Deck 54: Community Ecology

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Question
Figure 54-1 ​
<strong>Figure 54-1 ​   ​ In Experimental Condition 2 of the accompanying figure, the distribution of Chthamalus suggests that:</strong> A) interspecific competition kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area. B) intraspecific competition kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area. C) a limiting factor kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area. D) a barnacle parasite kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area. E) predation kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area. <div style=padding-top: 35px>

In Experimental Condition 2 of the accompanying figure, the distribution of Chthamalus suggests that:

A) interspecific competition kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area.
B) intraspecific competition kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area.
C) a limiting factor kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area.
D) a barnacle parasite kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area.
E) predation kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area.
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Question
Competitive exclusion is a result of:

A) interspecific competition.
B) intraspecific competition.
C) character displacement.
D) succession.
E) community complexity.
Question
Which of the following could be an example of a limiting resource?

A) Genetic mutations
B) Plenty of nesting sites
C) Amount of precipitation
D) Abundant food
E) Growth rate
Question
Suppose a bacterium needs glucose to reproduce. Glucose is defined as the bacterium's:

A) niche.
B) resource.
C) facilitator.
D) community.
E) habitat.
Question
Resource partitioning may include which of the following?

A) Relocating nesting sites
B) Feeding at the same time of day
C) Eating the same prey
D) Overlapping reproductive seasons
E) Intraspecific competition
Question
Which scenario best describes facilitation?

A) A species interaction that modifies and enhances the local environment for other species
B) A species interaction that modifies and detracts from the local environment, inhibiting other species
C) An interaction between members of a population that enhances the local environment for other members of the same population
D) An interaction between members of a population that detracts from the local environment, inhibiting other members of the same population
E) A species interaction that enhances the local environment for a previously extant species
Question
Which are the three main roles played by organisms in community life?

A) Producer, detritivore, decomposer
B) Consumer, detritivore. decomposer
C) Producer, consumer, decomposer
D) Facilitator, decomposer, consumer
E) Realized niche, fundamental niche, habitat
Question
Large-scale experiments conducted in oak forests of the northeastern United States linked bumper acorn crops to booming mouse populations. The conclusion from these experiments is that:

A) increased levels of first trophic level productivity cause an increase in disease vector activities.
B) competition can result in a more limited realized niche.
C) increased levels of first trophic level productivity cause a decrease in disease vector activities.
D) extermination of mouse populations is the most effective way of reducing Lyme disease transmission.
E) potential threat of Lyme disease in human beings is eliminated following a bumper crop of acorns.
Question
Habitat is best described as:

A) the local environment in which a species lives.
B) what a species eats.
C) what competes with a species.
D) the abiotic components of a species' environment.
E) the totality of adaptations by a species to its environment.
Question
Which of the following is an INCORRECT statement regarding a community in the natural world?

A) A community is an association of populations of different species.
B) The species in a community live and interact, directly and indirectly with each other, in the same place at the same time.
C) The definition for community is deliberately broad.
D) Communities refer to ecological categories that vary greatly in size and have precise boundaries.
E) Communities are rarely completely isolated.
Question
A biological community and its abiotic environment together comprise which of the following?

A) Ecosystem
B) Association
C) Population
D) Biosphere
E) Rhizosphere
Question
Suppose it is ideal for a fish to live in fast-moving water, but the fish can also survive in slow-moving water. Fast-moving water is best described as the fishes':

A) fundamental niche.
B) realized niche.
C) displaced niche.
D) excluded niche.
E) limited niche.
Question
The community found on a rotting log would include:

A) sunlight.
B) rainwater.
C) bacteria.
D) gases.
E) minerals.
Question
Niches apply to:

A) individual organisms.
B) individual species.
C) groups of species.
D) communities.
E) ecosystems.
Question
Which of the following is an INCORRECT description of how one species functions compared to other species in a community?

