REVIEW FOR MARINE BIOLOGY OCEAN ZONES FOOD CHAINS FOOD WEBS SYMBIOTIC RELATIONSHIPS.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Interactions within Communities
Advertisements

Food Webs BACK NEXT.
Fins Fish body parts used by fish for motion Decomposer Bacteria that breaks down dead organisms Carnivore Meat Eater.
Section 1 Interactions Among Living Things
Welcome to... A Game of X’s and O’s
All images are a part of the Creative Commons license of free use.
Name _____ 7__ Ch. 2 VOCABULARY Sept.__ Food Chains & Webs.
Food Webs.
Food Webs.
Food Chains / Webs. What’s to Eat? Producers: produce their own food Plants that carry out photosynthesis Trees, vines, shrubs, ferns, mosses,
Warm up… Arrange the following organisms to show who eats whom:
Unit B: Chapter 2 Vocabulary Living Things Depend on One Another.
Part 2.  ENERGY  Where does all of the energy on planet earth come from?
I wanted to do a food chain that involved sea creatures.
Miss G. & Ms. Davenport. What is Marine Biology? What can you do with a career in Marine Biology?career.
Food Chains and Food Webs
Chapter 18 Interactions of Living Things The study of the interactions between organisms and their environment Click for Term.
ProducerConsumer PredatorPrey ParasitismMutualism CommensalismFood Chains / Food Webs Set up page for notes.
This is a song about food chains, food chains, food chains This is a song about food chains and living things on Earth.
Marine Ecology Chapter 10.
Interactions in Ecosystems 2 CHAPTER Ecosystems are made up of living things (biotic factors) and non-living things (abiotic factors), which are connected.
Energy Flows Through Ecosystems Sun: Makes all energy on Earth. Producers: Make their own food. Consumers: Get their food by eating other organisms. Decomposers:
Welcome to... A Game of X’s and O’s
Chapter 5 Lesson Two: Interaction Among Living Things.
Make a new entry in your journal
Food Webs Within Ecosystems
Chapter 18 Review. Organisms are divided into three groups, based on how they get energy: Producers Consumers Decomposers.
Aim: How do organisms interact in an ecosystem? Why do organisms need to eat? To get ENERGY!! Cell Respiration: C 6 H 12 O 6 + O 2 ATP + CO 2 + H 2 O.
Food Chains Food Chain: a simple sequence of feeding relationships. – May include a producer, an herbivore and a carnivore. – Shows the different levels.
Food Web & Food Chains Quiz 1. an animal that eats only other animals A. consumer B. herbivore C. carnivore D. omnivore.
Ecology & the Environment. Chapter 20 Ecology Study of the interactions that take place among organisms and their environment.
Energy Flow Chapter 16 Food Chains, Food Webs, Energy Pyramids.
A producer is an organism that gets its energy from the sun. Example: sunflower plant.
ENERGY FLOW IN ECOSYSTEMS  Food chains and webs show how eaters, the eaten, and the decomposed are connected to one another in an ecosystem. Figure 3-17.
Week 2 Ms. Darlak  What cards do you want when you are trying to get the most cards?  What cards do you want when you want the most points?  Which.
Categories Theme Theme Theme Theme Theme
Interactions of Living Things Chapter 1. Everything Is Connected 1.2  All living things are connected in a web of life.  Ecology is the study of how.
Energy in Ecology How is energy transferred?. Energy  All ecosystems must transfer energy.  Energy flows in ONE DIRECTION  Heat Energy (Sun)  changes.
Interactions Within Ecosystems
Autotroph An organism that generates its own food to be used as energy. WordDefinition Example Phytoplankton (Marine Plants) Terrestrial Plants Etymology.
1. All the living and non-living things interacting is an ____________________. 2. The non-living parts of an ecosystem are ________ factors. 3. The living.
WHAT IS A HABITAT?. WHERE AN ANIMAL LIVES WHAT IS A PREDATOR? WHAT IS PREY? A predator is an animal that lives by killing and eating other animals. Prey.
Pass the Energy Activity
What are the relationships between organisms in an ecosystem?
Relationships in Ecosystems
Chapter 9 Marine Ecology.
Food Chains.
Food Chains Food Webs.
Food Webs BACK NEXT.
Energy Flow Through an Ecosystem
FEEDING RELATIONSHIPS: How do organisms obtain their energy?
Communities C21L3.
Food For Thought... We're made of star-stuff. We are a way for the cosmos to know itself.
Energy Roles in Ecosystems
Energy Flow in Ecosystems
Food Chains and Food Webs
Ecosystem and Ecology.
Food Webs & Energy Transfers
Energy Flow in Ecosystems
Unit 7 Review.
ECOSYSTEMS FOOD CHAINS AND WEBS.
Food Chains and Food Webs
Communities & Food Day 3.
Food Webs BACK NEXT.
Food Webs BACK NEXT.
Energy Flow Through an Ecosystem
Food Webs BACK NEXT.
Food Webs BACK NEXT.
Chapter 5 Lesson 2 Interactions Among Living Things
5.9B Vocabulary.
Presentation transcript:

