Biology Pre-Learning Check
... a b c d g h i k Biotic factors would include these letter(s). (living things) ...
... a b c d g h i k Biotic factors would include these letter(s). (living things) ...
What four main factors affect what life is found in an - OG
... secondary succession? 31. Are there situations in which an ecosystem may never fully recover from a disturbance? ...
... secondary succession? 31. Are there situations in which an ecosystem may never fully recover from a disturbance? ...
Ch 3-4 study guide ANSWERS
... 1. The side of a mountain range that faces the wind often receives more rainfall than the downwind side of the same range. 2. A(n) biome is a group of terrestrial communities that covers a large area and is characterized by certain soil and climate conditions and particular types of plants and anima ...
... 1. The side of a mountain range that faces the wind often receives more rainfall than the downwind side of the same range. 2. A(n) biome is a group of terrestrial communities that covers a large area and is characterized by certain soil and climate conditions and particular types of plants and anima ...
Chapter 4 Study Guide
... a. ___________________ is a relationship in which one organism, the parasite, depends on another, the host, for nourishment or some other benefit while simultaneously doing the host harm. b. Parasitism usually does not result in an organism’s immediate death. c. Many parasites live in close contact ...
... a. ___________________ is a relationship in which one organism, the parasite, depends on another, the host, for nourishment or some other benefit while simultaneously doing the host harm. b. Parasitism usually does not result in an organism’s immediate death. c. Many parasites live in close contact ...
Biodiversity, Species Interactions, and Population Control Chapter 5
... 5-4 How Do Communities and Ecosystems Respond to Changing Environmental Conditions? Concept 5-4 The structure and species composition of communities and ecosystems change in response to changing environmental conditions through a process called ecological succession. ...
... 5-4 How Do Communities and Ecosystems Respond to Changing Environmental Conditions? Concept 5-4 The structure and species composition of communities and ecosystems change in response to changing environmental conditions through a process called ecological succession. ...
Plant-Environment Relationship
... Biomes are “the world’s major communities, classified according to predominant vegetation (Climax) and characterized by adaptations of organisms to that particular environment.” Ecocline is a gradient along which communities and environments change. Ecotone is a transition zone between ...
... Biomes are “the world’s major communities, classified according to predominant vegetation (Climax) and characterized by adaptations of organisms to that particular environment.” Ecocline is a gradient along which communities and environments change. Ecotone is a transition zone between ...
Ecology - My eCoach
... (abiotic) components within a particular place. Biotic Components of a Pond – includes fish, turtles, plants, algae, insects, bacteria. – These interact with each other. ...
... (abiotic) components within a particular place. Biotic Components of a Pond – includes fish, turtles, plants, algae, insects, bacteria. – These interact with each other. ...
Ex. of Niche - Elmwood Park Memorial High School
... which an organism lives and the way in which an organism uses those conditions. • Temperature it survives in • Type of food it eats • What eats it • How it obtains food • How it reproduces ...
... which an organism lives and the way in which an organism uses those conditions. • Temperature it survives in • Type of food it eats • What eats it • How it obtains food • How it reproduces ...
Notes Chapter 21 Community Ecology
... The five major types of close interactions, or symbioses, among species—predation, parasitism, competition, mutualism, and commensalism. Interactions among various species comes from a long history of evolution in which the species adjust to one another Coevolution: the back-and-fourth evolution ...
... The five major types of close interactions, or symbioses, among species—predation, parasitism, competition, mutualism, and commensalism. Interactions among various species comes from a long history of evolution in which the species adjust to one another Coevolution: the back-and-fourth evolution ...
Chapter 5: How Ecosystems Work
... • List the three stages of the carbon cycle. • Describe where fossil fuels are located. • Identify one way that humans are affecting the carbon cycle. • List the tree stages of the nitrogen cycle. • Describe the role that nitrogen-fixing bacteria play in the nitrogen cycle. • Explain how the excess ...
... • List the three stages of the carbon cycle. • Describe where fossil fuels are located. • Identify one way that humans are affecting the carbon cycle. • List the tree stages of the nitrogen cycle. • Describe the role that nitrogen-fixing bacteria play in the nitrogen cycle. • Explain how the excess ...