A) Positive effects
B) Negative effects
C) Direct effects
D) Indirect effects
E) Independent existence
Question
One reason that the realized niche and fundamental niche are not typically the same is:

A) limiting resources.
B) reproductive potential.
C) extinction event.
D) species diversity.
E) species sparsity.
Question
Figure 54-1 ​
<strong>Figure 54-1 ​   ​ In Experimental Condition 1 of the accompanying figure, the distribution of Balanus suggests that:</strong> A) interspecific competition kept Balanus from extending higher into the intertidal area. B) intraspecific competition kept Balanus from extending higher into the intertidal area. C) an unfavorable environmental factor kept Balanus from extending higher into the intertidal area. D) Balanus is less motile than Chthamalus . E) Balanus is more motile than Chthamalus . <div style=padding-top: 35px>

In Experimental Condition 1 of the accompanying figure, the distribution of Balanus suggests that:

A) interspecific competition kept Balanus from extending higher into the intertidal area.
B) intraspecific competition kept Balanus from extending higher into the intertidal area.
C) an unfavorable environmental factor kept Balanus from extending higher into the intertidal area.
D) Balanus is less motile than Chthamalus .
E) Balanus is more motile than Chthamalus .
Question
The associated figure provides support for which of the following processes? ​
<strong>The associated figure provides support for which of the following processes? ​   ​</strong> A) Secondary succession B) Competitive exclusion C) Coevolution D) Mutualism E) Resource partitioning <div style=padding-top: 35px>

A) Secondary succession
B) Competitive exclusion
C) Coevolution
D) Mutualism
E) Resource partitioning
Question
The realized niche for the green anole was determined by:

A) a limiting resource.
B) competition.
C) symbiosis.
D) coevolution.
E) disease.
Question
An organism's role within the structure and function of a particular community is its:

A) habitat.
B) trophic level.
C) population.
D) ecological niche.
E) competition.
Question
Which country would be expected to have the greatest species richness per unit area?

A) Japan
B) United States
C) Brazil
D) Canada
E) New Zealand
Question
Which organisms may be a keystone species in a tropical rain forest?

A) Gray wolves
B) Fruit-eating bats
C) Poison arrow frogs
D) Fig trees
E) Fruit-eating monkeys
Question
A transitional zone where two or more communities meet is known as which of the following?

A) Interzone
B) Biota
C) Ecozone
D) Ecotype
E) Ecotone
Question
In accordance with the time hypothesis, which of the following countries would be expected to have the LEAST species richness?

A) Canada
B) Brazil
C) Cameroon
D) Papua New Guinea
E) Burundi
Question
In a parasitic relationship where the host contracts a disease and sometimes dies, the parasite is called a(n):

A) predator.
B) keystone species.
C) mutualistic symbiont.
D) interspecific competitor.
E) pathogen.
Question
Which of the following is NOT an example of a predator-prey relationship?

A) A mountain lion eating a deer
B) A deer eating grass
C) A fish eating plankton
D) An owl eating a mouse
E) All of these are examples of predator-prey interactions.
Question
An example of mutualism is:

A) mycorrhizae and epiphytes.
B) epiphytes and tapeworms.
C) monarch and viceroy butterflies.
D) silverfish and army ants.
E) Rhizobium and legumes.
Question
The idea that older, more stable habitats have greater species richness than habitats subjected to frequent, widespread disturbances is known as:

A) natural selection.
B) the time hypothesis.
C) island biogeography.
D) the theory of community stability.
E) the disturbance hypothesis.
Question
Mycorrhizae are associations between:

A) coral animals and dinoflagellates.
B) two types of insects.
C) fungi and plant roots.
D) wasps and orchids.
E) epiphytes and rainforest trees.
Question
The relationship between reef-building coral animals and zooxanthellae is classified as:

A) mutualism.
B) commensalism.
C) Batesian mimicry.
D) parasitism.
E) character displacement.
Question
An example of both chemical protection and coevolution can be seen in:

A) yellow goldenrod spiders and goldenrod.
B) milkweeds and monarch caterpillars.
C) the poison arrow frog and flying insects.
D) coral animals and dinoflagellates.
E) mycorrhizae.
Question
The difficulty encountered by many species in reaching and colonizing an isolated geographic location is known as which of the following?

