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The Biosphere Chapter 3
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What is Ecology?
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Ecology The study of the interactions among organisms and between organisms their environment.
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Biosphere All parts of the Earth where life can exist (land, water and air).
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Biotic vs. Abiotic Biotic: the living factors in an ecosystem
Abiotic: the nonliving factors in an ecosystem
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Levels of Organization
Ecosystem: interactions among the community and abiotic factors Community: group of interacting populations Population: group of one species living in the same place at the same time
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Energy, Producers, and Consumers
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Autotrophs An organism that can make its own food.
Use photosynthesis or chemosynthesis. Also called producers.
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Heterotrophs • An organism that has to get its food from others.
• Also called consumers.
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Types of Heterotrophs Herbivores: eat only plants
Carnivores: eat only meat Omnivores: eat both plants and meat Detritovores: break down dead material; decomposers Scavengers: eat dead animals
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Energy Flow in Ecosystems
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Feeding Relationships
• Food chains: less complex • Food webs: show all eating relationships in an ecosystem. BETTER!
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Trophic Levels • Each step in a food chain.
• As you move up trophic levels, 90% of the energy is lost.
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Ecological Pyramids • Energy Pyramid (kCal)
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Cycles of Matter
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The Water Cycle
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Nutrient Chemicals an organism needs to sustain life. Carbon Nitrogen
Phosphorous
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Carbon Cycle
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Nitrogen Cycle
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Phosphorous Cycle
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Ecosystems & Communities
Chapter 4
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Niches & Community Interactions
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Niche Everything an organism does to survive.
All physical and biological conditions. What it eats, where it lives (habitat), how it avoids predators, etc.
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Competition Occurs when two organisms want the same resource at the same time. Competitive Exclusion Principle: No two species can occupy the same niche at the same time.
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Predation An interaction where one organism captures and feeds on another organism. Predator: the “killer” Prey: the “killed”
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Keystone Species A species that exerts strong control on the structure of a community so that changes to its population causes dramatic changes Ex: sea otters, honeybees
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Symbiosis Any relationship in which two species live closely together.
Mutualism: both species benefit Ex: bees and flowers Commensalism: one species benefits while the other is not affected Ex: barnacles on a whale Parasitism: one species benefits, while the other is harmed Ex: tapeworms- YUK! Examples of Symbiosis
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