NCEA Level 3 Biology - Plant and Animal Responses

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84 Terms

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Abiotic Factors

Non living environmental factors affecting an organism

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Biotic Factors

Living factors affecting an organism

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Intraspecific Competition

Competition between different species

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Interspecific Competition

Competition between organisms of the same species

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Taxis

Movement towards or away from a stimulus

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Structural, Behavioral, Physiological, Life History

The 4 different adaptation an organism can have

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Predation

One animal kills another for food

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Parasitism

One organism feeds off another but does not kill it

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Amensalism

One organism benifits while the other is harmed

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Alleopathy

One organism secretes a substance to inhibit the growth of another

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Mutualism

Relationship where both organisms benifit

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Commensalism

One species benifits while the other is not affected

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Courtship

Ritualised behaviour between members of the same species to facilitate sexual reproduction

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Orthokinesis

Non-directional response to the speed of an organism

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Klinokinesis

Non-directional response to the random tuning and movement of an organism

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Zeitgeber

Environmental stimulus that resets an organisms biological clock

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Migration

Mass movement of a population from one area to another

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Homing

An animals ability to return home from unfamiliar territory

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Tropism

Directional growth towards or away from a stimulus

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Nastic movements

Non-directional responses to a stimulus most often found in plants

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Circadian Rhythm

A daily rhythm of an organism

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Endogenous Rhythm

Internal rhythms such as a biological clock that do not necessarily completely connect with with external abiotic cues

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Exogenous Rhythm

Rhythms that are derived from an external cue such as sunlight or tide

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Vernalisation

regulation of flowering by a period of chilling

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Territory

closely guarded area where organisms give birth and care for offspring

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Home Range

Wider area that the territory that organisms hunt for food,gether water etc.

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Succession

The changing of an environment due to competition over time

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Primary succession

The colonisation of new ground, could be a volcanic area or a slip

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Secondary succession

The colonisation of vacant but fertile ground

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Auxin

Chemical that causes cells in plants to elongate and therefore grow towards or away from a stimulus

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Riboflavin

This is what absorbs the light in plants

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Gibberellins

Increase inter-node length causing long day plants to flower. Helps mobilise endosperm and promotes germination of a wide variety of seeds

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Cyokinins

Promotes cell division

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Abcission

Leaf fall, aim is to prevent water loss in cells so that the water in leaves does not freeze

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kin selection

the idea that behaviours that help a genetic relative are favoured by natural selection

<p>the idea that behaviours that help a genetic relative are favoured by natural selection</p>
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k-selected

Species that produce a few, often fairly large offspring but invest a great deal of time and energy to ensure that most of those offspring reach reproductive age.

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Co-operative breeding

Organism work together when breeding so all benefit e.g pukekos

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parental care

Investment of resources by parents in the survival of offspring

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free-running rhythm

cyclical activity driven by biological clock in absence of environmental cues

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suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN)

a cluster of neurons in the hypothalamus in the brain that governs the timing of circadian rhythms

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Actogram

diagram showing the periods of activity and rest of an organism over a number of twenty four hour periods so that trends in activity can be identified

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biological clock

an internal control of natural cycles

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Circatidal rhythm

A rhythm with a period of approximately 12 hours under constant environmental conditions

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Circalunar rhythm

A rhythm with a period of approximately 29 days under constant environmental conditions

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circannual rhythm

Cycle of activity with an approximate 365 day period that expresses itself independent of environmental cues.

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Entrainment

the process of altering the free-running cycle to fit a different rhythm

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Amyloplast

Amyloplasts are dense starch granules that will sink to the bottom of a cell and aid in gravitropism

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Phototropism

A growth response to light

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Gravitropism/Geotropism

A growth response to gravity

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Thigmotropism

A growth response to touch

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pair bond

a durable and exclusive relationship between a male and a female

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pheromone

A chemical released by one animal that affects the behavior of another animal of the same species.

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mimicry

Adaptive resemblance between unrelated species

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Batesian mimicry

A type of mimicry in which a harmless species looks like a species that is poisonous or otherwise harmful to predators.

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Mullerian mimicry

two or more unpalatable species resemble each other

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instinc

complex behaviour that is not modified by experience

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Camouflage (cryptic coloration)

Any colour, pattern, shape, or behaviour that enables an animal to blend in with its surroundings

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Photo periodism

Regulation by activity by day length

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phytochrome

plant pigment responsible for photoperiodism

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r-strategist

reproductive strategy in which organisms reproduce early, bear many small, unprotected offspring (ex. insects, mice).

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long day plants (short night plants)

will flower only if dark is shorter than a certain number of hours, day length exceeds a certain minimum value

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short day plants

plants that flower when nights are longer than a critical length

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diurnal

active during the day

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nocturnal

active at night

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Crepuscular

active at dawn and dusk

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arrhythmic

No regular pattern found in organisms in unchanging habitats eg. caves

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pecking order

Social hierarchy: where there are levels of dominance in the organisms

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courtship behavior

The behaviour that animals of the same species engage in to prepare for mating.

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Chemotropism

response to chemicals

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Hydrotropism

A plant's response to water

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positive chemotaxis

movement toward a chemical stimulus

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kinesis

A simple change in activity or turning rate in response to a stimuli.

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orthokinesis

The speed of the movement is related to intensity of stimulus

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klinokinesis

The amount of random turning is related to the intensity of stimulus

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day-neutral plants

plants whose flowering cycle is not sensitive to periods of light and dark

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Critical day length

photoperiod above which long-day plants flower and below which short-day plants flower

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vernalisation

Induction of flowering by a period of chilling

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Lek

an arena where males gather to display for females

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Klinostat

Wheel to which germinating plants can be attached and rotated

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learning

a relatively permanent change in an organism's behaviour due to experience

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navigation

Determining one's position relative to other locations

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solar navigation

Using the sun to navigate

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stellar navigation

Using the stars to navigate

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magnetic navigation

many animals that undertake great migrations are thought to somehow utilise earth's magnetic field, examples: grey whales, sea turtles, birds