Module 3 Biological Diversity Study Notes
Module 3 Biological Diversity Study Notes
Module 3 Biological Diversity Study Notes
Biotic Factors
- Biotic selection pressures that affect ecosystems:
o Availability of food low food availability = decreases in population + abundance
o Mates able to fund mate = reproduction + increase in population + abundance
o Predators high amount of predators = decrease in prey population + abundance
o Competitors high amount of competitors = competition for resources + decrease
in population
If biotic selection pressures are positive population abundance and diversity increase. If selection
pressures are negative population abundance and diversity decrease.
Abiotic Factors
Abiotic selection pressures that affect ecosystems:
- Temperature
- Oxygen availability low oxygen = low respiration + decrease in organisms that can inhabit
the environment
- Water availability low water = competition for water + decrease in abundance species
If abiotic selection pressures are positive increase in abundance and diversity. If abiotic selection
pressures are negative decrease in abundance and diversity.
- Ecosystems
o Combination of all the organisms, biotic and abiotic, living in a community and how
they interact
o Organisms with favorable characteristics/adaptions that are uniquely suited for the
ecosystem will ultimately survive better
o Diversity and abundance are due to variation in biotic and abiotic factors
o Environment refers to the surroundings or dwelling place of all living things
habitat or setting
o Abiotic factors directly influence selection pressures on organisms
o Terrestrial
Found on land
Dessert, grasslands, forest, woodland
o Aquatic
o Wetlands, mangrove swamps, rivers, lakes
o Salt concentration, light availability
- Selection Pressures in an Ecosystem
o Selection pressures are all the factors of an ecosystem that influences changes of
survival
o Natural selection is a process whereby species which have traits that enable them to
adapt in an environment survive and reproduce, and then pass on their genes to the
next generation
o Drives natural selection
o Those individuals within the population that have random variations that make them
better suited to survive in the changed environment are more likely to survive.
o Genetic based variation are passed from preserving parents to offspring
o Biodiversity is essential for a surviving population If all organisms were the same,
no organisms could adapt to new conditions
o Abiotic pressures:
Temperature
Light intensity
Pressure
Salt concentration
Water availability
o Biotic Factors
Competition
Prey availability
Predation
- Abundance and Distribution
o Abundance how many individuals of that species live throughout an ecosystem
o Distribution where it is found
o Both abiotic and biotic factors affect these
- Ecology
o The study of interrelationships between different types of organisms and between
organisms and their environment
o Determines the distribution and abundance of flora and fauna
o Determines measures of populations in areas
o Studies the patterns that are formed increase or decrease in population
- Population Trends
o Examining population trends can lead to inferences about the species and what
abiotic and biotic characteristics they are most suited too.
- Changes in Populations Over Time
o Members in population that survive and reproduce in their habitat carry the traits
most suitable for the conditions
o Example Cane Toads
Introduced to Australia in 1935 to control the greyback cane beetle in sugar
plantations
Increase at a fast rate
Specific structural adaptions and behaviors to suit Australia
Feed at night, no predators, breed all year, absorb water through
skin
The cane toads are evolving to be faster, but more prone to arthritis
Predators have increased resistance to the toxin and those reluctant to eat
cane toads are ones that survive and reproduce
Red belly black snakes have gotten smaller due to the inability to consume
the frogs Snakes big enough to eat them die due to the toxin
The northern quoll has developed a toad aversion mechanism to avoid the
consumption of cane toads
Change in distribution and abundance over time
Spread quickly from Northern Queensland to Northern Territory and
Northern New South Wales
From 102 toads when first introduced to now 200 million
Adaptions
Inquiry Question: How do adaptions increase the organism’s ability to survive?
Organisms have different characteristics that enable them to survive and reproduce in different
environments. This is known as adaption. Adaptions enable plants/animal to: live in extreme
environments, access resources and mates and defend themselves.
- Adaptions
o Organisms are adapted to survive in their natural environment as a result of
evolutionary change by natural selection
o An adaption is a characteristic that an organism has inherited and makes it suited for
its environment
o It is a result of change that arise via mutation, when a cell divides and replicated
during the process of reproduction
o Structural Adaption
How an organism is built
o Physiological
How an organism functions
o Behavioral
How an organism acts and behaves
- Structural Adaption
Are anatomical features that improv an organism’s ability to cope with abiotic and biotic factors in
their environment. Appropriate adaptions increase the chance of survival and reproduction. Body
shape and size are structural adaptions. Example: thick fur to survive the cold