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Chapter 4: Evolution, Biological Communities, and Species Interactions Advanced Environmental Science
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EVOLUTION PRODUCES SPECIES DIVERSITY Section 4.1
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Summary: artificial selection natural selection adaptation in ecosystems speciation evolution still at work
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Artificial Selection
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Natural Selection adaptation: the acquisition of traits that allow a species to survive in its environment natural selection: the process of better-selected individuals passing their traits on to the next generations
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selection pressures: factors in the environment that favor successful reproduction of individuals possessing heritable traits and that reduce viability/fertility of individuals not possessing those traits (examples…)
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critical factor: the single factor in shortest supply relative to demand tolerance limits: minimum and maximum levels for each environmental factor
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Adaptation in Ecosystems habitat vs. niche
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competitive exclusion principle: no two species can occupy the same niche for long (the more successful will exclude the other) resource partitioning: allows several species to utilize the same resource and coexist (examples…)
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Speciation speciation: development of new species
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allopatric speciation: geographic barriers cause reproductive isolation sympatric speciation: biological or behavioral barriers cause reproductive isolation (once isolation occurs species diverge genetically)
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Evolution is still at work… Galapagos island finches pesticide resistant insects drug-resistant pathogens
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SPECIES INTERACTIONS SHAPE BIOLOGICAL COMMUNITIES Section 4.2
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Competition intraspecific interspecific
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Predation Predator-prey relationships exert selection pressures that favor evolutionary adaptation. Predators become more efficient at searching and feeding, and prey become more effective at escape and avoidance.
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coevolution: species exert selective pressures on each other and gradually change as a result
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Predator Avoidance Batesian mimicry: species that are harmless resemble poisonous or distasteful ones Müllerian mimicry: two unpalatable or dangerous species look alike
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Batesian mimicry
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Symbiosis mutualism
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Symbiosis commensalism
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Symbiosis parasitism
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keystone species: a species that plays a critical role in a biological community that is out of proportion to its abundance
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COMMUNITY PROPERTIES AFFECT SPECIES POPULATIONS Section 4.3
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primary productivity: rate of biomass production abundance: total number of organisms in a community diversity: number of different species, niches, or genetic variation present in a community
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complexity: the number of species at each trophic level and the number of trophic levels in a community
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Stability and Resiliency in Ecosystems constancy: lack of fluctuations in composition or functions inertia: resistance to perturbations renewal: ability to repair damage after disturbance
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edge effects: changes encountered at the boundary between two ecosystems ecotone: a boundary between two types of biological community *interior area is significant*
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COMMUNITIES ARE DYNAMIC AND CHANGE OVER TIME Section 4.4
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Ecological Succession primary succession: succession that occurs in an area where no community existed before secondary succession: succession that occurs in an area where the existing community is disturbed
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pioneer species: the first species to colonize a new area
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climax community: the community that develops last and stays the longest represents the maximum complexity and stability possible depends on climate and soil
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disturbance: any force that disrupts the established patterns of species diversity and abundance, community structure or community properties disturbance-adapted species: species that depend on disturbances to succeed
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