for two species, they will compete. - The more they overlap, the greater the competition between the two species.6
1062614682Population DensityThe total number of individuals per area or volume occupied.7
1062614683DispersionHow individuals in a population are distributed. It could be clumped, uniform, or random.8
1062614684Age StructureThe description of the abundance of individuals of each age.9
1062614685Survivorship CurvesThe description how mortality of individuals in a species varies during their lifetimes.10
1062614686Type IA survivorship curve in which most individuals survive to middle ages. After that age mortality is high.11
1062614687Type IIA survivorship curve in which the organism's life is random.12
1062614688Type IIIA survivorship curve in which most individuals die young with only a few surviving to reproductive age and beyond.13
1062614689Biotic PotentialThe maximum growth rate of a population under ideal conditions, with unlimited resources and without any growth restrictions.14
1062614690Factors of Biotic PotentialAge at reproductive maturity, clutch size (the number of offspring at each reproductive event), frequency of reproduction, reproductive lifetime, and survivorship of offspring to reproductive maturity.15
1062614691Carrying CapacityThe maximum number of individuals of a population that can be sustained by a particular habitat. *This happens when r=0, the population stops growing and it reaches equilibrium.16
1062614692Limiting FactorsElements that prevent a population from attaining its biotic potential.17
1062614693Density-DependentA type of limiting factor whose limiting effect becomes more intense as the population density increases. Gives rise to the S-shaped logistic growth curve. *Happens after growing exponentially for a while, but growth rate has to decrease as the environment becomes more and more crowded. *Can be caused by resource competition or biotic interactions. (Greater crowding can lead to disease, or to the attraction of more predators)18
1062614694Density-IndependentA type of limiting factor that occurs independently of the density of the population which includes natural disasters and extremes of climate.19
1062614695Exponential GrowthWhen the reproductive rate is greater than zero and when plotted it rises quickly forming a J-shaped curve.20
1062614696Logistic GrowthWhen limiting factors restrict the size of the population to the carrying capacity of the habitat and when plotted it stabilizes forming a S-shaped, or sigmoid, curve.21
1062614697Population CyclesFluctuations in population size in response to varying effects of limiting factors.22
1062614698R-Selected SpeciesThis species exhibits rapid growth. This type of strategy is characterized by opportunistic species.23
1062614699K-Selected SpeciesThis species' population size remains relatively constant at the carrying capacity.24
1062614700Abiotic FactorsThe non-living parts of an organism's habitat. SWATS: Soil, Water, Air, Temperature, and Sunlight.25
1062614701Biotic FactorsThe living parts of an ecosystem. Usually include: producer, consumers, decomposers, and human influence.26
1062614702Ernst Haeckel's definition of EcologyThe comprehensive science of the relationship of the organism to the environment. Invented the word "ecology".27
1062614703C. J. Krebs' definition of EcologyThe scientific study of the interactions that determine the distribution and abundance of organisms28
1062614704MutualismA relationship between two species in which both species benefit. Exp: like the bacteria in our gut that helps us break down our food.29
1062614705Competition or Interspecific Competition(-,-) A common demand by two or more organisms upon a limited supply of a resource; for example, food, water, light, space, mates, nesting sites. It may be intraspecific or interspecific. *If there is competition for a limiting resource, growth rates of both competitors will be reduced. *Gives way to resource partitioning, as natural selection favors individuals that do not compete.30
1062614706Consumer Resource(-,+) The consumer benefits while the consumed organism - the resource - loses. *Includes predation, herbivory, and parasitism, & pathogens.31
1062614707Commensalism(+,0) An interaction where one participant benefits, while the other is unaffected.32
1062614708Amensalism(-,0) An interaction between species when one species if harmed while the other is unaffected. *Often the harm is accidental. Exp: Elephants crush plants and insects while moving through a forest.33
1062614709ParasitismA relationship in which one organism lives on or in a host and harms it.34
1062614710PredationAn interaction between species in which one species, the predator, eats the other, the prey.35
1062614711Per Capita Growth RateThe difference between per capita birth rate and per capita death rate and represents the average individual's contribution to total population growth rate. *Delta (N) / Delta (T)36
