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What is an ecological niche?
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All Flashcards in Topic 2.9
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2.9.112 cards
What is an ecological niche?
An organism's **role** in its ecosystem: the **abiotic conditions** it tolerates, **how it obtains food/energy**, and its **interactions** with other species.
What is the difference between a habitat and a niche?
The **habitat** is **where** an organism lives (its address); the **niche** is **what it does** there and the conditions it needs (its job).
Define an abiotic factor.
A **non-living**, physical or chemical feature of the environment (e.g. temperature, light, pH, dissolved oxygen, salinity).
Define a biotic factor.
A condition created by **other living organisms** (e.g. food supply, predators, competitors, disease).
What is the range of tolerance?
The span of an abiotic factor an organism can survive in — best in the **optimum range**, stressed in the **zones of stress**, and **absent** beyond the **limits of tolerance**.
What happens to an organism in its optimum range?
It is **most abundant and active** — the conditions are ideal for it.
What happens beyond an organism's limits of tolerance?
It is **absent** — it cannot survive there at all.
What is an obligate aerobe?
An organism that **must have oxygen** to survive, because it relies on **aerobic respiration** to release energy.
What is an obligate anaerobe?
An organism for which **oxygen is toxic**; it survives **only where oxygen is absent** (e.g. waterlogged mud).
Why does an obligate aerobe need oxygen?
It must carry out **aerobic respiration** to release enough energy, and aerobic respiration **requires oxygen**.
Name one condition for survival for an aquatic organism, with a reason.
**Dissolved oxygen** — needed for aerobic respiration (for an obligate aerobe).
If a place lacks even one required condition, what happens to the organism?
It is **absent** there, however good the other conditions are.
2.9.212 cards
Define an abiotic factor.
A **non-living**, physical or chemical feature of a habitat — e.g. temperature, water, light, pH or salinity.
Define a biotic factor.
A **living** influence on a habitat — e.g. predators, competitors, food or disease.
Name five common abiotic factors.
**Temperature, water (moisture), light, pH and salinity** (also oxygen, wind, soil minerals).
What is a range of tolerance?
The **span of values** of an abiotic factor over which a species can **survive**; outside it, the species is absent.
What happens to a species near the OPTIMUM of an abiotic factor?
It is most **abundant** — conditions suit it best and its cell processes work well.
What happens BEYOND a species' limit of tolerance?
The species is **absent** — the factor is too high or too low for it to survive.
What is a limiting factor?
The one factor in **short (or excess) supply** that holds a species back and stops it living in a place.
How does temperature affect distribution?
It sets the rate of **enzyme-controlled reactions**; extremes **denature** proteins, so a species is absent where it is too hot or too cold.
How does light affect plant distribution?
Light is needed for **photosynthesis**, so plants are limited to places with **enough light** (e.g. not in deep shade or deep water).
How does water (moisture) affect distribution?
Too **little** water causes dehydration; too **much** can drown roots — so each species is restricted to a moisture range it tolerates.
In a data question, what makes a 'factor' answer score full marks?
Name a specific **abiotic factor** AND give the **reason** for its effect — a bare list of factors only scores half.
Why is a species not found everywhere?
It lives only where the **abiotic conditions stay within its range of tolerance**; outside those limits it cannot survive.
2.9.312 cards
What is a biome?
A **large region** with a particular **climate** and a **characteristic community** of organisms (e.g. tropical rainforest, tundra).
Which two abiotic factors are used most to classify biomes?
**Temperature** and **precipitation** (rainfall).
Define climate.
The typical pattern of **temperature and precipitation** in a region, averaged over many years.
Define an abiotic factor.
A **non-living** physical or chemical feature of the environment (e.g. temperature, rainfall, light, soil).
Hot + very dry climate → which biome?
**Hot desert** — sparse, drought-adapted plants.
Hot + very wet climate → which biome?
**Tropical rainforest** — dense, tall evergreen trees.
Cold climate → which biome?
**Tundra** — low mosses, lichens and small shrubs.
Moderate temperature + moderate-to-high rainfall → which biome?
