BIOL 1020 – ECOLOGY UNIT LECTURE NOTES
Ecology
- What is ecology?
- Ecology is the scientific study of interactions between ______
- term ecology comes from the Greek oikos, ______, and logos, to study
- biotic and abiotic factors
- What are biotic factors? Give examples.
- What are abiotic factors? Give examples.
- climate
- What is climate?
- What abiotic factors are the major components of climate?
- What effects do bodies of water have on climate?
- What effects do mountains have on climate?
- Include descriptions of how elevation affects temperature, and of rain shadows.
- What effects do seasons have on climate?
- Describe what causes seasons; include the terms solstice and equinox in your description.
- biomes
- What are biomes?
- aquatic biomes
- List the major aquatic biomes and their defining physical features (there are 8, giving you space here).
- define the following: photic zone, aphotic zone, benthic zone
- Describe the process of turnover in a lake, and why it is important.
- What is eutrophication, and what are some likely consequences of it?
- terrestrial biomes
- List the major terrestrial biomes and their characteristic vegetation types and climate (there are 8).
- define the following: climograph, ecotone
- Be sure that you can interpret a climograph (like figure 52.20).
- population ecology
- Population ecology is the study of populations in relation to ______
- A population is:
- define the following: density, dispersion, range
- How does the mark-recapture method to estimate population size work? Include the formula and definition of the terms in the formula.
- What is demography?
- define and be able to use/interpret:
- life tables
- survivorship curves
- reproductive tables
- define and be able to use/interpret the exponential population growth model
- define and be able to use/interpret the logistic population growth model
- define and understand the terms K and r
- describe K-selection and r-selection
- What sort of life tables and survivorship curves would you expect for each type?
- give examples of organisms of each type
- If given a typical life history for an organism be able to categorize it as K-selected and r-selected.
- List and describe six density-dependent factorsknown to affect population growth rates.
- Describe how population cycles may be linked between predators and their prey.
- Human population history and future
- Be sure that you understand figures 53.22-26.
- What was industrial revolution and how did it affect human population growth?
- What is the demographic transition and how does it affect human population growth?
- What is the global carrying capacity for humans?
- community ecology
- Community ecology is the study of ______
- A biological community is:
- describe the following interspecific interactions in general terms of the +/-/0 system
- competition
- define the terms (ecological) niche, resource partitioning, and character displacement
- predation
- Describe how these defenses can help animals avoid predation:
- camouflage
- warning coloration
- Batesian mimicry
- Müllerian mimicry
- herbivory
- parasitism
- mutualism
- What is the difference between obligate and facultative mutualism?
- commensalism
- What is symbiosis? Which interspecific interactions are types of symbiosis?
- What is keystone species and apivotal niche?
- What is a food web? How do energetic limits affect food webs/chains?
- Describe ecological succession, primary succession, and secondary succession.
- ecosystems
- Diagram the biogeochemical cyclesof
- water
- carbon
- nitrogen
- phosphorus
- Describe how biomagnification(biological magnification) of a toxin works in an ecosystem.
- How we almost killed ourselves: the ozone hole story (see fig 55.25)
- Describe the importance of the ozone layer.
- Describe how human activities led to depletion of the ozone layer.
- Describe what humans have done about the depletion of the ozone layer.
- How we still might kill ourselves: global warming (see fig 55.21)
- Describe the greenhouse effect and why CO2 is called a greenhouse gas.
- Describe how human activities increase CO2 in the atmosphere, the logic behind how that leads to global warming, and the evidence that global warming is occurring.
- Describe what effects global warming may have. What is the feed-forward effect of thawing tundra?
- Describe what humans have done about the global warming.
- Define ecosystem biodiversity,species biodiversity, genetic biodiversity
- Describe the value of biodiversity in
- maintaining the global ecosystem and biogeochemical cycles
- providing unique resourcessuch as food, remediation, drugs
- intrinsic value of biodiversity
- The sixth extinction, or how we are killing lots of things and perhaps ultimately ourselves as well.
- What is habitat loss and how is it affecting life on Earth today?
- What are introduced speciesand how are they affecting life on Earth today?
- What is overexploitationand how is it affecting life on Earth today?
- What is the sixth extinction? What can humans do about it?
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