REVIEW FOR MARINE BIOLOGY OCEAN ZONES FOOD CHAINS FOOD WEBS SYMBIOTIC RELATIONSHIPS

DEFINITIONS EPIPELAGIC ZONE: TOP ZONE OF THE OCEANIC ZONE, PHOTIC ZONE, HAS PHYTOPLANKTON MESOPELAGIC ZONE: 2 ND ZONE OF THE OCEANIC ZONE, APHOTIC ZONE, HAS ZOOPLANKTON BATHYPELAGIC ZONE: 3 RD ZONE OF THE OCEANIC ZONE, BENTHIC ZONE: 4,000M ABYSSALPELAGIC ZONE: 4 TH ZONE OF THE OCEANIC ZONE, BENTHIC ZONE: 4,000-6,000M HADALPELAGIC ZONE: BOTTOM ZONE OF THE OCEANIC ZONE, BENTHIC ZONE: >6,000M

DEFINITIONS PRODUCER: ORGANISM THAT GETS ITS ENERGY FROM THE SUN 1 0 CONSUMER: HERBIVORES – THEY EAT THE PRODUCER 2 0 CONSUMER: CARNIVORES – THEY EAT THE 1 0 CONSUMER 3 0 CONSUMER: CARNIVORES – THEY EAT THE 2 0 CONSUMER 4 0 CONSUMER: CARNIVORES – THEY EAT THE 3 0 CONSUMER (TOP PREDATOR) HERBIVORE: ORGANISM THAT EATS ONLY PLANTS CARNIVORE: ORGANISM THAT EATS ONLY MEAT OMNIVORE: ORGANISM THAT EATS BOTH PLANTS AND MEANT

DEFINITIONS COMPETITION: WHEN TWO ORGANISMS FIGHT OVER THE SAME RESOURCE PREDATOR: ORGANISM THAT IS HUNTING PREY: ORGANISM THAT IS BEING HUNTED PREDATION: ONE ORGANISM HUNTS AND KILLS THE OTHER (+,-) PARASITISM: ONE ORGANISM LIVES AND FEEDS ON ANOTHER ORGANISM (+,-) COMMENSALISM: ONE ORGANISM BENEFITS AND THE OTHER DOESN’T CARE (+,O) MUTUALISM: BOTH ORGANISMS BENEFIT (+,+)

QUESTIONS 1. APHOTIC 2. PHOTIC 3. OCEANIC AND NERITIC 4. EPI-, MESO-, BATHY-, ABYSSAL-, AND HADALPELAGIC 5. EPIPELAGIC 6. MESOPELAGIC

QUESTIONS 7. PREDATION, PARASITISM, COMMENSALISM, AND MUTUALISM 8. PARASITISM 9. MUTUALISM 10. COMMENSALISM 11. PREDATION 12. MUTUALISM 13. PREDATION

QUESTIONS 1. THE ARROW IS SHOWING WHO IS EATING WHO: ZOOP IS EATING PHYTOP 2. A. THE KILLER WHALE IS EATING THE SEAL, THE SEAL IS EATING THE SQUID, THE SQUID IS EATING THE ZOOP, AND THE ZOOP IS EATING THE PHYTOP 2. B. THE PHYTOP IS BEING EATEN BY THE KRILL, AND THE KRILL IS BEING EATEN BY THE BALEEN WHALE 2. C. THE PHYTOP IS BEING EATEN BY THE SQUID AND KRILL, THE KRILL IS BEING EATEN BY THE FISH, AND THE SEAL IS EATING THE SQUID AND FISH

QUESTIONS 3. A. PHYTOP EATEN BY COD, COD EATEN BY LEOPARD SEAL, LEOPARD SEAL EATEN BY KILLER WHALE 3. B. PRO: PHYTOP / 1 0 C: ZOOP, KRILL, COD / 2 0 C: COD, SQUID, PENGUIN / 3 0 C: LEOPARD SEAL, ELEPHANT SEAL, KILLER WHALE / 4 0 C: KILLER WHALE 3. C. IF THE ZOOP WERE REMOVED THE PHYTOP WOULD INCREASE GIVING MORE FOOD TO THE KRILL AND COD, BUT THE SQUID WOULD DECREASE WITH NO PHYTOP TO EAT 3. D. IF THE SQUID DRAMATICALLY DECREASED THE ELEPHANT SEALS WOULD DECREASE WITH NO SQUID TO EAT, THE ZOOP WOULD INCREASE WHICH WOULD INCREASE THE COD, BUT DECREASE THE PHYTOP