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Introduction to Ecology
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Ecology Study of the interactions between organisms and the non-living parts of their environment Each organism depends in some way on other living and non-living things in its environment
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Abiotic Factors Abiotic factors- non-living factors in the ecosystem that affect that ecosystem Ex. Sunlight, salt, oxygen, rainfall, temperature, Chemicals, etc.
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Biotic Factors Biotic factors- living components of an ecosystem
Interactions between organisms that can affect the ecosystem
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Biotic: anything living or once alive
Abiotic: anything not living Biotic: anything living or once alive
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Levels of Organization
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Organism (species) a single living species
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Population all the organisms of the same species living
in one place at one time
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Community all of the populations of living organisms in one area at one time
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Ecosystem All organisms and the non-living environment in an area
Can be as small as your back yard or as large as the world.
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Biome Large group of ecosystems that share the same climate.
Examples: Tundra, Desert, Temperate Deciduous Forest.
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Biosphere Relatively thin layer of Earth and its atmosphere that supports life. All of the biomes make up the biosphere.
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Habitat Habitat- the physical location of the organism
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Niche an organism’s role in the community (like a job)
It includes the way an organism interacts with its environment. (ex: How it gets food, how it finds shelter, when it reproduces, how many offspring it has)
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Symbiosis: close relationship between any 2 living organisms Remember:
Sym = together Bio = living 3 Types of symbiotic relationships Mutualism Commensalism Parasitism
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Mutualism- two species cooperating, they both benefit (+ and +)
ex. bees and flowers, hippos and fish
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Commensalism- one species benefits from another, the other species is not affected (+ and no affect)
ex. Sea anemones and clown fish Barnacles and whales NEMO!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Parasitism- one species benefits from another, the other species is harmed (+ and -), detriment=harm
dogs and ticks, humans and tape worms
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Predation (+ and -) predation- one species, the predator, hunting and eating another, the prey leopards and gazelles, spider and fly
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Competition an interaction between organisms or species in which both the organisms or species are harmed. Causes of Competition: Defend organisms space-territory Defend resources-food, water, available females Plants-compete for soil, nutrients and sunlight
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Competition competition- organisms that are in the same niche and are therefore struggling for a resource
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Spatial Distribution: How spread out a population is
Spatial Distribution: How spread out a population is. Where the population is located. Population Density: How many individual organisms are in a given area Limiting factors: Natural barriers (like land, mountains, ocean) that limit where populations can live.
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The end Loris is an arboreal animal (which lives on trees), slow-moving and nocturnal. Found in South East Asian countries. They use hands and legs to move from one tree to another tree. They are insectivorous but also feed on vegetables.
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