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Cheatography

Final for Bio 102, includes ecology, plant origins/anatomy, animal anatomy, fungi, etc.

Evolution

requir­ements of natural selection
variation, inheri­tance, variable surviv­al/­rep­rod­uctive success
homology
similar origin
bat/bird wings
analogy
similar structure
butterfly wings
apomorphy
derived, shared traits
plesio­morphy
ancestral, shared traits
autapo­morphy
derived, unique
synapo­morphy
derived, shared in ancestry
homoplasy
derived, found indepe­ndently in tree
stabil­izing selection
interm­edi­ately favored, average (purif­ying)
direct­ional
extreme phenotype
disruptive
2+ favored (diver­sif­ying)
genetic drift
change in allele frequency due to chance
Founder- Bottle­neck-
gene flow
movement of alleles between pops
migration, seed dispersal
hardy-­wei­nberg
p2+2pq+q2=1
if mutation, non-random mate, small pop size, gene flow, natural selection

Macroe­vol­ution

pre-fe­rti­liz­ation barrier
prevent fert
spatial, behavior, mechan­ical, temporal, gamete incomp­ati­bility
post
hybrid dies
hybrid steril­ity­/in­viable
speciation
form new species
punctuated speciation
short bursts
graduated
slow changes

phylogeny

limita­tions of linnaean classi­fic­ations
species may not be closely related, unrelated species placed together due to convergent evolution, related species separated, subject to reclas­sif­ication if DNA indicates
monoph­yletic
full clade
paraph­yletic
ancestral and some descen­dants
polyph­yletic
not include most common ancestor
ingroup
species part of study
 

Plant History

470mya
origin from green algae
425mya
traits for life on land
385mya
first forests
challenges for land plants
limited water, structural support, reprod­uctive techniques (wind/­pol­lin­ators)
benefits
more sunlight, carbon dioxide, soil nutrients

Seedless Vascular (pteri­dop­hyta)

sporophyte
fertil­ization (diploid) visibly dominant
all seedless vascular (eg. ferns)
gameto­phyte
meiosis (haploid)
moss, liverwort
thallus
plant w/o leaf, stem, roots
asexual repro
produce spores in sori, spores germinate
sexual repro
prothallus produce eggs (arche­gonia) and sperm (anthe­ridia), sperm fertilizes egg

Seeded plants

charac­ter­istics
roots, stems, leaves, vasc tissue, sporophyte dom, reproduce by seeds
benefits of seeds
embryo protec­tion, food reserve for embryo, dormancy, dispersal
benefits of pollen
plants are no longer dependent on water to transport sperm
gymnosperm
naked seed, no flower­/fruit, cones
cycado­phyta, gingko­phyta, gnetop­hyta, conife­rophyta
fascicles
needle like leaf bundles (reduce stomata, need for excess photos­ynt­hesis)
resin ducts
defend against predators
angiosperm
vessels, seeds, fruits
300 families, 369400 species, dominated terres­trial enviro­nment for 100+ million years
monocots
one cotyledon, parallel veins, scattered vascular tissue, fibrous root, floral organs in 3s
eudicots
two cotyledon, reticulate vein, ringed vasc tissue, taproot, flower organs in 4/5s
pericarp
outer skin of flower (epi/m­eso­/en­doc­arps)
simple fruit
apple
aggregate
raspberry
multiple
pineapple
double fertil­ization
sperm (n) + egg (n) + nucleus (n) = 3n

vascular plant anatomy

epidermis
waxy cuticle, guard cells, stomata, protective hairs, glands
periderm
replaces epiderm
parenchyma
thin walls
mesophyll (ground)
collen­chyma
thick walls, flexible support
sclere­nchyma
thick walls w/ lignin for support (nonli­ving)
xylem
water/­min­erals (roots to leaves)
both dead: tracheids (long,­narrow) vessel elements (small­,thick)
phloem
nutrients (leaves to roots)
sieve tube (sugars travel, living no nucleus) companion (helper)
indete­rminate meristem
grow throughout life
primary
height (apex)
secondary
girth
monocot root
distinct rings
eudicot
star-like bundles
root cap
zone of cell division, elonga­tion, differ­ent­iation
apical
dome shaped mass of dividing cells at shoot tip
vascular cambium
secondary growth in xylem
woody plants
cork cambium
periderm
all gymnos­perms, many eudicots

vasc plant transport

passive transport
high to low concen­tration
via phosph­olipid bilayer, aquapo­rins, transp­orters, or channel proteins
active
low to high
via proton pumps, transport proteins (carrier proteins)
long distance bulk flow
through xylem/­phloem
roots to shoots
apoplast
through cell wall
symplast
through cytoplasm
route
cortex via apo/sym, endodermis (check­point for selective passage), casparian strip (blocks apoplast transfer, to cylinder made of suberin)
suberin
complex biopolymer found on inner face of primary cell walls
gutlation
progre­ssive absorption capacity in roots (root pressure)
transp­iration
evapor­ation of water from stomata
adhesi­on/­coh­esion
creates water columns
tension
negative pressure created by evapor­ating water molecules
guard cells
open/close to balance water conser­vation
transl­ocation
movement of nutrients via actively loaded phloem (source to sink)
by pressure flow
source
leaves
sink
flower
auxin
growth, fruit develo­pment, slow leaf loss, cell division
ehylene
ripen fruit
absisic acid
shed leaves, seed dormancy
 

