All (9282)
Notes (9178)
note
Nodule Thyroïdien
Updated 312d ago
0.0(0)
note
lymph nodules/organs
Updated 456d ago
0.0(0)
note
Chapter 6: Voice Disorders
Updated 806d ago
0.0(0)
Flashcards (58)
flashcards
ENV 226: Essential Ecology Final Exam Study Guide — om single-species thinking to the dynamics of many interacting ecies. A community is more even when all species have similar abundances. Diversity: A combined measure of richness and evenness. More diverse = more likely to pull multiple different species out of a 'hat'. Shannon Diversity Index (H′): The most common diversity index. Higher H′ = more diverse (high richness AND high evenness). Formula: H′ = –Σ(pᵢ · ln pᵢ), where pᵢ is the proportion of individuals in species i. Worked example If a community has 4 species, each at 25% (p = 0.25), then H′ = –[4 × (0.25 × ln 0.25)] = 1.39. If one species dominates (e.g., 70/10/10/10), evenness drops and H′ falls even though richness is the same. Why diversity matters — ecosystem function & services Ecosystem function: Biological, geochemical, and physical processes that take place within an ecosystem (e.g., productivity, nutrient cycling, decomposition, pollination). Ecosystem services: The benefits humans derive from ecosystems. Four major categories: Provisioning: food, water, timber, fiber Regulating: climate regulation, flood control, water purification Cultural: recreation, spiritual, aesthetic, educational values Supporting: soil formation, nutrient cycling, primary production How diversity affects function — mechanism Complementary resource use (niche complementarity): Different species use slightly different resources (e.g., water at different soil depths, nutrients at different times). A diverse community captures more of the available resources than any single species could, raising total productivity. Diversity–stability theory Compensation: Species respond differently to environmental fluctuations. When one species declines, another can increase and 'compensate,' keeping overall ecosystem function steady. Insurance hypothesis: A diverse community is more likely to contain at least one species with traits that help the ecosystem cope with change. Diversity acts as ecological 'insurance' against disturbance. Rules of community assembly — what determines diversity at a site Three filters act in sequence on the regional species pool to determine which species actually end up in a local community: Term Definition Dispersal Who can physically get there. Controlled by distance from source populations and by dispersal ability. Connects to the 'mass effect' / rescue effect — regional diversity (gamma) can rescue local diversity (alpha). Environmental filtering What species can tolerate the abiotic conditions (climate, soil, water, salinity). Example: Ponderosa pine will not survive in the Sonoran Desert — environmental filtering excludes it. Biotic filtering What species can coexist given interactions with other species (competition, predation, facilitation). Strongest where abiotic conditions are benign, because more species can be there to interact. Intertidal zonation paradigm — how the filters stack In rocky intertidal communities, abiotic stress (desiccation, wave action) sets the UPPER limit of a species' distribution — an environmental filter. Competition and predation set the LOWER limit — biotic filters. Take-home: environmental filtering dominates in stressful zones; biotic filtering dominates in benign zones. What maintains diversity Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis (IDH): Diversity is highest at intermediate frequencies or intensities of disturbance. Low disturbance lets competitive dominants exclude others; high disturbance eliminates all but the most disturbance-tolerant species. The middle keeps both groups in the community. Positive species interactions (facilitation): When one species makes conditions better for another (e.g., a nurse shrub providing shade and moisture for seedlings underneath). Facilitation tends to INCREASE biodiversity, especially in stressful environments. 1.2 Succession Primary succession: Colonization of a substrate that has NEVER supported life (e.g., bare bedrock, new volcanic rock, glacial retreat). Soil must be built from scratch, typically by pioneers like lichens and mosses. Secondary succession: Recovery after a disturbance that left soil and some biological legacy behind (e.g., a cleared field, most wildfires). Much faster than primary succession because soil and seed bank persist. Pioneer species: The first species to colonize a disturbed or bare area. Typically fast-growing, high-dispersal, stress-tolerant organisms that modify the site so later-successional species can establish. Quiz-style example The Woodbury Fire burned so intensely on the Tonto NF that only bedrock remained. Recolonization of this area is PRIMARY succession — there is no soil or seed bank left to start from. 1.3 Ecological Energetics Energy: The currency of ecosystems. Most ecological energy originates from the sun as electromagnetic radiation and is stored in tissues (biomass). Trophic level: Organisms that share the same function in the food chain and the same nutritional relationship to primary sources of energy. Level 1 = producers; 2 = primary consumers (herbivores); 3 = secondary consumers (carnivores); 4+ = tertiary / apex predators. Autotroph (primary producer): An organism that produces its own food from inorganic sources — typically plants, algae, and some bacteria via photosynthesis. Consumer (heterotroph): An organism that obtains energy by consuming other organisms. Primary consumers eat producers; secondary consumers eat primary consumers; etc. Production: The rate at which new biomass is created by organisms in an ecosystem (units of mass or energy per area per time). Net primary production (NPP): Gross primary production (total photosynthesis) MINUS the energy plants use for their own respiration. NPP is what is actually available to herbivores. Assimilation and production efficiency Energy is lost at every step of the grazing food chain. Two key efficiencies describe where energy goes: Term Definition Assimilation efficiency (Energy assimilated / energy consumed) × 100%. Assimilated = consumed – egested (waste). Herbivores ≈ 20–50% (tough plant material); carnivores ≈ 80% (similar tissue chemistry). Production efficiency (Energy in new biomass / energy assimilated) × 100%. Endotherms (birds, mammals) are LOW (~1–3%) because most energy is burned as heat; ectotherms (insects, reptiles, fish) are HIGH (~10–50%). Worked example (assimilation efficiency) Eats 400 J, excretes 200 J as waste, puts 50 J into growth. Assimilated = 400 – 200 = 200 J. Assimilation efficiency = 200 / 400 = 50%. The 10% rule Roughly 10% of the energy at one trophic level is transferred to the next. The rest is lost to respiration, heat, and waste. This is WHY food chains are short (usually 4–5 links): there simply isn't enough energy left to support another level. 