Table of contents | |
Producers | |
Food Chains | |
Investigating Ecosystems | |
Abundance of Organisms | |
Feeding Relationships |
An example of a food chain
Using a quadrat to investigate population size or distribution
How to estimate percentage cover of one or more species using a quadrat
An example of a transect on a hillside. A quadrat is placed at regular intervals (every 10m of altitude gained) and counts the number of individuals (of the species being investigated eg. buttercups) in each quadrat
Exam Tip
When estimating percentage cover, you can count a square (and include it in your calculations) if more than half of it is covered by the species.
Calculate the mean, median and mode buttercup abundance in each habitat.
An example of a graph used to model a predator-prey cycle between the Canadian lynx and the snowshoe hare
Exam Tip
Don’t forget: predator-prey cycles are always out-of-phase with each other as it takes time for one population to respond to a change in the other population. For example, the peak in the Canadian lynx population occurs after the peak in the snowshoe hare population, as it takes time for the lynx to reproduce and for their numbers to increase.
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