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Self-Sustaining Arctic Victoria Garcia, Sean O’Dea, and Sean McNamara
Ecosystem Victoria Garcia, Sean O’Dea, and Sean McNamara
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The needs of organisms are related to the needs of cells because…
Cells are in organisms With out cells there would be no organisms The needs are very much alike the needs of organisms because the cells are in the organisms. If cells need glucose to live, then the organism needs glucose to live. This is why we will put in the same needs of cells, that the needs of organisms must have.
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We will have all sections of the Food web in our ecosystem.
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Needs of Organisms are related
To age and Health We need to be able to put in our ecosystem a lot of protein and energy. We also need different ages of different animals in our ecosystem. We must put in old and young animals of all ages and health's. The old animals would need to eat a lot of protein to stay alive, and the younger and more active animals would need to eat more energy then older animals. The reason we need to put all ages of animals in is because so they can reproduce the right way.
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Herbivores/Omnivores
We Must put in… Herbivores/Omnivores /Carnivores Herbivores- eat only plants Omnivores- eat plants and animals Carnivores- eat only animals Caribou- eats leaves of willow trees, flowering tundra plants, and mushrooms. Arctic Fox- eats birds, eggs, small mammals, and fish. This also eats berries, seaweed, insects, and larvae when other pray is scarce. Grizzly bear- eats small insects, rodents, and honey. Ermine (short tailed weasel)- eats rabbits, small insects, and rodents
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Plants in the Arctic Flowering Tundra Plants Saxifrage Wild Crocus
Arctic Poppies Buttercups Cinquefoil Moss Companion Campanulas Arctic Lupine Mushrooms
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Plants (From slides above)
Food Web Arctic Hare Ermine Plants (From slides above) Musk-oxen Caribou Lemming Tundra Voles Arctic Fox Arctic Wolf
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