1.4 Food Webs A food web is many, connected food chains — a map of who eats whom across an entire community. In simple diagrams, arrows point from prey to consumer. Complex diagrams use plus/minus signs to show the direction of effect, and dashed lines to show indirect effects. Top-down control: Higher trophic levels (predators) limit the abundance of lower levels. Removing a top predator releases herbivores, which suppress plants. Bottom-up control: Lower trophic levels (nutrients, producers) limit higher levels. Adding nutrients increases plants, which increases herbivores, which increases predators. Trophic cascade: Indirect effects of a predator propagate down the food web. Classic example: wolves reintroduced to Yellowstone → elk browsing decreases → riparian willow and aspen recover → beavers return → stream ecosystems recover. 2. Ecosystems Ecosystem: A community of organisms PLUS their shared environment. Includes biotic components (plants, herbivores, carnivores, detritivores) and abiotic components (climate, soils, nutrients). 2.1 Ecological building blocks Ecological building block: An atom that (1) makes up organisms and (2) is relatively abundant. Key building blocks: C, H, O, N, P (and sometimes S) — collectively CHONP. Not building blocks: Silicon, aluminum, arsenic, tungsten — they may be abundant in the crust or used by some organisms, but are not core structural elements of life. Potassium is important biologically but is NOT a core 'ecological building block' in this course's sense. 2.2 Liebig's Law of the Minimum Growth is dictated not by the total resources available, but by the SCARCEST resource. The 'limiting nutrient' sets the ceiling on production; adding more of a non-limiting nutrient has no effect until the limit is raised. Application — nutrient pollution A coastal system receives 10 g N, 200 g P, 50 g C, and 20 g O per year as pollutants, and you know the system is N-limited. By Liebig's Law, adding MORE nitrogen is what will most change structure and function — even though phosphorus is arriving in larger quantities, it is not the limiting nutrient. 2.3 Eutrophication Eutrophication is the enrichment of an aquatic system with nutrients (especially N and P) from fertilizer runoff, wastewater, or atmospheric deposition. Process: Excess N fuels algal blooms → algae die and sink → microbial decomposition consumes oxygen → a hypoxic 'dead zone' forms → fish and invertebrates die. Once N is drawn down, the system can become P-limited; phosphorus mined for fertilizer keeps the cycle going. The Gulf of Mexico hypoxic zone is the classic example. 2.4 Nutrient cycles (N, C, P) Term Definition Nitrogen cycle N₂ in atmosphere is biologically inert. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria (free-living and in legume root nodules) convert N₂ → ammonium (NH₄⁺). Nitrification converts NH₄⁺ → nitrite → nitrate (NO₃⁻), the form most plants take up. Denitrification returns N₂ to the atmosphere. Humans roughly DOUBLED global N fixation via the Haber-Bosch process → fertilizer → eutrophication. Phosphorus cycle Largely a SEDIMENTARY cycle — no gaseous phase. P weathers from rock → soil → plants → consumers → back to soil → eventually to ocean sediments. Slow turnover at global scales; a critical component of DNA/RNA, phospholipids, bones, and ATP. Carbon cycle See dedicated section below. C moves among atmospheric, terrestrial, oceanic, and fossil pools. Photosynthesis pulls CO₂ out; respiration and combustion return it. 2.5 Ecotones and cross-ecosystem flows Ecotone: A transition zone between two ecosystems, exhibiting gradients in environmental conditions and a related shift in the composition of plant and/or animal communities (e.g., forest–grassland edge, estuary). Two factors determine how a flow of material/energy from one ecosystem affects another: Relative size of the systems — when the amount of something varies across ecosystems, the LARGER system has a bigger impact on the small system (e.g., a stream flowing into a small pond vs. into the ocean). Quality of the resource — rich subsidies (like salmon carcasses bringing ocean nutrients to streams) matter more than dilute ones. 2.6 Ecological state change & resilience Key components of ecosystems: STRUCTURE (what organisms are there and how they interact), FUNCTION (processes of energy and nutrient movement), and REGIME (which of several possible stable states the system is in). Alternative stable states: An ecosystem can exist in two or more contrasting conditions under the same environmental conditions (e.g., clear lake vs. turbid lake; forest vs. shrubland). Ecological state change (regime shift): A large, persistent, often abrupt shift in the structure and function of an ecosystem, triggered by crossing a critical threshold. Threshold / tipping point: The level of a driver (stressor) at which a system flips to a new state. Hysteresis: Once a system flips, simply reversing the driver does NOT restore the original state — the return path is different from the 'forward' path. Slow vs. fast drivers: Slow drivers (e.g., gradual warming, soil nutrient accumulation) build up until a fast driver (e.g., fire, storm) tips the system across the threshold. Perturbation: Any event (abiotic or biotic) that disturbs the ecosystem. Perturbations that cause regime change can be abiotic (fire, flood, drought) or biotic (pest outbreak, invasion). Resilience: The capacity of a system to absorb disturbance, adapt to change, and recover from adversity while maintaining its essential functions, structure, and identity. The ball-and-cup diagram Picture a ball sitting in a valley (cup) on a hilly landscape. The ball is the current state of the ecosystem; the cup is the 'basin of attraction' for that state. A disturbance pushes the ball; stabilizing (negative) feedback loops pull it back. Strong disturbance or a shrinking cup (loss of resilience) can push the ball over a hill into a NEW cup — that's state change. Negative (stabilizing) feedback loop: A change triggers a response that DAMPENS the change, keeping the system near its current state. Deepens the cup. Positive (amplifying) feedback loop: A change triggers a response that AMPLIFIES the change, pushing the system further from its current state. Flattens the cup and makes state change more likely. Applying resilience to conservation & restoration Manage for resistance — remove stressors that push the ball (exclude high-intensity grazing, reduce pollution). Manage for resilience — rebuild the 'cup' by re-establishing key species, nutrient cycling, and stabilizing feedbacks (planting perennial grasses, restoring hydrology). Passive restoration works when the seed bank, soil, and key species are still intact; active restoration is needed when the system has already crossed the threshold. 