A) Distance effect
B) Edge effect
C) Diversity index
D) Complexity index
E) Opportunity index
Question
If you were to study all of the insect-eating birds in a forest, you would see that many birds eat insects, yet you may not see any evidence of competition. What is the most probable explanation?

A) The birds have coevolved.
B) The birds are exhibiting resource partitioning.
C) The birds are exhibiting intraspecific competition only.
D) There is no keystone species in this community.
E) There is not enough species richness to see evidence of competition.
Question
Traditionally, most ecologists have assumed that community stability is a consequence of:

A) competition.
B) predation.
C) community complexity.
D) the relative size of realized niches among species.
E) disease.
Question
Animals with chemical defenses are also typically:

A) fast runners.
B) aposematic.
C) small in size.
D) large in size.
E) camouflaged.
Question
Keystone species:

A) are always symbionts.
B) are typically not the most abundant species in the community.
C) illustrate secondary succession.
D) always form the base of a food chain.
E) are only found in tropical communities.
Question
In a lake, a certain native species of zooplankton is found evenly distributed in the water column. After introduction of a different species of zooplankton, the native species is only found in the shallow water zone. This is most likely an illustration of:

A) character displacement.
B) species richness.
C) primary succession.
D) secondary succession.
E) competitive exclusion.
Question
Many poisonous snakes share warning colors of red, yellow, and black. This is an example of:

A) Batesian mimicry.
B) mutualism.
C) camouflage.
D) Müllerian mimicry.
E) character displacement.
Question
A frog that lacks chemical defenses, yet resembles a poison arrow frog, would exhibit:

A) Batesian mimicry.
B) mutualism.
C) camouflage.
D) Müllerian mimicry.
E) epistasis.
Question
Which habitat would be expected to have the greatest species richness?

A) An island
B) a polar habitat
C) an ecotone
D) An agricultural habitat
E) A mountain top
Question
The orderly replacement of one community by another is known as:

A) character displacement.
B) succession.
C) coevolution.
D) the edge effect.
E) competitive exclusion.
Question
Adaptations that exert a strong competitive force on a predator are the result of coevolution.
Question
Which habitat would most likely have the greatest species richness?

A) Prairie
B) Savanna
C) Tundra
D) Temperate desert
E) Tropical rain forest
Question
The current concept of a climax community states that forest communities:

A) never reach a state of permanent equilibrium.
B) never are disturbed.
C) are determined solely by climate.
D) are not permanently affected by fires or floods.
E) are the inevitable end-point of succession.
Question
In which of the following lakes would you expect to find the highest species richness?

A) High pH
B) Low pH
C) High salt
D) Agricultural
E) Freshwater
Question
In accordance with the species richness hypothesis, the critical importance of any one species is expected to be the least in which of the following habitats?

A) Savanna
B) Tundra
C) Tropical rain forest
D) Desert
E) Alpine lake
Question
A lake in which of the following locations would be expected to have the highest species richness?

A) City
B) Farm
C) Metal mine
D) National forest
E) Grazed pasture
Question
The potential ecological niche of a species is its realized niche.
Question
Explain Gleason's individualistic model describing community structure.
Question
Explain the ecological significance of limiting resources, using three specific examples in your discussion.
Question
Figure 54-2


Figure 54-2 ​    ​ Use the accompanying figure to summarize the key concepts relating to species richness from studies of birds in the South Pacific islands. Each dot in the figure represents an island.<div style=padding-top: 35px>

Use the accompanying figure to summarize the key concepts relating to species richness from studies of birds in the South Pacific islands. Each dot in the figure represents an island.
Question
When the structural complexity of the vegetation is more complex, what can generally be said of the species richness?

A) Species richness is not correlated to structural complexity of the vegetation.
B) Species richness increases.
C) Species richness decreases by a small amount.
D) Species richness decreases by a moderate amount.
E) Species richness decreases by a large amount.
Question
In which of the following habitat types would species diversity be expected to be relatively low?