Competition
... - an association in which the commensal benefits while the host is unaffected - crab: attachment and locomotion for the barnacle Barnacles (commensal) are benefited from the food remains and locomotion Crabs (host) are not harmed or benefited. ...
... - an association in which the commensal benefits while the host is unaffected - crab: attachment and locomotion for the barnacle Barnacles (commensal) are benefited from the food remains and locomotion Crabs (host) are not harmed or benefited. ...
Ground Rules, exams, etc. (no “make up” exams) Text: read
... connectance, rates of energy fixation and flow, biogeochemical cycles, ecological energetics, ecological efficiency, trophic continuum, guild structure, ecological pyramids, successional stages, transition ...
... connectance, rates of energy fixation and flow, biogeochemical cycles, ecological energetics, ecological efficiency, trophic continuum, guild structure, ecological pyramids, successional stages, transition ...
1.1 Safety in the Science Classroom
... ___________ is found in stories, songs, cultural beliefs, rituals, community laws, and traditional practices. Current ___________ restoration and usage guidelines often involve traditional ...
... ___________ is found in stories, songs, cultural beliefs, rituals, community laws, and traditional practices. Current ___________ restoration and usage guidelines often involve traditional ...
Biodiversity, Species Interactions, and Population Control
... developing in places with soil or bottom sediment. The soil or sediment remains after the natural community of organisms has been disturbed, removed, or destroyed. a. Forest fires or deforestation, for example, can convert a particular stage of succession to an earlier stage. B. The classic view of ...
... developing in places with soil or bottom sediment. The soil or sediment remains after the natural community of organisms has been disturbed, removed, or destroyed. a. Forest fires or deforestation, for example, can convert a particular stage of succession to an earlier stage. B. The classic view of ...
Ecology (Finals Study Guide).
... • Over time, lichens convert, or fix, atmospheric nitrogen into useful forms for other organisms, break down rock, and add organic material to form soil. • Certain grasses, like those that colonized Krakatau early on, are also pioneer species. ...
... • Over time, lichens convert, or fix, atmospheric nitrogen into useful forms for other organisms, break down rock, and add organic material to form soil. • Certain grasses, like those that colonized Krakatau early on, are also pioneer species. ...
TheLivingWorld
... 8. Which of the following species is characteristic of a savanna? a. Lichens b. Oak trees c. Douglas fir d. Mangrove trees e. Grass 9. The river that brings water to Townsville periodically floods and destroys homes upstream. To build the homes, wetlands were filled in. One proposal brought by loca ...
... 8. Which of the following species is characteristic of a savanna? a. Lichens b. Oak trees c. Douglas fir d. Mangrove trees e. Grass 9. The river that brings water to Townsville periodically floods and destroys homes upstream. To build the homes, wetlands were filled in. One proposal brought by loca ...
NOTES UNIT 4 APES
... The course of succession cannot be precisely predicted. Previously thought that a stable climax community will always be achieved. ...
... The course of succession cannot be precisely predicted. Previously thought that a stable climax community will always be achieved. ...
PAST ECOLOGY FRQ`s
... a) DESCRIBE what innate and learned behaviors are. EXPLAIN the adaptive value of each of these two categories of behavior to an individual animal. b) During mating season, male snakes exhibit tracking behavior when they follow chemical pheromone trails deposited on the ground by females. DESIGN a co ...
... a) DESCRIBE what innate and learned behaviors are. EXPLAIN the adaptive value of each of these two categories of behavior to an individual animal. b) During mating season, male snakes exhibit tracking behavior when they follow chemical pheromone trails deposited on the ground by females. DESIGN a co ...
Ecosystems (Ecology is the study of ecosystems)
... eruption of Krakatoa in the early 1800s made an island disappear…. Poof. Magma rising from underwater then created a new island that was completely devoid of life. This set the stage for primary succession. Primary succession is rare. Secondary succession is common. When an ecosystem evolves to a po ...
... eruption of Krakatoa in the early 1800s made an island disappear…. Poof. Magma rising from underwater then created a new island that was completely devoid of life. This set the stage for primary succession. Primary succession is rare. Secondary succession is common. When an ecosystem evolves to a po ...