3. Landscape Ecology and Biogeography 3.1 Landscape ecology Landscape ecology: The study of spatial patterns of ecosystems and their ecological consequences — explicitly considers the arrangement of habitats across space and how organisms and materials move through them. Spatial elements Term Definition Patch A relatively homogeneous area that differs from its surroundings (e.g., a forest stand in a grassland). Generally the highest-quality habitat. Matrix The background land-cover type that surrounds patches (e.g., desert in Saguaro NP, or agricultural land around forest fragments). Corridor A linear feature connecting patches — allows movement of organisms, genes, and energy. Examples: riparian strips, hedgerows, engineered wildlife crossings (Oracle Road, Tucson). Ecotone See above — the transition zone between landscape elements. Spatial heterogeneity Variability in environmental conditions and habitat types across a landscape. Drives diversity at landscape scales. Scale dependence Ecological patterns and processes depend on the spatial/temporal scale at which they are observed (e.g., a species may look stable regionally but be declining locally). Fragmentation Fragmentation breaks a large continuous habitat into smaller, more isolated patches. Effects include: Loss of total habitat area More edge relative to interior — edge effects (different microclimate, invasives, more predators) penetrate into remaining patches Reduced connectivity — animals cannot move between patches Smaller populations in each patch → inbreeding depression, loss of genetic variability, higher extinction risk Saguaro NP example Mid-sized carnivores in Saguaro NP West crashed after a disease outbreak and never recovered. Why? The city of Tucson grew between Saguaro NP East and West, severing connectivity. No recolonization could occur from the eastern population. Solution: re-establish connectivity — the Oracle Road wildlife crossings documented over 4,400 crossings by 16 species in their first two years. Patch dynamics Patch size, shape, and connectivity change over time because of ecological processes — succession, disturbance (fire, flood, windthrow), and fragmentation — not random chance and not just geology. 3.2 Biomes and realms Biome: A large biological community defined by climate and dominant vegetation type (e.g., tropical rainforest, boreal forest, tundra, desert, savanna, temperate grassland). Biogeographic realm: A large area of the Earth's surface with a distinctive assemblage of taxa, reflecting shared evolutionary history (e.g., Nearctic, Neotropical, Palearctic, Afrotropical, Indomalayan, Australasian, Oceanic, Antarctic). Factors shaping where biomes are found: temperature and precipitation (the primary controls), seasonality, latitude, elevation, continental geography, and evolutionary history. Realms reflect plate tectonics — Pangaea split into Laurasia and Gondwana, then into the continents we have today, producing unique evolutionary trajectories in each realm (e.g., Australia's marsupials, Madagascar's lemurs). 3.3 Island Biogeography and the SLOSS debate MacArthur & Wilson's Theory of Island Biogeography: species richness on an island is set by the balance between the colonization rate (immigration) and the extinction rate. Size effect — larger islands have LOWER extinction rates (bigger populations). Distance effect — islands closer to the mainland have HIGHER colonization rates. Equilibrium species number occurs where colonization and extinction curves INTERSECT. SLOSS debate — Single Large Or Several Small? Originally framed: is a single large reserve or several small reserves of equal total area better for biodiversity? Large favors: lower extinction, room for interior species, bigger populations, full food webs. Several small favors: replication (insurance against one disaster), sampling more habitat types, potentially higher total diversity. Modern answer: it depends — on species' dispersal, the matrix, and whether you value diversity vs. viability. Connectivity (corridors) often matters more than the large/small question alone. Source population: Produces more offspring than can be supported locally — exports individuals to other patches. Population growth rate > 0. Sink population: Organisms arrive but do not reproduce enough to sustain the local population; persists only via immigration from sources. Population growth rate < 0. 4. Extinction and Climate 4.1 The 'Big Five' mass extinctions Term Definition Ordovician–Silurian (~439 Mya) ~85% marine species lost. Cause: rapid glaciation and sea-level drop, then warming. Late Devonian (~364 Mya) Prolonged event; major loss of marine invertebrates, especially reef builders. Probable causes include ocean anoxia and climate change. Permian–Triassic (~251 Mya) 'The Great Dying' — ~96% marine species and ~70% terrestrial vertebrates. THE most severe. Cause: Siberian Traps volcanism → CO₂ spike → warming, ocean acidification, and anoxia. Recovery took 5–10 million years. End Triassic (~199–214 Mya) ~50% of species lost; cleared the way for dinosaurs to dominate. Likely cause: CAMP volcanism and climate change. Cretaceous–Tertiary (K-Pg, ~65 Mya) ~76% of species, including non-avian dinosaurs. Cause: Chicxulub asteroid impact (plus Deccan Traps volcanism) → darkened skies, cooling, then warming. Why scientists are concerned now Current extinction rates are 100–1000× background rates — comparable to mass-extinction levels. Rate of change: current climate change is occurring more rapidly than almost any past episode — faster than many species can adapt or track. Humans have built roads, cities, and agricultural landscapes that BLOCK the range shifts species would otherwise use to follow their climate. Human societies are themselves adapted to current climate (agriculture, supply chains, coastlines) — disruption drives conflict. 4.2 Why climate change affects ecological systems Temperature, precipitation, seasonality, and extreme events all drive the distribution and performance of every species. Shifting climate disrupts energy balance, water balance, food availability, and reproduction; changes the timing of seasonal events; and alters disturbance regimes (fire, floods, storms). All of these cascade through communities and ecosystems. 