A) High environmental stress
B) Low environmental stress
C) Continental ecosystems
D) Ecotones
E) Mature successional communities
Question
Competition between species 1 and species 2 is beneficial for species 1 and harmful for species 2.
Question
Species diversity is often very high in the region between two distinct communities, known as a(n):

A) ecotone.
B) secondary successional area.
C) primary successional area.
D) fundamental niche.
E) realized niche.
Question
Based on latitude only, which of the following U.S. states would be expected to have the highest species richness?

A) Georgia
B) Utah
C) Kansas
D) Pennsylvania
E) North Dakota
Question
Primary succession may be seen:

A) on new lava or on sand dunes.
B) after a fire.
C) when farmland is abandoned.
D) only in tropical rain forests.
E) in any community that has periodic disturbances.
Question
In one sentence, summarize the intermediate disturbance hypothesis.
Question
Define predation and describe how natural selection shapes the behavior and bodies of both predator and prey. Include a brief discussion of two specific examples.
Question
Which of the following is an ideal example of where to study secondary succession?

A) A volcanic eruption
B) A retreating glacier
C) Abandoned mining waste
D) An abandoned agricultural field
E) An undisturbed rain forest
Question
In an ecosystem's bottom-up processes, predators affect the abundances of other populations in the ecological community.
Question
The association of nitrogen fixing bacteria of the genus Rhizobium with legumes such as peas is an example of mutualism.
Question
Species richness is a measure of both the number of species and the relative importance of each species based on its abundance, productivity, or size.
Question
Match between columns
Communities that are not interdependent
Organismic model
Communities that are not interdependent
Individualistic model
Question
Match between columns
Views communities as "super-organisms"
Organismic model
Views communities as "super-organisms"
Individualistic model
Question
Match between columns
Environmental gradients that are more important on species survivability
Organismic model
Environmental gradients that are more important on species survivability
Individualistic model
Question
Match between columns
Stresses the interaction of members of a community.
Organismic model
Stresses the interaction of members of a community.
Individualistic model
Question
Match between columns
Developed by Frederick Clements
Organismic model
Developed by Frederick Clements
Individualistic model
Question
Describe why identifying and conserving keystone species are important, provide an example of a keystone species
Question
Match between columns
Developed by Henry Gleason
Organismic model
Developed by Henry Gleason
Individualistic model
Question
In Müllerian mimicry a defenseless species is protected by its resemblance to a dangerous species.
Question
The impact of a keystone species is proportionate to its abundance in an ecosystem.
Question
Match between columns
Change in species composition produced at ecotones
Edge effect
Change in species composition produced at ecotones
Bottom-up processes
Change in species composition produced at ecotones
Dominant species
Change in species composition produced at ecotones
Top-down processes
Change in species composition produced at ecotones
Keystone species
Question
Humans have small mites that live in hair follicles and oil glands around the nose and eyelashes. What would you need to know to classify them as exhibiting mutualism, commensalism, or parasitism?
Question
Match between columns
Also known as tropic cascades
Edge effect
Also known as tropic cascades
Bottom-up processes
Also known as tropic cascades
Dominant species
Also known as tropic cascades
Top-down processes
Also known as tropic cascades
Keystone species
Question
Cryptic coloration advertises a species unpalatability to potential predators.
Question
Describe the ongoing research concerning the relationship between species richness and community stability. What research supports or fails to support this relationship?
Question
Nicotine synthesis is an adaptation of plant chemical defense against insects.
Question
Match between columns
Present in relatively small numbers in a community
Edge effect
Present in relatively small numbers in a community
Bottom-up processes
Present in relatively small numbers in a community
Dominant species
Present in relatively small numbers in a community
Top-down processes
Present in relatively small numbers in a community
Keystone species
Question
Match between columns
May change the local environment
Edge effect
May change the local environment
Bottom-up processes
May change the local environment
Dominant species
May change the local environment
Top-down processes
May change the local environment
Keystone species
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Deck 54: Community Ecology
1
Figure 54-1 ​
<strong>Figure 54-1 ​   ​ In Experimental Condition 2 of the accompanying figure, the distribution of Chthamalus suggests that:</strong> A) interspecific competition kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area. B) intraspecific competition kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area. C) a limiting factor kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area. D) a barnacle parasite kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area. E) predation kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area.

