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Introduction to Ecology Biology A/Ecology
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What is Ecology? Ecology is the scientific study of how organisms interact with each other and their environment.
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Energy Flow All organisms require energy from their environment to function. Sunlight is the main source of this energy
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Autotroph vs. Heterotroph Autotrophs are organisms that can use energy directly from sunlight or chemicals to produce their own food. –Autotrophs are also called producers. –Examples: Plants and algae Heterotrophs are organisms that get energy from the food they eat. –Heterotrophs are also called consumers.
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Decomposers Decomposers are a special type of heterotroph: –Decomposers break down organic matter
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Food Chains Energy flows through an ecosystem from producers to consumers. Food chains show this one-way flow of energy:
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Food Webs In most ecosystems many food chains interact together. Food webs link all the food chains in an ecosystem together:
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Energy Transfer When energy flows from one organism to another, only about 10% of the energy gets transferred. This is because each organism uses some energy for itself.
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Energy Transfer Continued Therefore, the more transfers that occur, the less energy is available for the organism at the top of the food chain. –For example, 10% of the sun energy captured by the grass gets passed along to the mouse that eats it. Only 10% of that energy gets passed along to the snake that eats the mouse.
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Energy Pyramids Energy Pyramids describe the transfer of energy from one level of the food chain to the next:
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Ecosystem Vocabulary An ecosystem is all the organisms living in a particular place, along with the non-living environment. –Example: grass, mice, snakes and hawks live in a very dry and hot prairie with frequent fires and little rain.
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Biotic vs. Abiotic Biotic factors are the living parts of an ecosystem –Examples: grass, mice, snakes and hawks Abiotic factors are the non-living parts of an ecosystem –Examples: Frequent fires, high temperatures, drought.
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