Ecosystems (Ecology is the study of ecosystems)
... eruption of Krakatoa in the early 1800s made an island disappear…. Poof. Magma rising from underwater then created a new island that was completely devoid of life. This set the stage for primary succession. Primary succession is rare. Secondary succession is common. When an ecosystem evolves to a po ...
... eruption of Krakatoa in the early 1800s made an island disappear…. Poof. Magma rising from underwater then created a new island that was completely devoid of life. This set the stage for primary succession. Primary succession is rare. Secondary succession is common. When an ecosystem evolves to a po ...
Community ecology of..
... 40 years post-disturbance urban brownfield contaminated w/ As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Pb, Zn, V Betula populifolia, Populus deltoides occurred on areas of increasing soil metal load Other species like emergent marshes restricted to areas with low soil metal loads B. populifolia, P. deltoides accumulate Z ...
... 40 years post-disturbance urban brownfield contaminated w/ As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Pb, Zn, V Betula populifolia, Populus deltoides occurred on areas of increasing soil metal load Other species like emergent marshes restricted to areas with low soil metal loads B. populifolia, P. deltoides accumulate Z ...
Envirothon Current Issue Study Guide Notes
... Why are scientists re-examining this method? - climax plant community for a site is hard to define - two-attribute approach: plant species composition and production is inadequate to address the complexity of rangeland ecosystems - ecosystem change may not follow linear path suggested - succession ...
... Why are scientists re-examining this method? - climax plant community for a site is hard to define - two-attribute approach: plant species composition and production is inadequate to address the complexity of rangeland ecosystems - ecosystem change may not follow linear path suggested - succession ...
Name______________________________________
... 2. ____________________ an environmental factor that causes a population to decrease 3. ____________________ the largest population that an area can support 4. ____________________ number of deaths in a population in a certain amount of time 5. ____________________ leaving a population 6. __________ ...
... 2. ____________________ an environmental factor that causes a population to decrease 3. ____________________ the largest population that an area can support 4. ____________________ number of deaths in a population in a certain amount of time 5. ____________________ leaving a population 6. __________ ...
ECOLOGICAL NICHE
... 9. What is a native species and what is its role in an ecosystem? Provide examples (you will need to include the habitat. You should know a few native species our region of the country/state.) 10. What is an introduced species and what is its role in an ecosystem? a. Which conditions in an ecosystem ...
... 9. What is a native species and what is its role in an ecosystem? Provide examples (you will need to include the habitat. You should know a few native species our region of the country/state.) 10. What is an introduced species and what is its role in an ecosystem? a. Which conditions in an ecosystem ...
File - Pedersen Science
... b. Morphological c. Behavioral d. Mimicry 5. Be sure you know Table 20.1 on page 209. 6. Describe what makes sea stars a keystone species? 7. Answer the Module 20 review questions: 1._______ 2._______ 3._______ ...
... b. Morphological c. Behavioral d. Mimicry 5. Be sure you know Table 20.1 on page 209. 6. Describe what makes sea stars a keystone species? 7. Answer the Module 20 review questions: 1._______ 2._______ 3._______ ...
Ecological succession
Ecological succession is the observed process of change in the species structure of an ecological community over time. The time scale can be decades (for example, after a wildfire), or even millions of years after a mass extinction.The community begins with relatively few pioneering plants and animals and develops through increasing complexity until it becomes stable or self-perpetuating as a climax community. The ʺengineʺ of succession, the cause of ecosystem change, is the impact of established species upon their own environments. A consequence of living is the sometimes subtle and sometimes overt alteration of one's own environment.It is a phenomenon or process by which an ecological community undergoes more or less orderly and predictable changes following a disturbance or the initial colonization of a new habitat. Succession may be initiated either by formation of new, unoccupied habitat, such as from a lava flow or a severe landslide, or by some form of disturbance of a community, such as from a fire, severe windthrow, or logging. Succession that begins in new habitats, uninfluenced by pre-existing communities is called primary succession, whereas succession that follows disruption of a pre-existing community is called secondary succession.Succession was among the first theories advanced in ecology. The study of succession remains at the core of ecological science. Ecological succession was first documented in the Indiana Dunes of Northwest Indiana which led to efforts to preserve the Indiana Dunes. Exhibits on ecological succession are displayed in the Hour Glass, a museum in Ogden Dunes.