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Energy Flow & Roles
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Producers a.k.a. autotrophs Can make their own food
May use energy from the Sun May use chemical energy (chemosynthesis) Ex. Plants, algae & some types of bacteria
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Consumers A.k.a. heterotrophs Include: Herbivores (1st level)
…carnivores (2nd level) …omnivores (3rd level) … scavengers (also 3rd level) …decomposers / detritivores (4th level)
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Food Chains Must start with a producer –
A producer makes it’s own food! Continues to include all levels of consumers Shows WHO eats WHO
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Food Webs Several food chains together
Shows how every organism is interdependent Everything depends on producers
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Energy Pyramid Made of “Trophic Levels” Each step of energy transfer ONLY 10% 90% of Energy is lost as heat or respiration
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Producers are at the base
Decomposers are at the top Shows DECREASING ENERGY FLOW!!!
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Populations
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Characteristics of Populations
(3 of ‘em!)
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1 - Geographic distribution
3 types:
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2 - Population Density Low High
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3 – Growth Rate: Birthrate Death-rate Immigration Emigration
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If birth rate , & death rate
Population increases If birth rate & death rate Population decreases
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Types of Growth
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Has unlimited resources J -shaped
Exponential Growth Has unlimited resources J -shaped
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Logistic Growth Normal S – shape It stops increasing at carrying capacity
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How many organisms a given area can support Determined by:
Carrying Capacity How many organisms a given area can support Determined by: Space and food
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Limiting Factors LIMIT population growth 2 Types: Density –Dependent & Density-Independent
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-1- DD: Competition Food Water Sunlight Space (Valley / mtn./ dam)
Soil type
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Examples of Competition
Male lions for control of female prides plants for water, nutrients and light
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-2- DD: Predation Predators eat prey Prey is eaten
Predators help the ecosystem by reducing the size of prey populations and….. Allow for BIODIVERSITY
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-3- DD: Parasitism & Disease
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-4- DD: Stress & Crowding
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Density Independent 1. Weather / temperature 2. Natural disaster
3. Seasonal cycles (rainy /drought) 4. Human activities (clear cutting forests, damming rivers)
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Human Impact on the Environment
Includes: Soil Erosion (from agriculture) Runoff & flooding (thru deforestation) Pollution (untreated sewage)
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Interrupting nutrient cycles (burning trash; not recyclable)
Population growth (depletes resources)
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What is the WORST things humans do????
Habitat destruction!!!! Might be done by invasive species Causes a loss of biodiversity
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Succession
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Succession The process of how ecosystems form over a long period of time
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Begins by hardy invaders called the pioneer species
This includes lichens & mosses Progresses to a stable climax community (endpoint of succession)
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Two Types
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1 -Primary succession no previous growth Requires thousands of years
Requires the creation of soil Occurs when new land is formed Ex. after volcanic eruption After a glacier melts
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2 - Secondary succession
develops after existing ecosystem has been disturbed More rapid – reaches climax within two centuries Ex: forest fire Natural disaster abandoned farm field
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Biggest difference between primary and secondary is time, due to the presence/ absence of soil. Soil is made by the decomposition of rock; broken down by lichens and mosses (pioneer species).
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Cycles That Occur in Nature
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Water cycle Moves between atmosphere, oceans & land 1 – water evaporates from the ocean 2 – water evaporates from the leaves of plants during transpiration
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3 - enters atmosphere as a gas (water vapor)
4 – Vapors condense to form clouds 5 – when large enough, water will fall back to earth as precipitation
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6 – Water travels as runoff or seepage
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7 – Plants remove water from root uptake
Water is always equal in the cycle The amount never changes
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Concerns (due to humans)
Groundwater depletion due to irrigation Unsafe drinking water due to pollution or animal waste (causes 80% of diseases in undeveloped countries)
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Carbon cycle
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Photosynthesis: CO2 is taken in by plants & converted to sugar
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Cellular Respiration: how energy from sugar is released
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Erosion & volcanoes: releases CO2 in the air & ocean
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Decomposition: carbon is released from dead stuff
stored underground as fossil fuels
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Human Activities: Mining Burning fossil fuels
Cutting / burning down forests **We ADD to the carbon cycle !!
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Nitrogen cycle Nitrogen –make up proteins and DNA
Where is most of it stored? In the atmosphere!! (79%) Plants and animals cannot take nitrogen from the atmosphere
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1. Bacteria converts nitrogen gas (N2) into ammonia in a process called:
Ammonification 2. A different bacteria converts ammonia into nitrates and nitrites needed by plants to make proteins process called nitrogen fixation
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3. Plants take in nitrogen (as nitrates and nitrites)
4. Consumers (including us) get nitrogen by eating producers 5. Organisms die, they return nitrogen to soil as ammonia
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6. Some ammonia may be taken up by producers
7. Nitrates are converted into nitrogen gas by bacteria in a process called denitrification 8. Nitrogen gas returns to the atmosphere
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Human activities can also add Nitrogen:
Use of fertilizers (travel by runoff) Dumping raw sewage Burning fossil fuels & wood Leads to eutrophication (algal blooms)
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Phosphorus Cycle 1 – stored in rock (land & ocean floor) & soil
2 - Released by weathering & erosion 3 – travels in runoff
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4 – enters the ocean & gets used by some marine animals
5 – travels through the food web 6 – returned to soil through waste
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Why do we need phosphorus?
Along with calcium, you need it to make bones #1: it is a part of DNA
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Phosphorous Cycle
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