3.2 Biology (Higher) - Sustainability and Interdependence

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higher Biology (UNIT 3 - Sustainability and Interdependence) Karteikarten am 3.2 Biology (Higher) - Sustainability and Interdependence, erstellt von kerryrandfield am 30/04/2015.
kerryrandfield
Karteikarten von kerryrandfield, aktualisiert more than 1 year ago
kerryrandfield
Erstellt von kerryrandfield vor etwa 9 Jahre
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Zusammenfassung der Ressource

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SYMBIOSIS a coevolved intimate relationship between members of two different species
PARASITISM symbiotic relationship in which one organism (parasite) benefits at the expense of another (host) eg - tapeworm in human
MUTUALISM symbiotic relationship in which both organisms benefit eg - cellulose digesting bacteria living in the guts of herbivores
TRANSMISSION OF PARASITES > direct contact - jumping or crawling from host to host > through resistant stages - periods in which parasites can remain dormant but viable without a host > vector - use of other organisms to carry parasite (eg mosquito as carrier of human malarial parasite)
PRIMARY HOST where parasite carries out the sexual stage of its reproduction
SECONDARY HOST used to complete the parasite's life cycle
EVIDENCE OF MUTUALISM IN CHLOROPLAST AND MITOCHONDRIA chloroplasts and mitochondria evolved from different types of small, prokaryotic cells that became residents in larger anaerobic cells. Mutualism - smaller residents gain security and larger hosts can produce much larger energy output
ADVANTAGES OF SOCIAL HIERARCHY > most powerful animals pass their genes on to next generation > experienced leadership guaranteed > aggression between members becomes ritualised and fighting is kept to a minimum so injury is avoided
ADVANTAGES OF COOPERATIVE HUNTING > larger prey can be tackled > increase is hunting success rate > more food for all individuals that hunting alone
ADVANTAGES OF SOCIAL DEFENECE MECHANISMS > increased vigilance - more eyes to spot > safety in numbers - proportionally less chance of being caught > possible for a group to fight off a predator > fast moving groups can confuse predators making it hard to spot an individual
ALTRUISM when an animal acts in a way that will decrease its own survival chances but improves the chances of another
RECIPROCAL ALTRUISM altruism in which there is a very real prospect of the favour being returned
KIN SELECTION when an individual performs an altruistic act to help a close relative - and therefore its own genes
KEYSTONE SPECIES species which have a particularly important impact on their ecosystem (eg bees)
EXTINCTION the complete demise of a group of organisms
GENETIC DIVERSITY results from genetic variation shown by NUMBER and FREQUENCY of alleles
SPECIES DIVERSITY > species richness - number of different species > relative abundance - proportion on each species
HABITAT ISLAND/FRAGMENT an area containing a specific ecosystem surrounded by an unlike ecosystem
HUMAN ACTIVITIES AFFECTING BIODIVERISTY > overharvesting or animals and plants > destruction of habitats > expansion of species across the world > islandisation / fragmentation >pollution
INTRODUCED SPECIES non native species in new geographical locations
INDIGENOUS SPECIES species native to a particular ecosystem
NATURALISED SPECIES non native species established itself in communities
INVASIVE SPECIES a naturalised species which can outcompete native species
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