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Ecology
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Ecology Study of organisms and their environment Biosphere:
-portion of earth that supports life -Bio meaning life; Sphere meaning ball shaped
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Two major factors Biotic Factors- living factors in an organism’s environment Ex. Frogs, fish, algae, tree Abiotic Factors- Non-living factors in an organism’s environment Ex. Sunlight, rainfall, temperature, air, soil
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Ecology Habitat- Area where an organism lives
Ex. A part of a tree, hole in the ground
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List 3 Biotic Factors, 2 Abiotic Factors, 1 habitat
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Hierarchy of Life (Recall)
Cells Tissues Organs Organ System Organism
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Levels of Organization
Organism Population Community Ecosystem Biome Biosphere
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Population Group of the SAME species living in a common area.
Ex. Population of Lions or Zebras
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Community A group of living things (Biotic) interacting with each other in a common area
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Ecosystem A community of living organisms (Biotic) interacting with the non-living factors (Abiotic) in the same environment.
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Biome Areas with similar types of communities and same climates, including temperature and precipitation. 9 Major Biomes -Tundra -Boreal Forest(Taiga) -Temperate Deciduous -Temperate Woodland Forest -Temperate Grassland –Desert -Savanna Tropical Seasonal Forest -Tropical Rain Forest
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Studying the interaction between living things in an ecosystem
[What Ecology is all about]
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What’s your role? Niche - the role or position an organism has in it’s environment - how an organism meets it’s needs for food, shelter, or reproduction Producer- Produce their energy Consumer- Consume others for energy Decomposer-Decompose (Breakdown) dead/decaying fragments
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Types of Interaction Competition- more than one organism uses one resource at one time Predation- One organism consuming another. Predator/prey relationship Symbiosis- relationship that exist when two or more species live together
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Types of Symbiosis (Relationships)
Mutualism- relationship where organisms benefit from each other Commensalism- relationship where one organism benefits and the other neither benefits or harmed Parasitism-relationship where one benefits on the expense of the other
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Mutualism Acacia Tree and Ant
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Commensalism Remora Fish/ Shark
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Parasitism Wasp and Caterpillar
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Discover Streaming Types of interactions within ecosystems
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Flow of Energy in an Ecosystem
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Energy in an ecosystem Organisms are classified based on how they obtain energy Autotroph: organism that obtains nutrients from the sunlight or inorganic substances to produce energy Example: Plants go through Photosynthesis Sunlight Glucose
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Heterotroph: organisms that obtain nutrients through consuming other organisms
Example: Animals go through Cellular Respiration Glucose ATP
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Types of Heterotrophs Herbivore- eats plants Carnivore- eats meats
Omnivore- eats both meats and plants Detritivore- eat fragments of dead matter in an ecosystem and return it back to the soil, air, or water as nutrients for other organisms to use
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Flow of Energy Models 1st Tropic Level are considered the Producers.
Food Web or Food Chains used to illustrate the flow of energy through an ecosystem Each step in a food web or food chain is a tropic level 1st Tropic Level are considered the Producers. Why???
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2nd tropic level is considered the primary consumer
3rd trophic level is considered the secondary consumer 4th trophic level is considered the tertiary consumer
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Food Chain Simple model that shows the flow of energy through an ecosystem
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Food Web A model representing the many food chains and pathways in which energy flows through a group of organisms
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Energy Pyramids
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Energy Pyramids They tell us 4 things about each trophic level:
The amount of energy -90% of the original energy is lost through heat energy or processes inside the organism The niche -Producers, Primary consumers, etc. Biomass -total mass of living matter Population size
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Energy Pyramid
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Create your own energy pyramid
Only 3 levels Include: Name of organism, niche, amount of energy at the level
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Is a perfect ecosystem attainable? Can we be balanced in a community?
Population Growth
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Climax Community The stable, mature community that results when there is little change in the composition of species Unlikely to achieve because of: Limiting Factors Density independent/dependent Factors Carrying Capacity Succession
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Population Density Number of organisms per unit in an area
Population Growth Emigration- # of individuals moving AWAY from a population Immigration- # of individuals moving INTO a population
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The J-Curve The growth of the population accelerates
There is no limit on the population……..yet Exponential Growth
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What stops the Growth of a population/community?
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Limiting Factors Any abiotic or biotic factor that restricts the numbers, reproduction, or distribution of organisms Ex. Sunlight, Climate, Temperature (Abiotic Factors) Plants, animals (Biotic Factors)
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Limiting Factors 2 types of limiting factors
a) Density-independent Factors b) Density-dependent Factors
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A. (Population) Density-independent Factors
Any factor that does NOT depend on the number of members in a population. -Ex. Flooding, drought, extreme heat, tornadoes, fire This will lead to succession
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Ecological Succession
The change in an ecosystem occurring when one community replaces another as a result of changing abiotic and biotic factors 2 Types
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Ecological Succession
Primary Succession- establishment of a community in an area of exposed rock that does not have any topsoil. Pioneer Species- first organisms that appear when the area beings to establish -Ex. Lichens, mosses -Help to create soil by secreting acids that help to break down rocks.
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Lichens An important pioneer species in primary succession
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Secondary Succession- orderly and predictable change that takes place after a community of organism has been removed but the soil has remained intact. EX. Plowing of a field
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Primary Succession
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Secondary Succesion
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B) Density-Dependent Factors
Any factor that DOES depend on the number of members in a population -Ex. Predation, disease (High pop. = transmission easily), parasites, and competition (As competition increases, resources such as food or space decreases, or becomes limited)
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Wolf vs. Moose The growth depends on the others population
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Carrying Capacity The maximum number of individuals in a species that an environment can support for the long term.
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The S-Curve Rate of population growth begins to slow down because you are reaching carrying capacity. Logistic Growth
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Carrying Capacity Graphs
What is the carrying capacity?
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Carrying Capacity What is the carrying capacity?
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Carrying Capacity What is the carrying capacity?
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3-2-1 3 Limiting factors (Abiotic or biotic) 2 Types of Succession 1 Pioneer Species Pg 62-64
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4 Main Cycles
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Water Cycle Evaporation-90% of water vapor
evaporates from oceans, lakes and rivers Transpiration-10% of water is Evaporated from the surface of Plants. Condensation- changing water vapor into a liquid form Precipitation- Rain
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The Water Cycle
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The Carbon and Oxygen Cycle
Carbon released in three ways: Combustion and burning of fossil fuels Decay and decomposition of organisms Respiration Carbon taken out of air through: 1)Photosynthesis
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The Carbon and Oxygen Cycle
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Nitrogen Cycle Nitrogen Fixation- Process of capture and conversion of nitrogen into a form that is useable by plants Denitrification- Soil bacteria convert fixed nitrogen compounds back into nitrogen gas, which make it useable by plants
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Nitrogen Cycle
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Phosphorus Cycle Two cycles:
Short term-Cycled from soil to producer to consumer to decomposer to soil Long term-weathering or erosion of rocks add phosphorus back into the environment -Through precipitation and sedimentation, rocks are formed through this process.
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Phosphorus Cycle
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