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Organisms and Their Environments
Ecology Organisms and Their Environments
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Ecology The study of the interactions of organisms and their environment
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Biotic Factors All the living organisms that inhabit an environment.
Bio = life tic = pertaining to. Animals, plants, fungi, bacteria, protists
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Abiotic Factors All the non-living parts of the environment
A = not/without, bio = life Examples = soil, rocks, water, minerals, temperature
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NOTE: All organisms depend on others for food, shelter, reproduction and protection. We must study an organism’s relationship with other organisms at different levels and see how different factors affect them.
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Levels of Biological Organization
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Organism
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Population A group of organisms of one species that interbreed and live in the same area.
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Community A collection of populations that interact with one another.
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Ecosystem Interactions of a community and its abiotic factors
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Biome large community of plants and animals that occupies a distinct region.
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Biosphere The portion of the Earth that supports life.
Many different environments exist here. Bio = life
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Niche vs. Habitat
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Niche The role a species plays in a community.
Includes the space, food, and other conditions the organism needs to survive.
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Habitat The place where the organism lives.
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NOTE: Several species may share a habitat, but the food, shelter, and resources of that habitat are divided into separate niches.
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Interactions between Organisms
Aka relationships
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Autotrophs Organisms that use solar energy to make their own food.
Auto = self Also called Producers
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Heterotrophs Organisms that depend on other organisms for food and energy. Hetero = other Also called consumers
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5 Types of Heterotrophs
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Herbivores Eat only plants
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Carnivores Eat other heterotrophs
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Scavengers Eat organisms that are already dead
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Omnivores Eat both animals and plants omni = all
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Decomposers Absorb nutrients from dead organisms Fungi, Bacteria
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Competition Organisms of the same or different species attempt to use an abiotic or biotic resource in the same ecosystem.
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Predation An interaction in which one organism captures and feeds on another organism.
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Symbiosis Close and permanent relationships between organisms
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Commensalism One species benefits and the other is not harmed or benefited.
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Crab sheltering in carpet of a sea anemone
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Mutualism Both species benefit.
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Golden damselfish being cleaned by 2 different cleaner fish- both parties benefit.
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Parasitism One species benefits and the other is harmed.
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Mosquitoes are a parasite
Mosquitoes are a parasite. They benefit from our blood and we are harmed by the bite and/or transmitted disease.
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These are common parasites.
Lice, Hookworms, Fleas, Ticks, Leeches
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Energy in Ecosystems Note: Organisms interact in order to obtain energy and resources necessary to stay alive.
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Energy Flow Energy flows thru an ecosystem in one direction:
sun autotroph heterotroph
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Food Chain A model that shows how matter and energy move through an ecosystem. It has arrows that show the direction that energy is being transferred.
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FOOD CHAIN
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Trophic Level A feeding step in a food chain that represents each organism.
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4 3 2 1
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Can you name the trophic levels below??
Tertiary consumer Primary consumer Producer Secondary consumer
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Food Web Shows all the possible feeding relationships at each trophic level in a community.
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Ecological pyramids Diagram that shows the relative amounts of energy or matter contained within each trophic level in a food chain or food web. 3 types
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Energy Pyramid Pyramid of Energy Heat 0.1% Consumers 1% Consumers 10% Consumers 100% Producers Parasites, scavengers, and decomposers feed at each level. 10% Rule - Only about 10% of energy available within one trophic level is transferred to organisms at the next trophic level The rest is lost as heat
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Pyramid of numbers Based on the number of individual organisms at each trophic level Pyramid of Numbers Fox (1) Birds (25) Grasshoppers (250) Grasses (3000)
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Biomass Pyramid The total amount of living tissue within a given trophic level is called biomass. A pyramid of biomass represents the amount of potential food available for each trophic level in an ecosystem.
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NOTE: Energy and matter are constantly being recycled. A balance of everything going on in an ecosystem is called HOMEOSTASIS.
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