In Experimental Condition 2 of the accompanying figure, the distribution of Chthamalus suggests that:

A) interspecific competition kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area.
B) intraspecific competition kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area.
C) a limiting factor kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area.
D) a barnacle parasite kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area.
E) predation kept Chthamalus from extending lower into the intertidal area.
A
2
Competitive exclusion is a result of:

A) interspecific competition.
B) intraspecific competition.
C) character displacement.
D) succession.
E) community complexity.
A
3
Which of the following could be an example of a limiting resource?

A) Genetic mutations
B) Plenty of nesting sites
C) Amount of precipitation
D) Abundant food
E) Growth rate
C
4
Suppose a bacterium needs glucose to reproduce. Glucose is defined as the bacterium's:

A) niche.
B) resource.
C) facilitator.
D) community.
E) habitat.
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5
Resource partitioning may include which of the following?

A) Relocating nesting sites
B) Feeding at the same time of day
C) Eating the same prey
D) Overlapping reproductive seasons
E) Intraspecific competition
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6
Which scenario best describes facilitation?

A) A species interaction that modifies and enhances the local environment for other species
B) A species interaction that modifies and detracts from the local environment, inhibiting other species
C) An interaction between members of a population that enhances the local environment for other members of the same population
D) An interaction between members of a population that detracts from the local environment, inhibiting other members of the same population
E) A species interaction that enhances the local environment for a previously extant species
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7
Which are the three main roles played by organisms in community life?

A) Producer, detritivore, decomposer
B) Consumer, detritivore. decomposer
C) Producer, consumer, decomposer
D) Facilitator, decomposer, consumer
E) Realized niche, fundamental niche, habitat
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8
Large-scale experiments conducted in oak forests of the northeastern United States linked bumper acorn crops to booming mouse populations. The conclusion from these experiments is that:

A) increased levels of first trophic level productivity cause an increase in disease vector activities.
B) competition can result in a more limited realized niche.
C) increased levels of first trophic level productivity cause a decrease in disease vector activities.
D) extermination of mouse populations is the most effective way of reducing Lyme disease transmission.
E) potential threat of Lyme disease in human beings is eliminated following a bumper crop of acorns.
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9
Habitat is best described as:

A) the local environment in which a species lives.
B) what a species eats.
C) what competes with a species.
D) the abiotic components of a species' environment.
E) the totality of adaptations by a species to its environment.
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10
Which of the following is an INCORRECT statement regarding a community in the natural world?

A) A community is an association of populations of different species.
B) The species in a community live and interact, directly and indirectly with each other, in the same place at the same time.
C) The definition for community is deliberately broad.
D) Communities refer to ecological categories that vary greatly in size and have precise boundaries.
E) Communities are rarely completely isolated.
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11
A biological community and its abiotic environment together comprise which of the following?

A) Ecosystem
B) Association
C) Population
D) Biosphere
E) Rhizosphere
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12
Suppose it is ideal for a fish to live in fast-moving water, but the fish can also survive in slow-moving water. Fast-moving water is best described as the fishes':

A) fundamental niche.
B) realized niche.
C) displaced niche.
D) excluded niche.
E) limited niche.
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13
The community found on a rotting log would include:

A) sunlight.
B) rainwater.
C) bacteria.
D) gases.
E) minerals.
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14
Niches apply to:

A) individual organisms.
B) individual species.
C) groups of species.
D) communities.
E) ecosystems.
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15
Which of the following is an INCORRECT description of how one species functions compared to other species in a community?

