Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
2016 Mock Exam - Marine Ecology 160; page 1 The questions on the exam will come from the questions listed below – except there be new questions from lecture and readings during week 9. Questions from reading and discussion section (1 - 3 will be on exam)- 5 or 10 points each Reading - Hughes 1994 According to Hughes, what is the effect (direct or indirect) of heavy fishing in the Caribbean on the abundance of: 1) Diadema 2) Algae 3) Corals What are two other factors (besides fishing) which may have affected the abundance of (any of) these populations? Reading – Warner 1984 Explain the following terms in relation to mating strategies: a. protogyny b. protandry c. simultaneous hermaphroditism When is a change of sex favored in sequential hermaphroditism? (You can give an example if it helps you to explain the answer to this question) Reading Gaines and Bertness Gaines and Bertness were interested in determining the importance of local retention of larvae in explaining population dynamics of barnacle populations. What was their conclusion and what was the basis of this conclusion? Reading – Harvell 1982 Harvell demonstrated that spines are induced in bryozoan colonies by a nudibranch predator. She states that this interaction is one of the few examples of coevolution in the ocean. What four factors does she cite to support this conjecture? What other adaptation would strengthen her argument for coevolution (either one discussed in section or a new one)? Reading – Doherty 1983 Doherty manipulated the presence of the damselfish, P. wardi, on patch reefs and compared recruitment (density of recruits) of larval P. wardi to patch reefs with and without residents. What was the result of these manipulations? What did he conclude and what are the broader implications of these results in terms of what limits the size of reef fish populations? Reading – Paine 1966 What role did the seastar, Pisaster, play in influencing diversity in the rocky intertidal? How did Paine determine this? In theory, how does keystone predation act to maintain or increase diversity? What sort of conditions are necessary for a predator to have such an effect on a community? Reading – Keough and Downes 1982 Explain the differences between recruitment and settlement. Why might measures of these two processes for the same species differ? Jones et al 1999. How did Jones et al determine the rate of self-replenishment in Pomacentrus amboinensis at Lizard Island? Reading- Ebert and Russell 1988 Ebert and Russell looked at the relationship between the size frequency distribution of purple sea urchin populations and the location of these populations along the coast. What was the pattern that they found and what was their explanation for this pattern? 2016 Mock Exam - Marine Ecology 160; page 2 Reading – Connell 1978 Give examples of two non-equilibrial and two equilibrial hypotheses to explain the maintenance of species diversity. Describe each of your examples thoroughly (i.e. rationale, assumptions, predictions of each hypothesis). Compare and Contrast (5 -7 will be on exam) - 6 points each - (should be able to define each term (can be graphical), give example of each and show how each member of the pair differs. 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7) 8) 9) 10) 11) 12) 13) 14) 15) 16) 17) 18) 19) Hypothesis vs. theory Replication vs. psuedoreplication Population vs. species Exponential (Malthusian) vs. logistic growth Settlement vs. recruitment Interference vs. exploitation competition Density-dependent vs. density-independent mortality Equilibrial vs non-equilibrial models of community organization Proportional vs. switching vs. keystone predation Deterministic vs. stochastic models of community organization Protandry vs. protogyny Lottery hypothesis vs. storage effect Fundamental vs. realized niche Species diversity vs. species richness Early vs. late successional species (traits of) Closed vs. open populations Null vs. alternative hypotheses Inductive vs. deductive reasoning Dispersal vs. dispersion Short Answer Questions (3 - 5 will be on the exam) - 10 points each 1. Define “statistical power” and describe the relationship between statistical power and (1) alpha, (2) magnitude of effect (effect size), and (3) level of replication. 2. Describe the process of science from a Popperian perspective. 3. In theory, what is the relationship between diversity and disturbance? Describe the basis for the relationship. Give an example that supports the theory. 4. Describe how succession can lead to loss of diversity and what general process may lead to increased diversity. 5. What is the logic of experimental controls? You may use examples to support your answer. 6. List and describe four mechanisms that may act to increase species diversity. 7. Define stability in terms of resistance, resilience, elasticity and amplitude. 8. Under what conditions are larval (behavioral) cues adaptive (you may use a figure as part of your answer)? 9. Gaines and Roughgarden concluded that rockfish predation affected settlement by the barnacle species Balanus glandula. Describe their experimental results that led to this conclusion. 10. Describe the experiment and the reasoning used by Grosberg to conclude that stratification of larvae in the water column determined the spatial distribution of Balanus glandula and Balanus crenatus on pier pilings in Santa Cruz harbor. 11. Describe three oceanographic features that have been shown to influence patterns of larval supply. Give examples of species whose larvae have been shown to be influenced by each feature. 12. Describe the hypothetical general relationship between settlement and subsequent adult density. Indicate on your graph the regions that are dominated by density-dependent and density-independent processes. 2016 Mock Exam - Marine Ecology 160; page 3 13. List one physical and one biological process that is important in the following life-history phases of marine organisms: Reproduction, transport, delivery, settlement, recruitment. 14. What are three general models of species vertical zonation in the intertidal? Describe each. 15. Describe how Cowen (1985) used otoliths and El Nino to infer patterns of larval sheephead transport and replenishment of adult populations throughout Baja California and the Southern California Bight. 16. What are the three primary patterns of dispersion (of organisms), what behavioral mechanisms create them, and how are the patterns identified graphically? 17. Using Jones’ “pluralistic approach” to discerning what model of maintenance of diversity is operating in a community, describe how you would interpret whether post-recruitment competition is weak or strong, and whether or not post-recruitment processes modify recruitment patterns. Essay Questions (1-2 will be on the exam) – 20 points each 1) Menge and others have proposed a set of rules for the importance of various factors in determining the structure of intertidal communities along a gradient of environmental harshness. These rules can be represented graphically. In the figure below: (1) label the x and y axes and indicate direction of scale (e.g. does the scale of the x axis increase as you move from left to right), (2) label each of the three lines. Describe the basis of these rules in the space below the figure. 2) Use the work of Doty, Connell and Grosberg to describe the evolution and chronology of ideas concerning the determination of zonation patterns in rocky intertidal communities. 3) Describe and explain the theoretical relationship between dispersal potential, degree of openness of a population, spatial scale, and stability and population regulation. As part of your answer you should discuss the conditions when settlement affects adult number. 4) For each of the following four hypotheses generated to explain the maintenance of species diversity (i.e., coexistence of competitors), (1) explain the hypothesis, (2) describe its assumptions, and (3) describe its predictions. A) Niche Diversification B) Lottery Hypothesis C) Storage Effect D) Recruitment Limitation 5) On exposed shores: (1) settlers and adults of species A occur between 0 and 3 m mlw, (2) settlers of species B occur between -1 and 2 m mlw and, (3) adults of species B occur between -1 and 0 m mlw. 2016 Mock Exam - Marine Ecology 160; page 4 A) Graph the distributions of settlers and adults for species A and B. B) Propose two hypotheses for the maintenance of the upper and lower limits of the adult distributions of species A and B (this means 2 for the upper limit of A, 2 for the lower limit of A etc. – 8 total) that are consistent with the patterns. C) Propose tests to distinguish between the two competing hypotheses for the upper limit of species B, OR the lower of species A. 6) Describe how you would design an experiment that would test whether early post-settlement mortality is density-independent (d-i) or density-dependent (d-d) and if predators influence whether the rate of mortality is d-i or d-d.