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I. Populations (Chap 36.1-7) A. Size 1. smaller populations risk extinction 2. population growth is limited a. carrying capacity = the maximum number of individuals an area can support b. is a dynamic value - limiting factors:space, water, light, nutrients 3. growth slows as carrying capacity is reached
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4. adaptations a. r-selection life history - favors exponential growth - early reproduction - high mortality - offspring - no parenting - many weed species and insects
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b. K-selection life history - later maturity and onset of reproduction - produce few but well-cared-for offspring - fits larger terrestrial vertebrates
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B. Density 1. number of individuals per unit area 2. density-independent effects on population growth a. affect growth rate b. effects are independent of population size - weather, natural disaster
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3. density-dependent effects: - mainly due to increased competition as population grows
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3. density-dependent effects: - mainly due to increased competition as population grows - behavioral changes, migration
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3. density-dependent effects: - mainly due to increased competition as population grows - behavioral changes, migration - spreading of disease through a dense population
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C. Dispersion patterns 1. scatter of organisms in the “range” area 2. clumped pattern (most common in nature) 3. uniform pattern (territoriality) 4. random pattern (scatter by currents)
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II. Competition (Chap 37.1-3) A. Niche 1. how an organism uses its available resources 2. an organism’s “biological role”
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B. Habitat (the place where an organism lives) C. Intraspecific competition - between individuals of the same species
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D. Interspecific competition 1. different species competing for the same resources 2. competitive exclusion principle: - two very similar species competing for the same resources cannot coexist in the same place - one will be slightly more efficient and out-reproduce the other
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III. Coevolution and Symbiosis (Chap 37.4-5) - life relationship between different kinds or organisms - lichens, mycorrhizae, N 2 -fixing bacteria A. Commensalism 1. one species benefits, with benign effect 2. barnacles growing on whales 3. birds and cows
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B. Mutualism 1. both species benefit 2. flowering plants and pollinators
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B. Mutualism 1. both species benefit 2. flowering plants and pollinators 3. carpenter ants and aphids
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C. Parasitism 1. parasite benefits while host can ultimately be harmed 2. lice, internal parasites 3. brood parasitism
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IV. Predator-Prey Interactions (Chap 37.5) A. Chemical defenses 1. plants - toxins - bad aromas or tastes - some animals have adapted
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2. animals - venoms and toxins - some maintain toxic plant compounds in their tissues (Monarch caterpillar)
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B. Coloration 1. warning (aposematic) - found on many poisonous animals - on many insects that eat toxic plants (Monarch)
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2. cryptic coloration (camouflage)
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C. Mimicry 1. fake warning coloration (Batesian) - Viceroy and Monarch ViceroyMonarch
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Batesian mimicry
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2. resemblance among unrelated poisonous species (Müllerian) - common marking pattern or coloration
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