1062614712BD ModelThe number of individuals in a population at some time in the future = the number now + the number that are born - the number that die. * N(t + 1) = N(t) + B - D37
1062614713Evolutionary Arms RaceA form of coevolution in which the species involved each evolve countermeasures to the adaptations of the others; most often associated with host - pathogen and predator - prey coevolution.38
1062614714CheatingIn a mutualistic relationship, the potential for one partner to acquire resources from the other partner without returning the mutualistic act.39
1062614715CoevolutionEvolutionary processes in which an adaptation in one species leads to the evolution of an adaptation in a species with which it interacts.40
1068783448TopographyThe variations in the elevation of Earth's surface that form, for example, mountains & valleys.41
1068783449Species CompositionThe particular mix of species that a community contains and the relative abundances of those species.42
1068783450BiomeA distinct physical environment that is inhabited by ecologically similar organisms with similar adaptations.43
1068783451SuccessionThe gradual, sequential series of changes in the species composition of a community following a disturbance.44
1068783452Ecological TransitionAfter some types of disturbance the original community is not reestablished, instead it becomes a distinctly different community.45
1068783453Trophic InteractionsThe consumer-resource relationships among species in a community.46
1068783454Primary ProducersThey convert solar energy into a form that can be used by the rest of the community. Aka autotrophs.47
1068783455AutotrophsSelf feeders... they make their own food.48
1068783456HeterotrophsSpecies that obtain energy by breaking apart organic compounds that have been assembled by other organisms. (Herbivores)49
1068783457Primary ConsumersHeterotrophs that dine on primary producers... aka herbivores.50
1068783458Secondary ConsumersPrimary carnivores... those that consume herbivores.51
1068783459Tertiary ConsumersSecondary carnivores... those that consume primary carnivores.52
1068783461Trophic LevelsThe feeding positions: primary producers and primary, secondary, and tertiary consumers. A group of organisms united by obtaining their energy from the same part of the food web.53
1068783463OmnivoresThey feed on both plants and animals. (feed from multiple trophic levels.)54
1068783464Decomposers/detritivoresFeed on waste products or dead bodies of organisms... Largely responsible for the recycling of materials within ecosystems. They break down organic matter into inorganic components that primary producers can absorb.55
1068783465Gross Primary ProductivityEnergy that primary producers capture and convert to chemical energy during gnome period of time.56
1068783466Net Primary ProductivityEnergy that primary producers have produced during that period of time.57
1068783467Ecological EfficiencyThe overall transfer of energy from one trophic level to the next. On average the total biomass of each trophic level is about one-tenth that of the level it feeds on.58
1068783468Trophic CascadeA series of changes in the population sizes of organisms at different trophic levels in a food chain, occurring when predators at high trophic levels indirectly promote populations of organisms at low trophic levels by keeping species at intermediate trophic levels in check. Trophic cascades may become apparent when a top predator is eliminated from a system. (yosemite wolves).59
1068783469Species richnessThe number of species in the community.60
1068783470Species evennessThe distribution of species' abundances.61
1068783471Island BiogeographyAccounts for island diversity patterns... The study of rates of colonization and extinction of species on islands or other isolated areas based on size, shape, and distance from other inhabited regions62
1068783472Ecosystem servicesProcesses by which ecosystems maintain resources that benefit human society.63
1068886236Convergent EvolutionProcess by which unrelated organisms independently evolve similarities when adapting to similar environments. Tends to happen in biomes where animals develop similar natural selection.64
1068886237The Nearshore regions of lakes and oceansLittoral (lakes) , Intertidal or Littoral (Oceans) ... Shallow, affected by wave action, periodically exposed to air by fluctuations in water level.65
1068886238Photic ZoneThe region of lakes and oceans that is penetrated by light and therefore supports photosynthetic organisms.66
1068886239The Open-Water zonesLimnetic zone (lakes) , Pelagic zone (oceans)67
1068886240Aphotic ZoneIn bodies of water, the region below the reach of light.68
1068886241Benthic ZoneThe lake bottom or ocean floor.69
1068886242Abyssal ZoneThe deepest parts of the ocean. Where there are very high pressures, low oxygen levels, and cold temperatures.70
1068886243Biogeographic regionsSix continental-scale areas... each region encompasses multiple biomes and contains a distinct assemblage of species, many of which are phylogenetically related.71