fungi

45,000 known species, estimated 2/3 million
relatives to animals
saprot­rophs
hetero­trophs that obtain nutrients from organic material
non-motile
grow toward food source
mycorr­hizae
mutualism w/ plant roots
mycelia
networks of branched hyphae adapted for absorption
maximizes surfac­e:v­olume ration (long, skinny)
multin­ucleate hyphae
1- septate, 2 - coenoc­ytic, 1/2 - pseudo
crypto­myc­ota­/mi­cro­spo­ridions
parasitic, freshw­ater, marine, soil, closely related to fungi
chytri­dom­ycota
1st to evolve, zoospores, freshw­ate­r/m­arine, decomp­osers, parasites, mutualists
zoopag­omycota
nonfla­gel­lated spores, some endopa­rasites
mucoro­mycota
zygospore fungi (fast growing molds, parasite, pathog­ens), mycorr­hizal
arbuscular mycorr­hizae
ascomycota (sac fungi)
plant pathogens, decomp, symbionts (ascocorp = produce spores, conidi­ophores = branches)
8 spores per ascus
basidi­omycota
mushrooms (basidium, basidi­ocarp)
mutualists
mycorr­hizae, endoph­ytes, lichen

animals

protist ancestors (choan­ofl­age­llates)
600 mya
spicules
skeleton like structure pieces
mesophyll
semi fluid matrix w/ amoeboid cells, produce spicules
all chordates
notochord, dorsal hollow nerve cord, pharyngeal slits, post anal tail
monotremes
hard shelled amniotic egg, milk from sweat glands (no nipples)
platypus
marsupial
true pouch w/ nipples
koala, opossum
epithelial
secrete, absorb, excrete, filter
simple (1 layer) stratified (multiple layer)
connective
loose (few fiber), fibrous (semi solid, many fibers), adipose, cartilage, bone (rigid matrix), blood
muscular
skeletal, cardiac, smooth
negative feedback
keep variable close to value (do opposite)
sensor, control center, effector
positive feedback
amplifies signal
clotting, labor contra­ctions

ecology

organismal
individual
anatom­y/p­hys­io/­beh­avior
popula­tions
group of indivi­duals
pop size (how/why)
community
species
intera­ctions
ecosystem
energy flow/chem cycling
landscape
mosaic of ecosystems
contro­lling exchange
global
regional exchange
global air circul­ation pattern
colling trade winds blow from E to W in tropics (defle­ction of wind from vertical paths near equator)
30 N/S desert (dry air descends), 60 N/S wet (air mass rise, release precip­ita­tion), poles dry/frigid
gyres
multiple currents working together
biomes
vegeta­tion, climate, physical (but not species)
ecotone
area of transition between biomes
type 1 curve
low death rates at birth
humans, elephants
type 2
constant death
squirrels, annual plants, lizards
type 3
high death rates at birth
fish, marine invert, long lived plants
semelp­arity
bing bang reprod­uction (once and then die)
annual plants
iterop­arity
repeated reprod­uction
humans
expone­ntial growth
J shaped (ideal)
logistic
S (reali­stic)
batesian
nonvenom pretends venomous
mullerian
bad tasting
aposematic coloring
indicate poison
compet­etive exclusion principle
no 2 species using exact resources can coexist
eco niche partition
separate role
temporal
opposite schedules
fundam­ental niche
ideal, wider area
realized niche
w/ compet­itor, narrow
character displa­cement
tendency of popula­tions to diverge in charac­ter­istics when sympatric
different beak morphology
bottom up control
what they eat, affected by food at lower level
top down
what eats them, affected by abundance of consumers at higher levels
flow of energy
cannot be recycled
light
net primary production
amt available to consumers (1/2 of GPP)
terres­trial primary production
most in tropics (moisture, sunlight, temp, nutrients)
net secondary production
amt of emergy organism consum­es/uses for growth
assimi­lation
amt of energy organism uses for above+­res­pir­ation
energy transfer only 10% efficient
movement corridors
connect fragmented habitats
water cycle
enter by drinki­ng/­abs­orp­tion, leave by evapor­ation, transp­ira­tion, peeing
carbon
enter plants via photos­ynt­hesis, return by respir­ation, volcanoes, fossil fuels
nitrogen fixation
conversion of unusable nitrogen to NH4 and NO3
assimi­lation
uptake of NH4 and NO3 by plants
ammoni­fic­ation
N2 to NH3 to NH4
nitrif­ication
NH4 to NO2 to NO3
denitr­ifi­cation
NO3 to N2
phosphorus cycle
rock weathering adds PO4(-3) to soil, to plants, biomol­ecules to animals
decomp­osi­tio­n/e­xcr­etion
phosphate returned to soil/water
ecosystem services
natural ecosystems help sustain human life
purifi­cation, detox, nutrient cycling, moderating weather, organism intera­ctions
 

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