Key Idea: Topic 2.2 explains how ecosystems are organised, and why some ecosystems can recover (resilience) while others cross tipping points and collapse.
โ Core definitions (exam must-know)
If a question mentions abiotic factors, it is about an ecosystem, not just a community.
๐ Ecosystems as systems & scale
๐ก๏ธ What increases resilience?
Memorise the chain: Disturbance โ resilience โ recovery.
๐ฆธ Keystone species
โ ๏ธ Low resilience & tipping points
High marks come from linking ideas: biodiversity โ โ resilience โ โ tipping point risk โ.
Community vs ecosystem: A community includes only the living organisms in an area, while an ecosystem includes the community plus abiotic factors such as soil, water, and climate. Three factors that increase ecosystem resilience: โข High biodiversity (more species = more alternative pathways) โข Complex food webs (less dependence on one species) โข Genetic diversity within populations (greater adaptability) Keystone species & trophic cascade: A keystone species has a disproportionately large effect on its ecosystem. Removing it can cause a trophic cascade, where changes at one trophic level affect multiple other levels.