5. Climate Change — Ecology, Climate, and the Carbon Cycle 5.1 The carbon cycle Term Definition Pool (reservoir) A place where carbon is stored and from which it can be released. Measured as a quantity (e.g., gigatons). Flux The amount of carbon exchanged between pools per unit time (gigatons/year). Measures MOVEMENT. Sink A pool that accumulates more carbon than it releases — net REMOVER of carbon from the active cycle. Source A pool that releases more carbon than it accumulates — net ADDER of carbon to the active cycle. Biggest/smallest pools & fluxes Major carbon pools (approximate, gigatons): Deep ocean: ~37,000 GtC — BY FAR the largest pool Fossil pool (oil, gas, coal): ~10,000 GtC — second largest Reactive ocean sediments: ~6,000 GtC Soils: ~2,300 GtC Surface ocean: ~1,000 GtC Atmosphere: ~800 GtC — this is the pool that drives climate Plant biomass: ~550 GtC (the largest LIVING pool) Major fluxes are photosynthesis and respiration (~120 GtC/yr terrestrial; ~90 GtC/yr ocean), which are normally nearly balanced. Fossil-fuel combustion and deforestation are the (smaller but crucial) fluxes currently unbalancing the system. Why atmospheric CO₂ is increasing Humans are burning fossil fuels — moving carbon from a long-term sink (the fossil pool) into the active atmospheric pool faster than natural sinks can remove it. Deforestation and land-use change also shift carbon from plant biomass and soils to the atmosphere. The balanced photosynthesis/respiration fluxes cannot keep up with the ~10 GtC/yr added by human activity. 5.2 Ocean acidification As atmospheric CO₂ rises, more CO₂ dissolves into the ocean. The chemistry: Step 1: The ocean is slightly alkaline; CO₂ is slightly acidic, so CO₂ dissolves into seawater. Step 2: CO₂ + H₂O → H₂CO₃ (carbonic acid). Step 3: H₂CO₃ dissociates → HCO₃⁻ (bicarbonate) + H⁺. Step 4: Some HCO₃⁻ dissociates → CO₃²⁻ (carbonate) + H⁺. Step 5: Bicarbonate and carbonate exist in equilibrium. Net result: more H⁺ ions → lower pH = acidification. Acidification also reduces carbonate availability, making it harder for corals, shellfish, and plankton to build calcium-carbonate skeletons. Warming and the ocean's ability to sequester carbon Warmer water holds LESS dissolved CO₂ (inverse solubility). As oceans warm, their ability to absorb atmospheric CO₂ decreases — a positive feedback loop that further increases atmospheric CO₂ and warming. 5.3 Important climate feedback loops Term Definition Ice-albedo feedback (POSITIVE) Warming melts polar ice → darker ocean/land replaces reflective white ice → lower albedo, more solar energy absorbed → more warming → more melting. Water vapor feedback (POSITIVE) Warming increases evaporation; water vapor is a greenhouse gas → more warming → more evaporation. Permafrost/methane feedback (POSITIVE) Thawing permafrost releases CO₂ and CH₄ long locked in frozen soils → more warming → more thawing. CO₂ fertilization (NEGATIVE, partially) Higher CO₂ can boost plant photosynthesis, pulling more C out of the atmosphere. Partially counteracts warming but is limited by water, nutrients, and heat stress. Ocean solubility feedback (POSITIVE) Warmer oceans hold less CO₂ → more stays in the atmosphere → more warming. Quiz-style example Melting polar ice caps → decreased albedo → further warming = POSITIVE feedback loop (amplifies the original change). 5.4 Factors affecting Earth's surface temperature Three major controls: Energy arriving from the sun (solar radiation) Earth's albedo — how much of that energy is reflected back to space Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere — how much outgoing infrared is trapped Carbon dioxide is the LARGEST driver of current human-caused climate change (sheer volume, long atmospheric lifetime). Methane is more potent per molecule but far less abundant; water vapor amplifies change via feedback but is not itself a primary driver. 6. Climate Change — Ecological and Human Response 6.1 How climate change affects plants and animals Climate change disrupts performance in three main ways: Term Definition Energy balance Plants: respiration rates rise faster than photosynthesis with warming — net carbon gain (and growth) drops. Animals: thermoregulation costs rise; outside the thermal neutral zone, organisms burn more energy just to stay alive. Water balance Warmer temperatures and higher vapor-pressure deficit mean plants LOSE more water per unit of photosynthesis. Animals face greater dehydration risk; aquatic species face altered hydrology. Food acquisition & reproduction Changed phenology, drought, and heat reduce the resources available for growth and reproduction. Fewer seeds, fewer offspring, lower survival. Examples of species already affected Term Definition Pika Small alpine mammal restricted to cold, rocky talus. Warming pushes them to higher elevations — eventually they 'run out of mountain.' Already extirpated from lower-elevation sites in the Great Basin. Tuatara Reptile with temperature-dependent sex determination. Warming skews sex ratios toward males, threatening population persistence. Wolverine Depends on persistent spring snowpack for denning. Declining snowpack reduces suitable reproductive habitat. 6.2 Responses of species: MOVE, ADAPT, or DIE Move: shift range poleward or upslope to track suitable climate (classic response). Range shifts are highly variable across species — depends on dispersal ability, habitat specificity, and whether barriers (cities, roads, water bodies) intervene. Adapt: through plasticity (phenotypic change within a lifetime) or evolutionary change (genetic change across generations). Long-lived species with small populations adapt slowly. Die: local extirpation or global extinction if neither option is available fast enough. 