1068886244Biotic InterchangeContinued movements of continents have more recently eliminated some barriers to dispersal and have caused mixing of species.72
1092043832Geographic RangeRegion in which a species is found.73
1092043833Habitat Patches"Islands" of suitable habitat separated by areas of unsuitable habitat.74
1092043834Life historyThe time course of essential events during an average individual's life like .... growth and development, dispersal, reproduction, death.75
1092043835FecundityAverage number of offspring each individual produces at those life stages or ages.76
1092258428Life-History TradeoffsNegative relationships among growth, reproduction, and survival. Exp: If you are likely to die young, it makes sense to invest in early reproduction.77
1092258429Why do humans appear to break the rules for density dependence in population growth?Vaccines, Antibiotics, Better sanitation, "Green Revolution", and technological advances have raised carrying capacity by increasing food production and improving health.78
1092258430Conservation and SustainabilityKey priorities for the 21st century... as 20th century population expansion has led to climate change and ecosystem degradation.79
1092258431Natural ExperimentWhen a natural process perturbs the ecosystem dramatically, so ecologists can learn by watching how the ecosystem responds. Exp: volcano eruption, flood, epidemic.80
1092258432"Anthropocene"(the Age of Humans)... human-dominated ecosystems (croplands, pasture, cities and towns) now cover ~50% of Earth's land area. *These ecosystems are more uniform than natural ones, becoming homogeneous.81
1092258433Human activities that increase extinction risk• Habitat destruction, fragmentation and alteration • Over-harvesting wild populations • Pollution • Introduction of invasive species • Climate change82
1092258434Interspecific interactionsInteractions between individuals of different species, which can be beneficial (+), detrimental (-), or neutral (0) to each species.83
1092258435Intraspecific CompetitionCan lead to density dependence, when the per capita growth rate decreases due to competition for resources with individuals of the same species.84
1092258436If an individual's fitness exceeds that of another...then the frequency of that individual's traits will increase.85
1092258437Rarity AdvantageIntraspecific competition must be stronger than interspecific competition... and a species gains a growth advantage when it is at a low density and its competitor is at a high density. *The result is coexistence.86
1092258438Resource PartitioningIf differences in resource use are sufficiently large, competing species can coexist. *Differences between species in their use of resources causes individuals to have a larger effect on the resources available to another of the same species than to an individual of another species.87
1092258439Competitive ExclusionWhen both species used the exact same resource, the more efficient species would win. *Two species with the exact same niche cannot co-exist in the same place at the same time. One must out do the other.88
1092258440Condition for CoexistenceFor coexistence to be possible, INTRAspecific competition must be stronger than INTERspecific competition. *Then each species grows better when it is rare than when it is abundant (rarity advantage).89
1092258441Fundamental NicheThe conditions tolerated and the resources used when predators are not around. (100% ... all is yours)90
1092258442Realized NicheThe range of conditions tolerated or resources used when competitors are present (not able to use all resources since you are limited).91
1092258443Prey/Predator AbundanceLots of prey = lots of predators. Low prey = low amount of predators. *Exp: Infectious diseases show Predator-Prey Cycles. Consumer:infectious disease. Resource: susceptible (non-immune) hosts.92
1093617613Species TurnoverSome species drop out and new ones appear. *Some or all of the species can be wiped out, and environmental conditions are changed.93
1093617614What can cause communities to change over time?Extinction and colonization, Disturbance, Climate change.94
1093617615Better ColonizersThey invest in early reproduction, many offspring, and high dispersal, but have short life expectancy.95
1093617616Better CompetitorsThey invest in growth and defense, and have fewer, later offspring and long life expectancy.96
1097658328Invasive SpeciesAn exotic species that reproduces rapidly, spreads widely, and has negative effects on the native species of the region to which it had been introduced.97
1102689378Principal of AllocationThe idea that a unit of some resource acquired by an organism can be used for only one function at a time, meaning that resources must be divided among competing functions.98

Need Help?

We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.

For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.

If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.

Need Notes?

While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!