Campbell Biology (10th Edition)
10th Edition
ISBN: 9780321775658
Author: Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert B. Jackson
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 54, Problem 54.2CR
Based on indexes such as Shannon diversity, is a community of higher species richness always more diverse than a community of lower species richness? Explain.
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Chapter 54 Solutions
Campbell Biology (10th Edition)
Ch. 54.1 - Explain how competition, predation, and mutualism...Ch. 54.1 - According to the principle of competitive...Ch. 54.1 - Prob. 3CCCh. 54.2 - What two components contribute to species...Ch. 54.2 - How is a food chain different from a food web?Ch. 54.2 - Prob. 3CCCh. 54.3 - Why do high and low levels of disturbance usually...Ch. 54.3 - Prob. 2CCCh. 54.3 - WHAT IF? Most prairies experience regular fires,...Ch. 54.4 - Describe two hypotheses that explain why species...
Ch. 54.4 - Prob. 2CCCh. 54.4 - WHAT IF? Based on MacArthur and Wilson's island...Ch. 54.5 - What are pathogens?Ch. 54.5 - WHAT IF? Rabies, a viral disease in mammals, is...Ch. 54 - Prob. 54.1CRCh. 54 - Based on indexes such as Shannon diversity, is a...Ch. 54 - Is the disturbance pictured in figure 54.25 more...Ch. 54 - How have periods of glaciation influenced...Ch. 54 - Prob. 54.5CRCh. 54 - Prob. 1TYUCh. 54 - The principle of competitive exclusion states that...Ch. 54 - Based on the intermediate disturbance hypothesis,...Ch. 54 - According to the island equilibrium model, species...Ch. 54 - Prob. 5TYUCh. 54 - Prob. 6TYUCh. 54 - Prob. 7TYUCh. 54 - The most plausible hypothesis to explain why...Ch. 54 - Community 1 contains 100 individuals distributed...Ch. 54 - Prob. 10TYUCh. 54 - EVOLUTION CONNECTION Explain why adaptations of...Ch. 54 - Prob. 12TYUCh. 54 - WRITE ABOUT A THEME: INTERACTIONS In Batesian...Ch. 54 - Prob. 14TYU
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Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, biology and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Consider the following hypothetical scenario: In a vast area of a land-locked town, two distinct forest formations can be found – (1) forest over limestone formation and (2) a lowland tropical forest. Researchers did an area-random sampling composed of 25 plots measuring 20mx20m for each of the two forest formations. Do you think the two forest formations have the same diversity index values and species richness? Why or why not?arrow_forwardUse the Shannon-Weiner Diversity equation to calculate diversity (H). Which treatment (predator enclosure, no predator enclosure) is more diverse? Why do you think this is the case? Predator Enclosure: Species Number A 5 B 1 C 4 D 2 E 12 No Predator Enclosure: Species Number A 7 B 9 C 17 D 3arrow_forwardData shown in this figure describes the species richness of mammals and birds among a variety of Sky islands. Which of the following best fits the correlations represented in the graphs? 1) number of individuals increases with area and decreases with isolation 2) species richness increases with area and decreases with isolation 3) species diversity varies depending on area and isolation? Follow up question which model of species distribution and abundance does this data support? 1) Species area relationship 2) species accumulation curve 3) island-biogeography 4) rapoport’s rulearrow_forward
- Ecology and Biology: Shannon Diversity Index: Definition & Example The Shannon Diversity Index (sometimes called the Shannon-Wiener Index) is a way to measure the diversity of species in a community. Denoted as H, this index is calculated as: H = -Σpi * ln(pi) where: Σ: A Greek symbol that means “sum” ln: Natural log pi: The proportion of the entire community made up of species i The higher the value of H, the higher the diversity of species in a particular community. The lower the value of H, the lower the diversity. A value of H = 0 indicates a community that only has one species. The Shannon Equitability Index is a way to measure the evenness of species in a community. The term “evenness” simply refers to how similar the abundances of different species are in the community. Denoted as EH, this index is calculated as: EH = H / ln(S) where: H: The Shannon Diversity Index S: The total number of unique species What is the Shannon diversity index value for this community? What…arrow_forwardUsing the netlogo run the sheep-wolves-grass model variation, but set INITIAL-NUMBER-WOLVES to 0. This gives a stable ecosystem with only sheep and grass. Why might this be stable while the variation with only sheep and wolves is not?arrow_forwardIdentify the Shannon diversity index in the two hypothetical communities below. Which of the two communities is more diverse? Round off your answer to the nearest hundredth Species A Community A B Community B A 12 5 B 1 5 C 3 3 D 4 7arrow_forward
- What do you mean lay species diversity? Name two measures of species diversity?arrow_forwardYou are an ecologist studying the biodiversity of islands in a tropical archipelago. Using the species-area relationship, you aim to estimate the number of species on a newly discovered island with an area of 220 km². Your research has established that the y-intercept of the species-area relationship (log S = log c + z log A) is 1.09 and the slope (z) is 0.38. Based on these parameters, how many species would you expect to find on this island? Group of answer choices: 34 149 82 8 92 0.65arrow_forwarda community has 9 species and 12 links. what is the connectivity for this community? the correct answer is 0.15. why?arrow_forward
- What two components contribute to species diversity?Explain how two communities with the same numberof species can differ in species diversity.arrow_forwardA scientist studying the diversity of month species in two forests calculates H' = 1.6 for forest 1 and H' = 1.1 for forest 2. What conclusion can be made based on these data? %3D The moth species richness of forest 1 is greater than forest 2 If the species richness of both forests is equal, the species evenness of forest 2 is greater There was more sampling effort in forest 2 than forest 1 If the species richness of both forests is equal, the species evenness of forest 1 is greaterarrow_forwardIf an ecosystem has a high Shannon diversity Index, is that a measure of good/healthy biodiversity? Explain your answer.arrow_forward
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