6.3 Phenology Phenology: The timing of recurring biological events — bud burst, flowering, migration, breeding, hibernation. Climate change is advancing many spring phenological events (earlier bloom, earlier migration). Phenological mismatch occurs when interacting species shift their timing differently — e.g., a migratory bird arrives after its caterpillar prey has already peaked. Mismatches cascade through food webs. 6.4 Characteristics of climate-vulnerable species Narrow thermal tolerance (specialists) Poor dispersal ability (can't move to new climate) Long generation time, low reproductive rate (slow to adapt) Small, fragmented populations (low genetic variation, high stochastic risk) Dependence on climate-sensitive habitats (snowpack, sea ice, coral reefs, alpine tundra) Narrow geographic range, especially on islands or mountain tops (nowhere to go) Tightly tied to a specific phenological window or species interaction 6.5 Why current climate change is especially damaging Rate — change is occurring faster than most species can adapt or move Barriers — human land use has fragmented habitat, blocking the range shifts species used during past climate changes Cumulative stressors — climate change interacts with pollution, invasive species, overharvest, and habitat loss Interconnected systems — ecosystems, human agriculture, and global supply chains are all calibrated to current conditions 6.6 Mitigation vs. Adaptation Term Definition Climate MITIGATION Actions that reduce the magnitude of climate change itself — typically by lowering atmospheric greenhouse gases. Examples: switching to renewables, reforestation (sequestering carbon), reducing fossil-fuel use, more efficient buildings and transport. Climate ADAPTATION Actions that help humans and ecosystems COPE with the climate change that is already happening / unavoidable. Examples: creating migration corridors, building climate-resilient ecosystems through forest thinning, adjusting USDA seed zones, changing crop choices, updating hunting/fishing regulations, designing for sea-level rise. Quick quiz check Planting trees to sequester carbon = MITIGATION (reduces atmospheric CO₂). Thinning Southwest forests to make them more fire-resilient = ADAPTATION (copes with changing fire regime). Geoengineering proposals like stratospheric aerosol injection = a controversial form of mitigation (reduces incoming solar energy). Special cases of adaptation Managed (assisted) relocation: Actively moving species to areas outside their current range that are projected to become climatically suitable. Benefits: may be the only option for species that cannot disperse fast enough; can save species from extinction. Risks: recipient communities may experience novel interactions; potential to create invasive species; ethical questions about intervention. Assisted evolution: Human intervention to increase the rate of evolutionary adaptation — e.g., selective breeding for heat tolerance, or hybridization with warm-adapted populations. Benefits: keeps species in place; works for species that cannot move. Risks: may reduce genetic diversity; unintended consequences; can go wrong (outbreeding depression). 6.7 Corridors, climate refugia, and conservation design Climate refugium: A location whose physical or biological features allow species to persist despite regional climate change — e.g., high-elevation cool pockets, deep canyons, shaded slopes, coastal fog zones. Incorporating corridors (to enable range shifts) and refugia (places species can hold on) into reserve design is essential for climate-integrated conservation. A high-elevation forest that remains cool despite regional warming can serve as a seed source for recolonization — that's the textbook example of a refugium supporting resilience. Final thoughts: making an argument about climate-integrated conservation You should be able to give your own opinion on climate-integrated conservation and defend it. A solid answer acknowledges trade-offs: traditional 'protect what is there' approaches may fail under rapid change, but aggressive interventions (managed relocation, assisted evolution) carry real risks. Most conservation scientists argue for a portfolio approach — protect refugia, build corridors, and use active interventions only where the alternative is extinctionl
98
Updated 3d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
NUR 204: EXAM 1 COMPLETE STUDY GUIDE SECTION 1: CANCER PATHOPHYSIOLOGY & EPIDEMIOLOGY Cellular Characteristics • Cancer is uncontrolled cell growth caused by genetic damage. • Apoptosis: The body's natural ability to destroy abnormal or cancerous cells. Malignant cells fail to undergo apoptosis. • Angiogenesis: Malignant cells can create their own blood supply for nourishment, making them very difficult to eliminate. • Progression to Malignancy: Hyperplasia (rapid increase in normal cells) → Dysplasia (abnormal cells) → Carcinoma in situ (localized cancerous cells) → Malignancy. Tumor Types & Staging • Primary vs. Secondary: The primary tumor is where the cancer originated. Secondary tumors are the sites of metastasis (e.g., lung cancer that spreads to the liver means the liver contains secondary tumors). • TNM Staging System: o T = Tumor size. o N = Lymph Node involvement. o M = Metastasis (Spread). • Number Staging (0-4): Stage 0 (In situ, abnormal cells haven't spread) to Stage IV (Distant metastasis, spread to distant body parts). Risk Factors & Prevention (Live Lecture Focus) • Modifiable vs. Non-modifiable: Age, genetics (BRCA mutations), and gender are non-modifiable. Smoking, alcohol, obesity, and sedentary lifestyle are modifiable. • Environmental Factors: o Physical: UV light (tanning beds), radiation. o Chemical: Tobacco, alcohol, workplace pesticides/cleaners. o Biological: Viral infections (HPV causes cervical cancer, Hep B/C causes liver cancer), poor diet. • Nurse's Role in Community Screenings: Skin cancer screenings are highly effective for community health fairs because they are non-invasive. Screening Guidelines • Breast: Mammograms starting at age 40 (earlier if high risk). • Colorectal: Colonoscopy every 10 years starting at age 45. • Prostate: PSA blood screening at age 50. • Tumor Markers: PSA (Prostate) and BRCA1/BRCA2 (Breast). SECTION 2: IMPACT OF CANCER & NURSING CARE Physiological Impacts • Pain: Very common, affecting up to 80% of advanced cancer patients. • Infection/Neutropenia: Dangerously low white blood cells. Live Lecture Note: Any spike in temperature (even a low-grade fever like 100.4°F) is a massive red flag for impending sepsis and must be addressed immediately. • GI Issues: Nausea, vomiting, and mucositis (painful mouth inflammation). For mucositis: avoid spicy/acidic foods and use lidocaine rinses. Cognitive & Psychosocial Impacts • Delirium (HIGH YIELD): Acute, sudden confusion. Live Lecture Note: Delirium is reversible. The nurse must treat the underlying cause. Interventions include reorienting the patient, clustering care, avoiding interruptions, and simulating day/night to regulate circadian rhythms (lights on during the day, off at night). • Financial & Psychosocial: Cancer treatments are grueling and expensive, leading to lost employment and depression. Nurses should facilitate early referrals to social workers and case managers. Nursing