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Ecosystems Essential Question:
How do organisms interact with and respond to components of their environment?
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Vocabulary Species Competition Population Coexistence
Community Cooperation Ecosystem Symbiosis Habitat Commensalism Niche Parasitism Biotic Mutualism Abiotic
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Concept How populations are affected in ecosystems;
Relationships among populations.
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Species Group of organisms that share characteristics and can breed with one another. Example: white-tailed deer.
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Population All the members of a species living in a certain area.
Example: white-tailed deer in a forest.
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Community All the populations of different species living in an area.
Example: white-tailed deer, chipmunks, trees, fungi, insects living in a forest.
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Ecosystem All the living AND nonliving parts of an environment, plus how they interact. Terrestrial – land (forest, desert, grassland.) NC’s main ecosystem – temperate deciduous forest. Aquatic - Freshwater – rivers, lakes, wetlands. Aquatic - Marine – salty ocean water.
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Habitat The place/home where an organism lives.
Example: a rotting log is a habitat for insects, worms, and fungi.
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Niche How an organism acts (the role it plays) in an ecosystem.
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Biotic Factor The LIVING factors in an ecosystem.
Example: all the plants, fungi, and animals in a forest.
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Abiotic Factor All the NONliving factors in an ecosystem.
Example: light, temperature, weather, soil, water.
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Ecological Relationships
How and why do organisms interact with one another?
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Vocabulary Competition Coexistence Cooperation Predation Symbiosis
Mutualism Parasitism Commensalism
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Competition Members of a population & community compete for what they need to survive: Water, space, sunlight, food.
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Coexistence Members of a community living together, but not affecting the other’s survival in the ecosystem.
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Cooperation Members of a population working together for survival.
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Predation One animal attacks and preys on another. Predator and prey.
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Symbiosis A close relationship between two species that benefits at least one of them.
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Commensalism One species benefits; the other is not affected.
Example: egret & cattle
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Parasitism One organism lives in/on another organism and harms it.
The parasite lives in/on the host. Example: fleas, ticks, leeches.
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Mutualism Both species benefit from the interaction.
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