A) Positive effects
B) Negative effects
C) Direct effects
D) Indirect effects
E) Independent existence
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16
One reason that the realized niche and fundamental niche are not typically the same is:

A) limiting resources.
B) reproductive potential.
C) extinction event.
D) species diversity.
E) species sparsity.
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17
Figure 54-1 ​
<strong>Figure 54-1 ​   ​ In Experimental Condition 1 of the accompanying figure, the distribution of Balanus suggests that:</strong> A) interspecific competition kept Balanus from extending higher into the intertidal area. B) intraspecific competition kept Balanus from extending higher into the intertidal area. C) an unfavorable environmental factor kept Balanus from extending higher into the intertidal area. D) Balanus is less motile than Chthamalus . E) Balanus is more motile than Chthamalus .

In Experimental Condition 1 of the accompanying figure, the distribution of Balanus suggests that:

A) interspecific competition kept Balanus from extending higher into the intertidal area.
B) intraspecific competition kept Balanus from extending higher into the intertidal area.
C) an unfavorable environmental factor kept Balanus from extending higher into the intertidal area.
D) Balanus is less motile than Chthamalus .
E) Balanus is more motile than Chthamalus .
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18
The associated figure provides support for which of the following processes? ​
<strong>The associated figure provides support for which of the following processes? ​   ​</strong> A) Secondary succession B) Competitive exclusion C) Coevolution D) Mutualism E) Resource partitioning

A) Secondary succession
B) Competitive exclusion
C) Coevolution
D) Mutualism
E) Resource partitioning
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19
The realized niche for the green anole was determined by:

A) a limiting resource.
B) competition.
C) symbiosis.
D) coevolution.
E) disease.
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20
An organism's role within the structure and function of a particular community is its:

A) habitat.
B) trophic level.
C) population.
D) ecological niche.
E) competition.
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21
Which country would be expected to have the greatest species richness per unit area?

A) Japan
B) United States
C) Brazil
D) Canada
E) New Zealand
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22
Which organisms may be a keystone species in a tropical rain forest?

A) Gray wolves
B) Fruit-eating bats
C) Poison arrow frogs
D) Fig trees
E) Fruit-eating monkeys
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23
A transitional zone where two or more communities meet is known as which of the following?

A) Interzone
B) Biota
C) Ecozone
D) Ecotype
E) Ecotone
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24
In accordance with the time hypothesis, which of the following countries would be expected to have the LEAST species richness?

A) Canada
B) Brazil
C) Cameroon
D) Papua New Guinea
E) Burundi
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25
In a parasitic relationship where the host contracts a disease and sometimes dies, the parasite is called a(n):

A) predator.
B) keystone species.
C) mutualistic symbiont.
D) interspecific competitor.
E) pathogen.
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26
Which of the following is NOT an example of a predator-prey relationship?

A) A mountain lion eating a deer
B) A deer eating grass
C) A fish eating plankton
D) An owl eating a mouse
E) All of these are examples of predator-prey interactions.
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27
An example of mutualism is:

A) mycorrhizae and epiphytes.
B) epiphytes and tapeworms.
C) monarch and viceroy butterflies.
D) silverfish and army ants.
E) Rhizobium and legumes.
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28
The idea that older, more stable habitats have greater species richness than habitats subjected to frequent, widespread disturbances is known as:

A) natural selection.
B) the time hypothesis.
C) island biogeography.
D) the theory of community stability.
E) the disturbance hypothesis.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Mycorrhizae are associations between:

A) coral animals and dinoflagellates.
B) two types of insects.
C) fungi and plant roots.
D) wasps and orchids.
E) epiphytes and rainforest trees.
Unlock Deck
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30
The relationship between reef-building coral animals and zooxanthellae is classified as:

A) mutualism.
B) commensalism.
C) Batesian mimicry.
D) parasitism.
E) character displacement.
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31
An example of both chemical protection and coevolution can be seen in:

A) yellow goldenrod spiders and goldenrod.
B) milkweeds and monarch caterpillars.
C) the poison arrow frog and flying insects.
D) coral animals and dinoflagellates.
E) mycorrhizae.
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32
The difficulty encountered by many species in reaching and colonizing an isolated geographic location is known as which of the following?

