ENWC201 Study Guide - Final Guide: Sympatric Speciation, Allopatric Speciation, Logistic Function

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ENWC 201:
Cumulative Concepts to Review for Final Exam
Section 1: General Wildlife Ecology
● What is an animal’s niche? How many dimensions can a niche have? Can animals share
a niche?
â—‹ The functional role of an organisms considered in the environment in which it
loves
○ Its “job”
â—‹ A niche is multidimensional
â–  Time of hunting
â–  Size of prey
â–  Location of prey
â—‹ Competitive exclusion theory
â–  No two organisms can occupy the same niche at the same time in the
same place
â–  The more similar the organisms are, the more intense the competition
between them
â–  The less-fit species will have to evolve into a dif niche, move to a dif area,
or become extinct
â—‹ How do organisms adapt to fill a particular niche
â—Ź Natural selection and evolution
â—Ź Darwin
â—Ź Natural selection - process that determines which individuals will pass on
their genes to next generation
â—Ź Evolution - changes that we see in the genes and characteristics
displayed by successive generations of a population
â—Ź Steps of a natural selection
â—‹ Individuals within a species show genetic variation
â—‹ Organisms reproduce many more offspring than are needed to
replace the parents
â—‹ Excess numbers of individuals result in a shortage of resources
â—‹ Individual variation allows some a greater chance of obtaining
resources, and therefore a greater chance of reproducing than
others
â—‹ Over time, each generation is subjected to natural selection. The
percentage of individuals showing favorable variations will thus
increase and those having unfavorable variations will decrease
â—Ź Natural selection over time can lead to considerable change in the
characteristics of a species and kinds of species present
â—Ź Speciation - the production of a new species from a previously existing
species
â—‹ Allopatric speciation - geographic speciation, speciation that
occurs when biological populations of the same species become
isolated from each
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â–  Volcano
â–  Most common across time
â—‹ Sympatric speciation - when species are in same area but still
manage to speciate and become different species - because of
available niche space
â–  Have to have something special occur
â—Ź What happens when a species cannot adapt as fast as environment?
â—‹ Extinction - loss of an entire species
â—‹ 500 million species are believed to have existed
â—‹ 5-10 million are currently in existence
â—‹ Extinctions are a natural result of natural selection, but the
extinction rate is increasing with humans
â—Ź Interactions between organisms
â—‹ Predator and prey
â—‹ Predation - one organism known as predator, kills and eats other
organisms, known as they prey
â–  Predator Employ strategies to make them more effective at
capturing prey
â–  Prey employ strategies to make them more effective at
avoiding predators
â–  The relationship between the two is evolving
â–  Prey adapt
â—Ź Increased reproduction rate
â—Ź Tolerate a higher level of mortality
â–  Prey that survive pass on their survival traits to their
offspring
â–  Predators that are successful in capturing prey, survive
and pass those traits onto offspring
â—‹ Interspecific competition - competition between members of
different species
â—‹ Other symbiotic relationships - long standing physical relationship
between two different species
â–  Parasitism - one organisms, known as the parasite lives on
or in another organism known as the host from which it
derives nutrients to the detriment of the host
â—Ź Ectoparasite - lives on the outside or surface of the
host
â—Ź Endoparasite - lives inside the host
â–  Commensalism - relationship between organisms where
one benefits and the other organism is not affected
â—Ź Cow and cattle egrets (eats the bugs on the cows)
â—Ź Shark and small fish, small fish swims under the
shark and eats whatever comes out of the sharks
mouth after shark eats
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â–  Mutualism- both species involved in the relationship
benefit. Many times the relationship is obligatory, meaning
that the species cannot live without each other
â—Ź Clownfish and sea anemone
â—Ź What is a specialist vs a generalist?
â—‹ Specialist- fit into their environment tightly and there is no room for dealing with
changes or for colonizing different habits. they are good at ONE SPECIFIC
THING
â—‹ Generalist - those adapted to a wide range of environmental circumstances and
food sources
â—Ź What is logistic growth? What limiting factors might lead to a given (K) carrying capacity?
â—‹ Carrying capacity (K)
â–  The max sustainable pop
â–  Limiting factors help define K
â–  May change
â–  K= carrying capacity
â—‹ Logistic growth rate
â—‹ Our biggest limiting factor of population growth is growing food for ourselves - to
overcome carrying capacity is make new ag advancements
â—‹ Pesticides
â—‹ Managing Animal Abundance
â—Ź today hunters and trappers are the cornerstones of NA wildlife
conservation bc of the funds and advocacy they bring the table - they are
the most effective logistical agents of actual population management
â—Ź With initial protections, populations became overpopulated and some
efforts were too successful in some cases - the local populations had
been allowed to exceed the carrying capacity
â—‹ Reproduction decreased and mortality increased because of
intraspecific competition for resources available
â—Ź Often needed to maintain wildlife populations below environmental and
social carrying capacity to reduce die offs to provide for more productive
populations - to protect die offs, provide more productive populations,
protect habitats and reduce spread of disease or reduce conflicts with
humans
â—Ź Biological carrying capacity is normal carrying capacity - social carrying
capacity depends on many factors like conflicts with humans
â—Ź What is the energy pyramid? What is at the bottom? What is at the top? Where is the
most energy and the least energy? Where is the most biomass and least biomass?
Where is the highest number of individuals and lowest number?
○ About 1% of sun’s energy is caught and changed into chemical energy
â—‹ Producers (P=1%) -> primary consumers (P=16.2%) -> secondary consumers
(P=11.37%) -> tertiary consumers (P=5%) -> bacteria/ fungus - can eat on all
levels (P=24.3%)
â—‹ Can average out that each level is 10% of the energy of the last
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Document Summary

The functional role of an organisms considered in the environment in which it loves. No two organisms can occupy the same niche at the same time in the same place. The more similar the organisms are, the more intense the competition between them. The less-fit species will have to evolve into a dif niche, move to a dif area, or become extinct. How do organisms adapt to fill a particular niche. Natural selection - process that determines which individuals will pass on their genes to next generation. Evolution - changes that we see in the genes and characteristics displayed by successive generations of a population. Organisms reproduce many more offspring than are needed to replace the parents. Excess numbers of individuals result in a shortage of resources. Over time, each generation is subjected to natural selection. Natural selection over time can lead to considerable change in the characteristics of a species and kinds of species present.

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