Biodiversity , Species , Interact and Population control

Description

NY Mind Map on Biodiversity , Species , Interact and Population control, created by SE ENIGMA on 05/02/2015.
SE ENIGMA
Mind Map by SE ENIGMA, updated more than 1 year ago
SE ENIGMA
Created by SE ENIGMA almost 10 years ago
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Resource summary

Biodiversity , Species , Interact and Population control
  1. CMIPP interaction
    1. Predation-Prey(+,-)

      Annotations:

      • • Member of one species (the predator) feed directly on all or part of a living organism of another  species (the prey). Predator benefit, prey harmed. • Predator strategies – Herbivores can move to plants – Carnivores • Pursuit, Ambush – Camouflage – Chemical warfare • Prey strategies – Evasion – Alertness = highly developed senses – Protection = shells, bark, spines, thorns – Camouflage – Mimicry – Chemical warfare – Deceptive look or behavior
      1. co-evolution

        Annotations:

        • – Intense natural selection pressure on  each other – Each can evolve to counter the advantageous traits the other has  developed –Bats and moths
      2. Interspecific Competation(-,-)

        Annotations:

        • • competition b/w members of two or more  different species for food, space and any  other limited resources. • Humans – compete with other species • No two species can share vital limited  resources for long • Resolved by: – Migration – Shift in feeding habits or behavior – Population drop – Extinction • Intense competition leads to resource  partitioning
        1. Mutualism(+,+)

          Annotations:

          • • Both species benefit • Nutrition and protection • Gut inhabitant mutualism • Pollination: having pollen and seeds  dispersed for reproduction, • Nutritional mutualism: being supply with  food (i.e., lichens, rhizobium bacteria,  bacteria in a digestive system) • protection
          1. Commensalism(+,0)

            Annotations:

            • Benefits one species with little impact on other :
            1. Parasititism(+,-)

              Annotations:

              • Occurs when one species (the parasite)  feeds on part of another organism (the  host) by living on (Ecto parasite) or in the  host (Endo parasite) • Parasite benefits, host harmed • Parasites promote biodiversity • usually smaller than its host, • remains closely associated with, draw  nourishment from and weaken the host  over time, • rarely kill the host.
            2. Limit Growth - CELB

              Annotations:

              • Carrying capacity Biotic potential Exponential growth Logistic growth
              1. Carrying cap (k)

                Annotations:

                • The number of  individuals of a given species that can be sustained indefinitely in a given space =  carrying capacity (k) • biotic potential and environmental resistance decide growth
                1. Exponential

                  Annotations:

                  • few resource  limitation, population can grow at its intrinsic rate of increase
                  1. J curve (r-selected species)

                    Annotations:

                    • – High rate of population increase – Reproduce & spread rapidly when conditions  are favorable – Opportunists
                    1. r - intrinsic rate of increase

                      Annotations:

                      • –Rate under unlimited resources – no population can grow indefinitely –Nature limits population growth due to  resource limitation and competition  among species for those resources – Environmental resistance
                  2. Biotic potential
                    1. ideally
                    2. Logistic (near k)

                      Annotations:

                      • growth rate decrease as population grow larger. With time, size  stabilizes at or near the carrying capacity  (k) – sigmoid curve (S-shape)
                      1. Sigmoid (k-selected species)

                        Annotations:

                        • – Competitors – Typically follow a logistic growth curve – Slowly reproducing
                    3. Ecological Succesion - PSDI

                      Annotations:

                      • Structure and species composition of  communities and ecosystems change in  response to changing environmental conditions through a process called  ecological succession
                      1. (Intermediate) disturbance

                        Annotations:

                        • Moderate disturbance have greatest species  diversity
                        1. Primary - lifeless

                          Annotations:

                          • gradual establishment  of biotic communities on nearly lifeless ground
                          1. Secondary - some biotic community appear

                            Annotations:

                            • the reestablishment  of biotic communities in an area where some types  of biotic community is already present
                            1. Disturbance - new condition
                            2. Population
                              1. Dynamic
                                1. Stage - PTIP
                                  1. Preindustrial
                                    1. Transitional
                                      1. Industrial
                                        1. Postindustrial
                                        2. Distribution - CUR
                                          1. Clumping-most occur

                                            Annotations:

                                            • • Resources not uniformly distributed • Protection of the group • Pack living gives some predators  greater success • Temporary mating or young-rearing  groups
                                            1. Uniform
                                              1. Random
                                              2. pop = (B+J)-(D+E)

                                                Annotations:

                                                • population = (births + immigration) -  (deaths + emigration)
                                                1. AGE( pre,post) reproductive

                                                  Annotations:

                                                  • Age structure –Pre-reproductive stage (0-14 years) –Reproductive stage (15-44 years) –Post-reproductive stage (45 years)
                                                2. overshoot-dieback

                                                  Annotations:

                                                  • • Population not transition smoothly  from exponential to logistic growth • Overshoot carrying capacity of  environment due to fast resource  consumption • Caused by reproductive time lag • Dieback, unless excess individuals  switch to new resource
                                                  1. technical term

                                                    Annotations:

                                                    • Evasion- run away Mimicry - copy like other Pursuit-  attack Ambush - hiding Biotic potential- max rate at which the population of a given species can increase when there are no limit in its rate of growth Environmental resistant- all of the limiting factors of the growth of a population Intrinsic Rate of increase - rate of which a population could grow if it had unlimited resources 
                                                    1. Ideas

                                                      Annotations:

                                                      • • Interactions b/w species affect their use  of resources and their population sizes • There are always limits to population  growth in nature • Changes in environmental conditions  alter the composition of species and their population sizes in communities  and ecosystems (ecological succession)
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