A) Distance effect
B) Edge effect
C) Diversity index
D) Complexity index
E) Opportunity index
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33
If you were to study all of the insect-eating birds in a forest, you would see that many birds eat insects, yet you may not see any evidence of competition. What is the most probable explanation?

A) The birds have coevolved.
B) The birds are exhibiting resource partitioning.
C) The birds are exhibiting intraspecific competition only.
D) There is no keystone species in this community.
E) There is not enough species richness to see evidence of competition.
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34
Traditionally, most ecologists have assumed that community stability is a consequence of:

A) competition.
B) predation.
C) community complexity.
D) the relative size of realized niches among species.
E) disease.
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35
Animals with chemical defenses are also typically:

A) fast runners.
B) aposematic.
C) small in size.
D) large in size.
E) camouflaged.
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36
Keystone species:

A) are always symbionts.
B) are typically not the most abundant species in the community.
C) illustrate secondary succession.
D) always form the base of a food chain.
E) are only found in tropical communities.
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37
In a lake, a certain native species of zooplankton is found evenly distributed in the water column. After introduction of a different species of zooplankton, the native species is only found in the shallow water zone. This is most likely an illustration of:

A) character displacement.
B) species richness.
C) primary succession.
D) secondary succession.
E) competitive exclusion.
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38
Many poisonous snakes share warning colors of red, yellow, and black. This is an example of:

A) Batesian mimicry.
B) mutualism.
C) camouflage.
D) Müllerian mimicry.
E) character displacement.
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39
A frog that lacks chemical defenses, yet resembles a poison arrow frog, would exhibit:

A) Batesian mimicry.
B) mutualism.
C) camouflage.
D) Müllerian mimicry.
E) epistasis.
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40
Which habitat would be expected to have the greatest species richness?

A) An island
B) a polar habitat
C) an ecotone
D) An agricultural habitat
E) A mountain top
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41
The orderly replacement of one community by another is known as:

A) character displacement.
B) succession.
C) coevolution.
D) the edge effect.
E) competitive exclusion.
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42
Adaptations that exert a strong competitive force on a predator are the result of coevolution.
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43
Which habitat would most likely have the greatest species richness?

A) Prairie
B) Savanna
C) Tundra
D) Temperate desert
E) Tropical rain forest
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44
The current concept of a climax community states that forest communities:

A) never reach a state of permanent equilibrium.
B) never are disturbed.
C) are determined solely by climate.
D) are not permanently affected by fires or floods.
E) are the inevitable end-point of succession.
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45
In which of the following lakes would you expect to find the highest species richness?

A) High pH
B) Low pH
C) High salt
D) Agricultural
E) Freshwater
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46
In accordance with the species richness hypothesis, the critical importance of any one species is expected to be the least in which of the following habitats?

A) Savanna
B) Tundra
C) Tropical rain forest
D) Desert
E) Alpine lake
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47
A lake in which of the following locations would be expected to have the highest species richness?

A) City
B) Farm
C) Metal mine
D) National forest
E) Grazed pasture
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48
The potential ecological niche of a species is its realized niche.
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49
Explain Gleason's individualistic model describing community structure.
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50
Explain the ecological significance of limiting resources, using three specific examples in your discussion.
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51
Figure 54-2


Figure 54-2 ​    ​ Use the accompanying figure to summarize the key concepts relating to species richness from studies of birds in the South Pacific islands. Each dot in the figure represents an island.

Use the accompanying figure to summarize the key concepts relating to species richness from studies of birds in the South Pacific islands. Each dot in the figure represents an island.
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52
When the structural complexity of the vegetation is more complex, what can generally be said of the species richness?

A) Species richness is not correlated to structural complexity of the vegetation.
B) Species richness increases.
C) Species richness decreases by a small amount.
D) Species richness decreases by a moderate amount.
E) Species richness decreases by a large amount.
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53
In which of the following habitat types would species diversity be expected to be relatively low?

