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Energy-transfer hypothesis |
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Definition
food chain length is limited by productivity |
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Definition
long food chains are easily disrupted by envirornental perturbations and thus tend to be elimintated |
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environmental complexity hypothesis |
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Definition
food chain length is a funcion of na ecosystems physical structure |
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Term
gross primary productivity |
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Definition
total amount of photosynthesis in a given area and time period |
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Term
gross photosynthetic efficiency |
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Definition
effieciency with which plants use the total amount of energy available to them |
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Definition
primary consumers production of new tissue. |
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Term
% goes to maintence? excretion and growth and reproduction. enrgy derivied from plants |
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Definition
80.7% maintenance. 17.7 exprection .1.6 growth |
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Definition
- areas where elements are stored for a period of time |
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Term
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Definition
path elements take as it moves fro abiotic systems through organisms and back again |
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Term
decomposition rate is influence by: |
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Definition
abiotic conditions and quality of the detritus as a nutrient source |
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Definition
why are x amount of species at a place/time |
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Term
community ecology tries to understand |
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Definition
how species interact and how those interactions affect distribution and abundance |
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Term
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Definition
how do chemicals and energy flow through specis in a ecoysystem. |
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Definition
abiotic range of conditions favorable to a species |
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Term
realized niche- give ex also |
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Definition
fundamental niche modified by biotic interactions (ex.competition and predation |
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Term
what produces different biomes |
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Definition
temperature and precipiation and variation in temperature and preciptation. |
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Term
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Definition
ecoyststem characterized by unique types of vegetation |
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Term
Net primary productivity(NPP) and it represents |
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Definition
total amount of carbon that is fixed per year minus amount of fixed carbon oxidized during cell respiration.
Represents organic matter that is availbae as food for other organism |
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Definition
intertidal neritic oceanic zone. |
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Term
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Definition
Community is neither stably nor predictable. |
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Term
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Definition
communities are highly predictable |
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Definition
species that has a greater impact thhan their abundance would suggest. |
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Definition
occurs when a disturbance removes the soil and its organisms, as well as organisms that live above the surface. |
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Definition
occurs when a disturbance removes some or all of the organisms from an area but leaves the soil intact. |
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Definition
are the first organisms to arrive at a newly disturbed site. They have good dispersal ability, being able to tolerate severe abiotic conditions, and high reproductive rates. However, they have little competitive ability. |
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Term
• As the number of native predator species increases |
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Definition
diversity of native prey species also increases (across the U.S.) |
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Term
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Definition
early-arriving species make conditions more favorable for the arrival of certain later species. |
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Definition
happens when existing species do not affect the probability that subsequent species will become established. |
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Definition
occurs when the presence of one species inhibits the establishment of another. |
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Definition
total genetic information contained within, for example, a species |
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Definition
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Definition
the variety of biotic communities in a region, along with abiotic components such as soil, water, and nutrients |
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Definition
alleles to go extict more rapidly in small populations than in large populations |
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Term
alleles that become fixed |
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Definition
genetic drift and slelection |
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Term
low levels of genetic variation is due to |
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Definition
drift associated with founder effects and genetic bottlenecks during domestication directional, artificial selection |
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Term
gene flow increases variation ____ populations and decreases____ populations |
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Definition
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Term
new speciation is caused by |
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Definition
drift, mutation, selection |
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Term
Sexual dimorphism refers to any trait that differs between males and females of the same species. |
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Definition
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Term
biological species concept |
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Definition
populations are evolutionarily independent if they are reproductively isolated from each other, i.e., they do not interbreed. |
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Definition
Speciation that begins with physical isolation via either dispersal or vicariance is known as |
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