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Question

What is true about the relationship between hare and lynx if lynxes depend mainly on hares for food?
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A
As the hare population decrease, the lynx population increase.
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B
As the hare population decrease, the lynx population stays the same.
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C
As the hare population increase, the lynx population increase.
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D
As the hare population increase, the lynx population stays the same.
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E
There is no relationship between the population of lynx and hares.
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Solution

The correct option is C As the hare population increase, the lynx population increase.
The crests and troughs of lynx population graph follow the crests and troughs of hare population graph. So, increase in hare population increase food availability for lynx population. This causes an increase in lynx population size. The decline is hare population causes the decline in lynx population as lynx face feed scarcity. Thus, the correct answer is C.

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Q. A basic principle of ecology is that population size is partly a reflection of available food resources. Recent experiments suggest that the relationship is more complex than formerly thought. Specifically, the browsing of certain rodents appears to trigger chemical reactions in food plants which, in turn, affect the size of the rodent populations. Two examples of such regulation have been reported. Berger has demonstrated the power of a naturally occurring chemical called 6-MBOA to stimulate reproductive behavior in the mountain vole, a small mouse-like rodent. 6-MBOA forms in young grass in response to browsing by voles. Berger experimented by feeding oats coated with 6-MBOA to non-breeding winter populations of voles. After three weeks, she found a high incidence of pregnancy among females. Since the timing of reproduction is crucial to the short-lived vole in an environment in which the onset of vegetative growth may be considerably delayed, the phytochemical triggering of reproductive behavior represents a significant biological adaptation.
In an example reported by Bryant, plants appear to have developed a phytochemical defense against the depredations of snowshoe hares in Canada. Every ten years, for reasons that are unclear, the hare population swells. The result is overbrowsing of certain deciduous trees and shrubs. Bryant found that trees favored by the hare produce young shoots high in terpene and phenolic resins, which discourage hare browsing. After treating non-resinous willow twigs with resinous extracts and placing treated and untreated samples at hare feeding stations, Bryant found that samples containing at least half of the resin concentration of natural twigs were untouched. The avoidance of resinous shoots, he concludes, may play a role in the decline of the hare population to normal levels.
Both of these reports suggest areas for further research. For example, data should be reviewed to determine if periodic population explosions among lemmings (another small rodent living in a northern environment) occur during years in which there is an early onset of vegetative growth; if so, a triggering mechanism similar to that prompted by the vole may be involved.
Q. Which of the following statements can be inferred about plant shoots containing large amounts of terpene and phenolic resins?
I. They serve as a form of natural defense.
II. Their growth is stimulated by increases in the hare population.
III. They are unappetizing to hares.
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