A) High environmental stress
B) Low environmental stress
C) Continental ecosystems
D) Ecotones
E) Mature successional communities
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54
Competition between species 1 and species 2 is beneficial for species 1 and harmful for species 2.
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55
Species diversity is often very high in the region between two distinct communities, known as a(n):

A) ecotone.
B) secondary successional area.
C) primary successional area.
D) fundamental niche.
E) realized niche.
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56
Based on latitude only, which of the following U.S. states would be expected to have the highest species richness?

A) Georgia
B) Utah
C) Kansas
D) Pennsylvania
E) North Dakota
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57
Primary succession may be seen:

A) on new lava or on sand dunes.
B) after a fire.
C) when farmland is abandoned.
D) only in tropical rain forests.
E) in any community that has periodic disturbances.
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58
In one sentence, summarize the intermediate disturbance hypothesis.
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59
Define predation and describe how natural selection shapes the behavior and bodies of both predator and prey. Include a brief discussion of two specific examples.
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60
Which of the following is an ideal example of where to study secondary succession?

A) A volcanic eruption
B) A retreating glacier
C) Abandoned mining waste
D) An abandoned agricultural field
E) An undisturbed rain forest
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61
In an ecosystem's bottom-up processes, predators affect the abundances of other populations in the ecological community.
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62
The association of nitrogen fixing bacteria of the genus Rhizobium with legumes such as peas is an example of mutualism.
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63
Species richness is a measure of both the number of species and the relative importance of each species based on its abundance, productivity, or size.
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64
Match between columns
Communities that are not interdependent
Organismic model
Communities that are not interdependent
Individualistic model
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65
Match between columns
Views communities as "super-organisms"
Organismic model
Views communities as "super-organisms"
Individualistic model
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66
Match between columns
Environmental gradients that are more important on species survivability
Organismic model
Environmental gradients that are more important on species survivability
Individualistic model
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67
Match between columns
Stresses the interaction of members of a community.
Organismic model
Stresses the interaction of members of a community.
Individualistic model
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68
Match between columns
Developed by Frederick Clements
Organismic model
Developed by Frederick Clements
Individualistic model
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69
Describe why identifying and conserving keystone species are important, provide an example of a keystone species
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70
Match between columns
Developed by Henry Gleason
Organismic model
Developed by Henry Gleason
Individualistic model
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71
In Müllerian mimicry a defenseless species is protected by its resemblance to a dangerous species.
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72
The impact of a keystone species is proportionate to its abundance in an ecosystem.
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73
Match between columns
Change in species composition produced at ecotones
Edge effect
Change in species composition produced at ecotones
Bottom-up processes
Change in species composition produced at ecotones
Dominant species
Change in species composition produced at ecotones
Top-down processes
Change in species composition produced at ecotones
Keystone species
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74
Humans have small mites that live in hair follicles and oil glands around the nose and eyelashes. What would you need to know to classify them as exhibiting mutualism, commensalism, or parasitism?
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75
Match between columns
Also known as tropic cascades
Edge effect
Also known as tropic cascades
Bottom-up processes
Also known as tropic cascades
Dominant species
Also known as tropic cascades
Top-down processes
Also known as tropic cascades
Keystone species
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76
Cryptic coloration advertises a species unpalatability to potential predators.
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77
Describe the ongoing research concerning the relationship between species richness and community stability. What research supports or fails to support this relationship?
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78
Nicotine synthesis is an adaptation of plant chemical defense against insects.
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79
Match between columns
Present in relatively small numbers in a community
Edge effect
Present in relatively small numbers in a community
Bottom-up processes
Present in relatively small numbers in a community
Dominant species
Present in relatively small numbers in a community
Top-down processes
Present in relatively small numbers in a community
Keystone species
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80
Match between columns
May change the local environment
Edge effect
May change the local environment
Bottom-up processes
May change the local environment
Dominant species
May change the local environment
Top-down processes
May change the local environment
Keystone species
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