Introduction to Ecology Chapter 2. What is Ecology? EEcology: the study of the relationship between organisms and their environment Involves observing.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Standardized Test Prep
Advertisements

What is an ecosystem? Chapter 5 Lesson 1.
What is Ecology?.
Ecosystems are made up of both living and nonliving things
Chapter 5 Lesson One: Interactions in an Ecosystem
Introduction to Ecology
Ecology: Ecology: an introduction. The study of the interactions that take place among organisms and their environment.
Introduction to Ecology “Ecology is the study of the interactions between organisms and the living and nonliving components of the environment. Each organism.
Intro to ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions b/t organisms and the living and nonliving components of their environment. What kinds of.
Introduction to Ecology Part I
Ecology: Ecosystems Cornell Notes Page 147.
Chapter 18 Table of Contents Section 1 Introduction to Ecology
Principles of Ecology IN 167 Heading Vocabulary Important Info
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. ResourcesChapter menu Introduction to Ecology Chapter 18 Table of Contents Section 1 Introduction.
Intro to Ecology. Ch Intro to Ecology Ecology is the study of the interactions between organisms and the living and nonliving components of their.
What is Ecology?.
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.
PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY Chapter 2. Organisms & Their Environment Ch. 2, Sec. 1.
The study of the interactions among organisms and their environment. Ecologists are scientists who study these relationships. Two groups of environmental.
Introduction to Ecology Chapter 18 Table of Contents Section 1 Introduction to Ecology Section 2 Ecology of Organisms Section 3 Energy Transfer Section.
What is Ecology?  The study of organisms and how they interact with their environment. (includes both biotic and abiotic factors).
THE STUDY OF THE INTERACTIONS AMONG THE NONLIVING AND LIVING PARTS OF THE EARTH.
Biotic and Abiotic Factors
Ecology. WHAT IS ECOLOGY? Ecology- the scientific study of interactions between organisms and their environments, focusing on energy transfer Ecology.
CHAPTER 18. Section 1 - Objectives Identify a key theme in ecology. Describe an example showing the effects of interdependence upon organisms in their.
Introduction to ecology: Ecology of Populations. Niche Discussion Modern Biology Pages What is the common theme for ecology? “Interconnectedness”“Interconnectedness”
Ecology. Interdependence Key Theme in Ecology Crucial interactions occur between organisms and the living and nonliving environment.
Notes: Biotic & Abiotic Factors. A. Ecology The study of interactions between organisms and their environment.
PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY Chapter 2.
Intro to Ecology (The last unit of the year!!). What Is Ecology?
Introduction to Ecology Ecology is the study of the interactions between organisms and the living (BIOTIC) and nonliving (ABIOTIC) components of their.
ECOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 19. What is Ecology? The study of interactions between organisms and the living and non-living components of their environment.
Ecology Chapter 2 Section 1 pp What is Ecology Ecology is the study of the interactions between organisms (living things) and the environment.
Ch. 18 sec. 1 Answers. 1. Define: Ecology The study of the interactions between organisms and the living and non-living components of 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.
The Web of Life: Interactions among living organisms Populations Interactions in Communities.
Food Chains And Food Webs Principles of Ecology KEY CONCEPT Ecology is the study of the relationships among organisms and their environment.
Components of an Ecosystem Notes. An ecosystem consists of all of the living organisms and all of the non- living elements that interact in an area.
1.  The study of interactions that take place between organisms and their environment.  It explains how living organisms affect each other and the world.
Introduction to Ecology Chapter 18. Ecology Section 18.1.
Ecosystems. Habitat Specific environment where an organism lives.
Introduction to Ecology Chapter 18 Table of Contents Section 1 Introduction to Ecology Section 2 Ecology of Organisms Section 3 Energy Transfer Section.
Ecology Unit Part 2: Ecology of Organisms. Ecosystem Components Ecologists separate the environmental factors that influence an organism into two types:
Ecology Introduction. What is it?  The study of living things and how they interact with nonliving things.  Each organism depends in some way on other.
Environmental Science Chapter th Grade.  Ecology: Study of the interactions of organisms with one another and with their environment.  Two Groups:
Ecosystems: Why is everything connected? Section 4.1.
Energy Flow in an Ecosystem
Ecology Living Environment.
INTRO TO ECOLOGY pp
PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY Chapter 2.
PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY Chapter 2.
Introduction to Ecology
3-1 What is Ecology?.
Ecology: an introduction
Energy Flow in an Ecosystem
Ecological Organization
Chapter 3: Ecology.
Ecology Introduction.
16.1 Teacher Notes Interactions of Living Things
INTRO TO ECOLOGY pp
PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY Chapter 2.
Ecology.
Ecology.
Introduction to Ecology
Everything is Connected
Chapter 18 Table of Contents Section 1 Introduction to Ecology
3-1 What is Ecology?.
3-1 What is Ecology?.
Introduction to Ecology
What is Ecology? Biology.
Presentation transcript:

Introduction to Ecology Chapter 2

What is Ecology? EEcology: the study of the relationship between organisms and their environment Involves observing relationship patterns and seeking to explain them

Levels of Ecological Organization 11) Biosphere: Earth & its atmosphere 22) Ecosystem: organisms and non-living things in one area 33) Community: interacting organisms in one area 44) Population: all members of one species in an area 55) Organism: how they adapt to the environment

Theme of “Interconnectedness” AAlso called “Interdependence” All organisms interact with other organisms and non-living things in the environment Survival depends on this Any disturbance may cause widespread effects

Factors that Influence Organisms  2 Types: 1) Biotic Factors: “living”  i.e. bacteria, plants, animals 2) Abiotic: “non-living”  i.e. temperature, pH, climate

Survival Mechanisms 11)Acclimation: organisms adjust their tolerance to abiotic factors (NOT adaptation!!) 22) Dormancy: state of decreased activity in response to unfavorable conditions 33) Migration: when organisms move to more favorable environmental conditions

Niche NNiche: the specific role a species plays in the environment IIncludes: The conditions they can tolerate Their methods of obtaining resources # of offspring created Time of reproduction (human = 9 months) All other interactions with the environment