Safety & Medication Administration • Extravasation Safety: Vesicant chemotherapy drugs can severely damage tissue if they leak outside the vein. Live Lecture Note: If chemo is given via a peripheral IV, the nurse MUST check for blood return every single hour to prevent extravasation. If extravasation occurs: stop the infusion immediately. • Chemotherapy PPE: The nurse must wear proper PPE (e.g., double gloves, chemo gown, face protection) and dispose of chemo materials in designated hazardous waste bins (e.g., yellow bins). • Neutropenic Precautions (Reverse Isolation): Protecting the highly vulnerable patient from the nurse/visitors. Includes strict hand hygiene, no sick visitors, and avoiding crowds. SECTION 3: ONCOLOGIC EMERGENCIES • Spinal Cord Compression: Early signs include back pain, muscle weakness, loss of sensation, and bowel/bladder incontinence. • Brain Metastasis/Increased ICP: Personality changes, seizures, altered speech/balance. • Hypercalcemia: Confusion, severe muscle weakness, arrhythmias, and ECG changes. • Superior Vena Cava (SVC) Syndrome: Tumor compresses the SVC causing facial/neck edema and dyspnea. • Tumor Lysis Syndrome (TLS): Rapid cell death causes severe electrolyte imbalances (hyperkalemia, hyperuricemia). • SIADH: Tumor triggers excessive antidiuretic hormone (ADH), leading to massive water retention, dilutional hyponatremia, and confusion. SECTION 4: SELECTED CANCERS Lymphedema What is it? A frequent cancer treatment complication where fluid builds up in an extremity (typically on one side), causing severe swelling. • Signs & Symptoms: Swelling, a feeling of heaviness, decreased range of motion, and tightness in the skin. • Common complication of: Breast cancer treatments, specifically resulting from lymph node dissection/removal, radiation therapy, or chemotherapy. • Nursing Priorities & Treatment: o Elevate the affected arm above heart level. o Use compression sleeves as prescribed. o Encourage range-of-motion exercises to prevent stiffness. o ABSOLUTE SAFETY RULE: NO blood pressures, NO IVs, and NO blood draws on the affected arm. • Breast Cancer: o Live Lecture Note: Ductal breast cancer is the most common type (originating in the milk ducts). o Signs: Hard mass, nipple retraction, "orange peel" skin (peau d'orange). o Hormone Receptors: If the tumor is estrogen-receptor positive, treatment must avoid estrogen as it will feed the tumor. o Lymphedema Care: Swelling in the arm due to lymph node removal. Rule: No blood pressures, IVs, or blood draws on the affected arm. Elevate the arm and use compression. • Lung Cancer: o Live Lecture Note: Often asymptomatic in the early stages, leading to late diagnosis. o Signs: Chronic cough, hemoptysis (rust-colored/bloody sputum), dyspnea. High risk for brain metastasis. • Colorectal Cancer: o Live Lecture Note: A hallmark sign is "ribbon-like" or pencil-thin stool, caused by a tumor pressing in the rectum and narrowing the passageway. Other signs: rectal bleeding, changes in bowel habits, anemia. • Pancreatic Cancer (HIGH MORTALITY): o Live Lecture Note: High mortality because early symptoms are incredibly vague; usually caught too late. o Whipple Procedure: Surgery that removes the head of the pancreas but leaves a portion behind so the patient retains some insulin secretion. Nursing Priority: You must strictly monitor for manifestations of diabetes (hypo/hyperglycemia) because pancreatic function is deeply impaired. • Skin Cancer: o Types: Basal cell (slow-growing, sun-exposed areas), Squamous cell (more serious), Melanoma (most deadly, highly metastatic). o Melanoma ABCDEs: Asymmetry, Border irregularity, Color variation, Diameter >6mm, Evolving. • Brain Tumors: o Live Lecture Note: Primary brain tumors are typically benign. Malignant brain tumors have usually metastasized from somewhere else. SECTION 5: INFLAMMATION & IMMUNITY BASICS • Acute vs. Chronic Inflammation: Acute is short-term and protective (redness, heat, swelling, pain). Chronic is prolonged, causing tissue damage. Exam Tip: Chronic inflammation heavily increases the risk for cardiovascular disease. • Infection vs. Inflammation: Inflammation does not always mean infection (e.g., sprains, allergies). Systemic infection signs include fever, tachycardia, and confusion. Rule: Always draw a blood culture before starting antibiotics. SECTION 6: AUTOIMMUNE & INFLAMMATORY DISORDERS Detailed Osteoarthritis (OA) (Live Lecture Focus) • Pathophysiology: OA is a degenerative joint disease causing progressive cartilage breakdown. It is characterized by the friction of "bone on bone" as cartilage degenerates, which leads to the formation of bone spurs and bone cysts (fluid-filled cavities). • Key Distinction: There is NO systemic inflammation; OA is localized to the affected joints. • Risk Factors: Natural wear and tear of aging, trauma, joint overuse (e.g., repetitive work or sports), obesity, genetics, and a sedentary lifestyle. • Complications: Because OA causes a lack of mobility and a sedentary lifestyle, patients are at a highly increased risk for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and obesity. Patients over 65 should also be screened for iron overload (hemochromatosis), which can accelerate the progression of OA. Patients are also at high risk for depression and anxiety due to loss of independence and chronic pain. • Signs & Symptoms: Joint pain, stiffness, crepitus (cracking of the joints), muscle atrophy, and limited range of motion. • Treatment: o Non-surgical first: Physical therapy, exercise (specifically swimming/water exercises to take pressure off the joints), and weight loss. o Medications: Acetaminophen (monitor for liver toxicity), NSAIDs like ibuprofen/naproxen (monitor for kidney toxicity), and cortisone injections into the joint. o Surgical: Joint replacement (e.g., hip or knee). Nursing Priority: Ambulate the patient right away after surgery to prevent complications. Detailed Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) (Live Lecture Focus) • Pathophysiology: A chronic autoimmune disease where the body's immune system mistakenly attacks the synovial tissue and fluid in the joints. • Risk Factors: Increased age (highest onset in the 60s), genetics, females (especially those who have never given birth), obesity, smoking, and high stress. o Trigger mechanism: Someone with a genetic susceptibility who experiences an external trigger (like an infection or trauma) can kickstart the autoimmune reaction. • Signs & Symptoms: Symmetric joint swelling and pain (usually in the hands and feet), morning stiffness lasting longer than 1 hour, fever, malaise, and weakness. Patients experience flare-ups (severe symptoms) and remissions (no symptoms). • Rheumatoid Nodules: The most common visible manifestation of RA. These are detachable, movable subcutaneous knots or swellings of varying sizes, typically found in the fingers/hands. • Diagnostics: Elevated ESR and C-reactive protein (CRP) indicate inflammation. Positive Rheumatoid Factor (RF) and ANA (anti-nuclear antibody) blood tests. • Medications & Safety: o Treated with DMARDs (Disease-Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs). o Priority: DMARDs suppress the immune system, putting the patient at a severe risk for infection. o Hydroxychloroquine teaching: Long-term use can cause retinal damage and glaucoma leading to blindness; patients MUST see an optometrist regularly for eye exams. Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE): • Multisystem autoimmune disease attacking self-tissues. • Symptoms: Butterfly rash on the face, photosensitivity, joint pain. • Complications: Cardiovascular disease (pericarditis) and kidney failure (lupus nephritis). • Triggers: Teach patients to avoid UV light/sun exposure, severe stress, exhaustion, and infections to prevent flare-ups. Peritonitis (LIFE THREATENING): • Inflammation of the peritoneum (abdomen). • Symptoms: Rigid, board-like abdomen, rebound tenderness. • Complication: Septic shock and death. SECTION 7: HIV / AIDS & HYPERSENSITIVITY HIV/AIDS: • A retrovirus that specifically targets and destroys CD4 T-cells. • Transmission Phase: The virus is most highly infectious during the initial phase when the viral load is the highest. • Opportunistic Infections: When CD4 drops < 200 (AIDS), the patient is at extreme risk for deadly infections like Tuberculosis, Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP), and Kaposi sarcoma. • PrEP (Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis): Reduces risk of contracting HIV but does NOT replace safe sex practices (condoms). Risk Factors & At-Risk Populations: o Individuals with multiple sexual partners without protection, and those who share IV drug needles. o Substance use (drugs/alcohol) is a major risk factor because it lowers inhibitions, leading to unprotected sex. o Incarcerated populations or those in closed settings (due to sharing needles, self-tattooing, and sexual violence). o Pregnant or lactating women (due to the risk of perinatal transmission). Phases of HIV Progression: 1. Acute Infection Phase: Occurs 2 to 4 weeks after exposure. The risk of transmission is at its absolute highest because the viral load in the blood is massive. Patients exhibit flu-like symptoms (fever, malaise, fatigue). 2. Chronic Infection Phase: Patients are often asymptomatic, meaning they may not even realize they are infected. They can still transmit the virus if their viral load is high enough. This stage can last for a decade or longer. 3. AIDS: If left untreated, HIV progresses to AIDS. Diagnosis is confirmed when the CD4 T-cell count falls below 200. Immune system damage is severe, creating a very high risk for fatality and opportunistic infections (such as Tuberculosis, Kaposi sarcoma, and fungal infections). • PrEP vs. PEP (Crucial Difference): o PrEP (Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis): Medication taken prophylactically to prevent the transmission of HIV to an HIV-negative person. It does NOT replace safe sex practices (condoms must still be used). o PEP (Post-Exposure Prophylaxis): Medication taken after accidental exposure (e.g., a broken condom, a needle stick injury, or sexual assault). It MUST be taken within 72 hours of exposure to be effective. It is taken daily for 28 days and is not meant for regular, ongoing use. Anaphylaxis: • Severe allergic reaction triggering massive histamine release. • Patho: Causes increased capillary permeability, where blood vessels leak fluid into the tissues, leading to profound hypotension and airway edema. • Priority Treatment: Epinephrine IM. • High-Risk Factor: Patients taking Beta-blockers or Alpha-adrenergic blockers are at a high risk of death because these medications reduce the effectiveness of epinephrine, preventing the reversal of the shock. SECTION 8: INFECTIONS & SAFETY PROTOCOLS Meningitis (SAFETY RULE): • Diagnosed via Lumbar Puncture (testing CSF). • Live Lecture Safety Rule: If the patient shows signs of Increased Intracranial Pressure (ICP) (like severe headache, altered mental status), a CT scan of the head MUST be performed BEFORE a lumbar puncture. Performing a lumbar puncture when ICP is high can cause fatal brain herniation. • Risk Groups: College dorm students, unvaccinated individuals. Lumbar Puncture (Live Lecture Safety Rules) • Purpose: To draw out and test the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) specifically to screen for and confirm a diagnosis of meningitis. • Position: The patient should be laying on their side with their knees pulled to their chest (fetal position) to help open up the spinal column for needle insertion. • Contraindication & Safety Priority: A lumbar puncture is completely contraindicated if the patient has Increased Intracranial Pressure (ICP). o Rule: A CT scan of the head MUST be performed BEFORE a lumbar puncture to rule out increased ICP. Performing a lumbar puncture on a patient with increased ICP can cause fatal brain herniation Sinusitis: • Inflammation of the sinuses causing facial pressure ("like you got punched in the face"), congestion, and post-nasal drip. • Live Lecture Rule: Treat with hydration, nasal irrigation, and steam. AVOID over-the-counter antihistamines and decongestants because they cause rebound inflammation (making symptoms worse when they wear off). Influenza: • FACTS Mnemonic: Fever, Aches, Chills, Tiredness, Sudden onset. High risk for secondary pneumonia in older adults and pregnant women. SECTION 9: MEDICATIONS HIGHLIGHTED IN LIVE LECTURE 1 Your instructor specifically highlighted these medications and their nursing implications during the recorded lectures: 1. Analgesics & Anti-inflammatories • Opioids (Cancer Pain): A major side effect is delayed gastric emptying and severe constipation. Intervention: Administer stool softeners, encourage hydration and mobility. Monitor for decreased respirations and drowsiness (which creates a fall risk). • Acetaminophen (Tylenol): Used for mild OA pain. Warning: Hepatotoxic (toxic to the liver) if too much is given. • Ibuprofen/Naproxen (NSAIDs): Used for OA/RA inflammation. Warning: Nephrotoxic (toxic to the kidneys) and can cause GI bleeding. • Corticosteroids (Cortisone): Can be injected directly into joints for OA inflammation. 