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Ecology
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Ecology is the study of the interactions between organisms and their interrelationships with the environment.
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Ecology Organisms Environment
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No organism exists as an entity, separate and distinct from its environment.
All living organisms are dependent upon other living things as well as dependent on the nonliving environment.
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Ecological Organization
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Arrange these from largest to smallest
Answer: Biosphere Ecosystem Community Population Community Population Biosphere Ecosystem
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is the portion of the earth in which life exists – oceans, land & sky.
Biosphere is the portion of the earth in which life exists – oceans, land & sky.
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Ecosystem is the living community and the physical environment functioning together as an interdependent, self-sufficient, and relatively stable system.
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* The ecosystem is the structural and functional unit studied in ecology
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Community All the plant and animal populations of a given area make up a community.
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is all the members of a species living in a given location.
Population is all the members of a species living in a given location. Ex #1: all the gray squirrels living in a forest Ex #2: All the dandelions growing in a field
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species A group of organisms capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring
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The Liger
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In Biology, a population is a smaller group than a community
How is the meaning of the word “population” in Biology different from its everyday (common) meaning? In Biology, a population is a smaller group than a community
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A Food Chain SUN (radiant energy) Energy Energy Energy
What do the arrows represent? Energy Energy Energy A Food Chain
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An ecosystem is a self-sustaining unit if the following requirements are met:
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1) constant source of energy .
Characteristics of Ecosystems 1) constant source of energy 2) organisms that can store this energy into organic compounds
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3) A flow of energy from one population to another - food chains, food webs
4) cycling of materials between the organisms and their environment.
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A. Ecosystem Structure & Function
An ecosystem involves interactions between abiotic (nonliving) and biotic (living) factors.
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The abiotic factors include:
The abiotic environment includes physical (non-living) factors which affect the ability of organisms to live and reproduce. The abiotic factors include:
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gases - O , CO , N 2 2 2 temperatures moisture substratum inorganic substances - minerals light pH
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Examples of limiting factors include:
Each of these factors may act as a limiting Factor - determines the types of organisms which may exist in that environment. Examples of limiting factors include:
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The amount of available water determines the kinds of organisms that can live in a desert.
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The low temperature of regions at high latitude or altitudes.
The salt concentration in the oceans and seashore regions.
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Some species of fish, shellfish, and other marine species would die in freshwater due to an imbalance of water pressure in their tissues.
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Some plants live well on a forest floor under tall trees, but would not do well in an open field due to the increased intensity of light.
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Biotic Factors are all the living things that directly, or indirectly, affect the environment.
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Thus, the organisms, their presence, parts, interaction, and wastes, all act as biotic factors.
Biotic factors interact in many ways such as in nutritional relationships and symbiotic relationships.
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Nutritional Relationships
involve the transfer of nutrients from one organism to another.
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