Relationships Within Ecosystems Created By: Erin, Lynsey, Alexis, and Lon Niches Competition Overpopulation Predation Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Niche & Community Interactions
Advertisements

4.2 Niches and Community Interactions
Ecosystems 8.11 The student knows that interdependence occurs among living systems and the environment and that human activities can affect these systems.
Studying the Web of Life
Ecosystems What is ecology?.
Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions
Relationships Among Organisms Biology EOCT Review.
Principles of Ecology Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3.
Interactions in Ecosystems
Chapter 4 Ecosystems and Communities
Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Lesson 1Lesson 1Ecosystems Lesson 2Lesson 2Energy and Matter Lesson 3Lesson 3Humans and Ecosystems Chapter Wrap-Up.
Niches and Community Interactions
What is the greenhouse effect?. AGENDA: 1.Finish PSQ: Greenhouse Effect 2.Notes 4-2: What shapes an Ecosystem? 3.Using Predators to Manage Population.
Ch.21 Populations & Communities Section 3: Interactions Among Living Things.
4-2: What Shapes an Ecosystem? Biology 1. Ecology tell you where an organism lives Ecology also tells you about the climate What shapes the ecosystem.
 All living things interact with their environment, both biotic and abiotic  Most living things produce more offspring than can survive.
Biodiversity The diversity of plant and animal life in a particular habitat (or in the world as a whole).
Interactions in Nature Mandek Richardson STARS Program University of South Florida.
ECOSYSTEMS CHAPTER 10.
Jeopardy Q 1 Q 2 Q 3 Q 4 Q 5 Q 6Q 16Q 11Q 21 Q 7Q 12Q 17Q 22 Q 8 Q 13 Q 18 Q 23 Q 9 Q 14 Q 19Q 24 Q 10 Q 15 Q 20Q 25 Final Jeopardy
POPULATIONS & COMMUNITIES REVIEW. The nonliving things within the environment. ABIOTIC FACTORS.
Types of Interactions Section 3. Objectives  Distinguish between the two types of competition  Give examples of predators and prey  Distinguish between.
Interactions Among Organisms. What is Ecology? Ecology is the study of organisms and the living and non-living parts of their environment. Ecology is.
Ecology Study of organisms and their interaction with each other and the environment.
JEOPARDY Science FINAL JEOPARDY.
Interactions in Ecosystems
Community Interactions Unit 6: Ecology. Niche Full range of physical and biological conditions in which an organism lives The way in which the organism.
Chapter 18 Interactions of Living Things The study of the interactions between organisms and their environment Click for Term.
Lecture 8 Organisms and Their Relationships Ozgur Unal 1.
PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY Chapter 2.
Interactions of Life Chapter 24.
1 Study of interactions of living organisms with one another and with their physical environment.
Ecology Chapter 2. What is Ecology? Ecology is the study of interactions that take place between organisms and their environment. Ex. Bird on a tree limb.
Ecology & the Environment. Chapter 20 Ecology Study of the interactions that take place among organisms and their environment.
Ecology Class Notes 2. A. What is Ecology?  1. Ecology is the way organisms (living things) interact with their environments (surroundings).  2. The.
Review: Levels of organization ORGANISM POPULATION COMMUNITY ECOSYSTEM BIOME BIOSPHERE.
Introduction to Ecology. 1 notepad, 1 pencil Put your initials by your answers First time around: -List 1 thing you want to do this year in science class.
The Web of Life: Interactions among living organisms Populations Interactions in Communities.
ECOSYSTEMS.
1.3 Interactions among living things. Adapting to the environment – Natural selection – A process by which characteristics that make an individual better.
How do organisms interact? Chapter 2 Lesson 3. In an ecosystem, organisms compete for space, light, food, water, air, and nutrients Competition is the.
ECOSYSTEMS Mr. Harper 8 th Grade Science. WHAT’S AN ECOSYSTEM? Ecosystems are complex, interactive systems that include both biological communities (biotic)
ECOSYSTEMS CHAPTER 10. WHAT IS AN ECOSYSTEM? An ecosystem is all the living things and nonliving things in a given area Examples of ecosystems: ◦ Forests,
Lesson Overview Lesson Overview Niches and Community Interactions Objectives 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions - - Define niche. -Describe the role.
1. All the living and non-living things interacting is an ____________________. 2. The non-living parts of an ecosystem are ________ factors. 3. The living.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall What Shapes an Ecosystem? What Shapes an Ecosystem?
Unit 2 Review.
Biotic Interactions.
Communities C21L3.
Two or more organisms living together in a close association
What Shapes an Ecosystem?
POPULATIONS & COMMUNITIES REVIEW
Organisms and Their Environments
Warm Up #7 How can you describe an ecosystem?.
Chapter 10 Lesson 2 Relationships Within Ecosystems
(Relationships in the Environment)
ECO: “home” OLOGY: “study of”   …the scientific study of the interactions among organisms and between organisms and their environments.
List all the Biotic and Abiotic Factors you can find in the picture.
True or false? 1. An ecosystem is all the animals that live together in a given area. 2. A layer of decayed leaves that covers the soil in a forest is.
GOOD BUDDIES ACTIVITY.
Interactions among Organisms/Adaptations
Niches and Community Interactions
Two or more organisms living together in a close association
Ecology The study of the relationship of living and nonliving parts of an ecosystem. A healthy ecosystem: Biodiversity Population in check (right number.
1.2 Ecosystems.
Ecosystem Interactions
And other types of interactions among organisms
Two or more organisms living together in a close association
Ecosystems.
Ecosystems Vocabulary
Presentation transcript:

Relationships Within Ecosystems Created By: Erin, Lynsey, Alexis, and Lon Niches Competition Overpopulation Predation Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy Symbiosis

Niches for $100 This is the way a species interacts with abiotic and biotic factors to obtain food, find shelter, and fulfill other needs.

$100 Answer What is a niche?

Niches for $200 Species share habitats, but no two species share the same of these.

$200 Answer What is a niche?

Niches for $300 This is the area within an ecosystem that provides an organism with the resources it needs for life.

$300 Answer What is a habitat?

Niches for $400 Each species that shares a habitat has a separate one of these..

$400 Answer What is a niche?

Niches for $500 Many organisms, such as the ones that live in the coral reef, share the same of these but has separate niches.

$500 Answer What is a habitat?

$100 Question from Competition. The demand for resources, such as water, food, and shelter, in short supply in a community.

$100 Answer What is competition?

$200 Question from Competition Something that organisms who live in a same area often compete for.

$200 Answer from Competition What are resources?

$300 Question from Competition Between different populations competition can take place among these different members.

$300 Answer from Competition What are species?

$400 Question from Competition Competition may limit this aspect in a particular species habitat.

$400 Answer from Competition What is population size?

$500 Question from Competition When there is nowhere for a particular species to move, they are forced to live closer together with the same species. This allows a major epidemic to spread through the population causing ---

$500 Answer from Competition What is disease?

Overpopulation for $100 This occurs when a population becomes so large that it causes damage to the environment.

$100 Answer What is a overpopulation?

Overpopulation for $200 Overpopulation can cause this to spread easily within populations of species.

$200 Answer What is disease?

Overpopulation for $300 Overpopulation causes this in an ecosystem because there is a limited amount of resources.

$300 Answer What is competition?

Overpopulation for $400 This, being only temporary, causes the population to quickly shrink, allowing the resources to slowly return to normal.

$400 Answer What is overpopulation?

Overpopulation for $500 This happens when food and other resources eventually run out.

$500 Answer What is movement elsewhere, starvation, or death?

$100 Question from Predation Humans as well as animals need these necessities in order to survive.

$100 Answer from Predation What are food, living space and water?

$200 Question from Predation When humans build houses or other buildings and causes animals homes to be destroyed.

$200 Answer from Predation What is a natural environment?

$300 Question from Predation This place may cause danger for animals for them to be able to move from one habitat to another.

$300 Answer from Predation What are roadways?

$400 Question from Predation This method endangers the monarch butterfly population by cutting down trees so they cannot live in them for survival during the winter months.

$400 Answer from Predation What is logging?

$500 Question from Predation. The act of one organism, a predator, feeding on another organism, its prey.

$500 Answer from Predation What is predation?

Symbiosis for $100 These are two types of interactions that take place between organisms in an ecosystem.

$100 Answer What is competition and predation?

Symbiosis for $200 This is a close, long-term relationship between two species that usually involves an exchange of food or energy.

$200 Answer What is symbiosis?

Symbiosis for $300 This is a symbiotic relationship in which both organisms benefit.

$300 Answer What is mutualism?

Symbiosis for $400 This is a symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits but the other neither benefits nor is harmed.

$400 Answer What is commensalism?

Symbiosis for $500 This is a symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits while the other is harmed.

$500 Answer What is parasitism?

Final Jeopardy When too many deer live in an ecosystem and they eat too many plants and it slows the growth rate of the plants down and it causes damage to the environment.

Final Jeopardy Answer What is overpopulation?