2. Neurological & Emergency Medications • Mannitol: An osmotic diuretic used specifically to lower elevated Intracranial Pressure (ICP) in patients with brain tumors. • Phenytoin & Levetiracetam (Keppra): Anti-epileptic medications used to prevent seizures in patients with brain metastasis/tumors. • Epinephrine: The absolute first-line priority treatment for anaphylaxis. Works to constrict blood vessels and open the airway. • Hydroxychloroquine (DMARD): Used for RA and Lupus. Warning: Can cause retinal toxicity. Patients require regular eye exams (every 6 months) and must use photosensitivity precautions. SECTION 10: SAMPLE QUESTIONS & ANSWERS Q1: The client’s cancer is staged as T1, N2, M1 according to the TNM classification system. How would the nurse interpret this staging? A. One tumor that is nonresponsive to treatment with distant metastasis B. Leukemia indicated that is confined to the bone marrow C. A 2-cm tumor with one regional lymph node involved and no distant metastasis D. Small tumor with extension into two lymph nodes and one site of distant metastasis Answer: D. Rationale: T = small primary tumor, N = extension to regional lymph nodes, M = distant metastasis has occurred. Q2: The nurse is assessing an older client at a checkup visit. Which reported change would alert the nurse to the possibility of colon cancer? A. Pencil-thin stool B. Erectile dysfunction C. Reduced urine stream D. Persistent pain in the lower back and legs Answer: A. Rationale: Tumors growing in the colon/rectum compress the passageway, resulting in ribbon-like or pencil-thin stool. Q3: A nurse is performing a cancer screening assessment on several clients. Which of the following findings is a possible manifestation of cancer? (Select all that apply) A. Temperature 36° C (96.8° F) B. Sore that does not heal C. Difficulty swallowing D. Blood in the urine E. Rhinitis Answer: B, C, D. Rationale: Using the CAUTION mnemonic, signs include sores that do not heal, difficulty swallowing, and unusual bleeding/discharge. Q4: A nurse is caring for a client who has breast cancer. The client asks why the treatment plan contains a combination therapy of three different medications. Which of the following responses should the nurse make? (Select all that apply) A. “Combination chemotherapy decreases the risk of medication resistance.” B. “Combination chemotherapy attacks cancer cells at different stages of cell growth.” C. “Combination chemotherapy increases production of platelets.” D. “Combination chemotherapy stimulates the immune system.” Answer: A, B. Rationale: Using multiple chemo drugs reduces drug resistance and attacks the cell at various phases of the cell cycle. Q5: A nurse is caring for a burn client whose calculated 24-hour intravenous fluid requirements are determined to be 5000 mL. What is the total volume (mL) that the nurse should infuse after the first 8 hours of fluid resuscitation has infused? Answer: 2500 mL. Rationale: Standard burn fluid resuscitation protocols require half (50%) of the 24-hour total to be administered in the first 8 hours following the burn injury. Q6: The nurse is caring for a client who has a systemic infection. What is the best method to prevent infection transmission? A. Obtaining an immunization B. Implementing proper hand hygiene C. Wearing gloves D. Managing the client’s fever Answer: B. Rationale: Strict hand hygiene remains the most effective method for preventing the transmission of infectious organisms. Q7: The nurse is assessing a client with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Which of the following laboratory findings should the nurse anticipate? (Select all that apply) A. Positive ANA titer B. Increased hemoglobin C. Pancytopenia D. Urine positive for protein and RBCs Answer: A, C, D. Rationale: SLE causes an autoimmune response (Positive ANA), bone marrow suppression (pancytopenia), and lupus nephritis, which damages the kidneys causing protein and blood to spill into the urine. Q8: A nurse is providing teaching to a client who is to receive a vaccination following a deep puncture wound to the foot. Which information would the nurse include? A. “You will need to receive this vaccination annually.” B. “Your passive immunity will be boosted by receiving this shot.” C. “I am administering this vaccination to help protect you against tetanus.” D. “This immunization requires three separate injections several weeks apart.” Answer: C. Rationale: Tetanus vaccination is indicated for deep puncture wounds. Q9: A nurse is assessing a client who is being treated with interferon alfa-2b for malignant melanoma. The nurse should identify that which of the following findings are adverse effects of this medication? (Select all that apply) A. Tinnitus B. Muscle aches C. Peripheral neuropathy D. Bone loss E. Depression Answer: B, C, E. Rationale: Interferon therapy causes significant flu-like symptoms (muscle aches, chills), peripheral neuropathy, and mood changes including severe depression. Q10: A nurse is reviewing the medical record of a client. Which of the following findings are risk factors for ovarian cancer? (Select all that apply) A. Previous history of endometriosis B. Family history of colon cancer C. First pregnancy at age 24 D. First period at age 14 E. Use of oral contraceptives for 10 years Answer: A, B. Rationale: Endometriosis and a family history of associated cancers (like colon or breast BRCA mutations) increase the risk for ovarian cancer. (Pregnancy and oral contraceptive use typically decrease the risk). Q11: The nurse is caring for a client whose white blood cell count is 6000/mm3. Which differential value would the nurse discuss with the health care provider? A. Eosinophils 700/mm3 (Reference range: 50–400/mm3) B. Monocytes 500/mm3 (Reference range: 100–800/mm3) C
31
Updated 26d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
19.6a SA Nodal Cells at Rest
13
Updated 47d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
Pulmonary Nodules
15
Updated 96d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
Thyroid nodule and tumors
21
Updated 109d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
Nodule Thyroïdien
12
Updated 110d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
nodule thyroide
17
Updated 112d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
E3- Thyroid nodules and cancer
30
Updated 113d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
nodule mamaire
10
Updated 132d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
Vocal Nodules, Polyps, Cysts
15
Updated 170d ago
0.0(0)
flashcards
PRIMARY NODULES
14
Updated 171d ago
0.0(0)
Users (46)