**Temperate forest** — deciduous broadleaf trees.
On a temperature-vs-precipitation biome graph, how do you identify a biome point?
Read **both** coordinates (its temperature AND its rainfall) and match them to the biome whose climate fits.
Why does a biome's climate decide its community?
Climate sets the **vegetation** that can grow, and the vegetation decides which **animals** can live there.
Why are temperature and rainfall the two key factors?
Plants are the base of the community and are limited most by **how warm it is** and **how much water** there is.
Why do a hot desert and a tropical rainforest differ, though both are hot?
They differ in **rainfall**: the desert is very dry (sparse plants) and the rainforest is very wet (dense trees).
2.9.412 cards
What is an adaptation?
A **feature** (structural, physiological or behavioural) that helps an organism **survive and reproduce** in its environment.
What is a xerophyte?
A plant adapted to live where **water is scarce**, such as a hot desert (e.g. a cactus).
What is a halophyte?
A plant adapted to live in **salty conditions**, such as a mangrove tree in a coastal swamp.
Name three adaptations of a desert (xerophyte) leaf.
**Thick waxy cuticle**, **reduced leaf area** (spines/needles), and **sunken stomata** — all reduce water loss.
How do sunken stomata reduce water loss?
They trap a layer of **humid air** in pits, lowering the water-vapour gradient so **less water escapes**.
Why do some desert plants open their stomata only at night?
Gas exchange then happens when it is **cooler**, so **less water is lost** than during the hot day (CAM).
How does succulent tissue help a desert plant?
It **stores water** taken up during rare rains, for use through long dry periods.
What are pneumatophores and what do they do?
**Aerial 'breathing' roots** of mangroves that grow into the air to **take in oxygen**, because the swamp mud is oxygen-poor.
How do salt glands benefit a mangrove?
They **excrete excess salt**, keeping internal salt low so water can still be **absorbed by osmosis**.
Why is waterlogged mangrove mud a problem for roots?
It contains **very little oxygen**, so the roots struggle to **respire** — solved by aerial roots.
State two ways a flower attracts animal pollinators.
Any two of: **bright colourful petals**, **scent**, sugary **nectar**, a **shape** that fits the pollinator.
How do you turn a habitat's problem into an adaptation?
Name the **problem** (e.g. losing water, no oxygen, too much salt), then the adaptation is whatever **solves it**.
2.9.512 cards
What is an adaptation?
A feature that helps an organism **survive and reproduce** in its particular environment.
What are the three types of animal adaptation?
**Structural** (body parts), **physiological** (internal processes) and **behavioural** (actions).
What is a structural adaptation? Give an example.
A physical **body feature** — its shape, size or parts. Example: a fennec fox's **large ears** that lose heat.
What is a physiological adaptation? Give an example.
A way the body **works on the inside**. Example: making very **concentrated urine** to save water.
What is a behavioural adaptation? Give an example.
Something the animal **does** (an action or habit). Example: **sheltering in a burrow** during the midday heat.
Give one structural, one physiological and one behavioural adaptation to desert heat.
Structural: **large ears** to lose heat. Physiological: **concentrated urine** to save water. Behavioural: being **active at night**.
How do animals adapt to cold environments?
Structural: **thick fur and blubber**, small ears. Physiological: **shivering**. Behavioural: **huddling** or **migrating**.
Name four herbivore adaptations for feeding on plants.
**Grinding teeth**, a **long gut**, **gut microbes** that digest cellulose, and **long feeding times**.
Why do herbivores need gut microbes?
The microbes digest **cellulose** in plant cell walls, which the animal's own enzymes cannot break down.
Give three behaviours that reduce an animal's risk of being eaten while feeding.
Staying **alert (vigilant)**, feeding **in a group**, and feeding **near cover** or at dawn/dusk.
Why is 'large ears' alone not enough to score an adaptation mark?
You must add the **benefit** — large ears, **which lose heat** and keep the animal cool. Name the feature AND say how it helps.
Which command term is used for almost all 2.9.5 questions, and what does it ask?
**Suggest** — apply the idea of adaptation to a **new animal** and give a plausible, reasoned answer.
Topic 2.9 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Adaptation to environment
Biology exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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