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Published byChristian Shelton Modified over 9 years ago
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS
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COMMUNITY-LEVEL ECOLOGY – COMMUNITY DEF ?? DEFINING CHARACTERISTICS OF A COMMUNITY – DIVERSITY (BIO-DIVERSITY) – PREVALENT FORMS OF VEGETATION – RESPONSE TO DISTURBANCES – TROPHIC STRUCTURE
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS BIODIVERSITY – THE VARIETY OF DIFFERENT OF DIFFERENT KINDS OF ORGANISMS THAT MAKE UP A COMMUNITY – 2 COMPONENTS SPECIES RICHNESS RELATIVE ABUNDANCE
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS TROPHIC STRUCTURE – THE FEEDING RELATIONSHIPS AMONG THE VARIOUS SPECIES MAKING UP THE COMMUNITY
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS COMPETITION MAY OCCUR WHEN A SHARED RESOURCE IS LIMITED – INTERSPECIFIC COMPETITION TWO DIFFERENT SPECIES COMPETING FOR THE SAME RESOURCE – COMPETITIVE EXCLUSION PRINCIPLE TWO SPECIES, SO SIMILAR, THAT THEY COMPETE FOR THE SAME LIMITING RESOURCES CANNOT CO-EXIST IN THE SAME PLACE
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS COMPETITIVE EXCLUSION PRINCIPLE
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS COMPETITIVE EXCLUSION PRINCIPLE LEADS TO THE FORMATION OF NICHES – NICHE A SPECIES’ ROLE IN ITS COMMUNITY; OR THE SUM TOTAL OF ITS USE OF THE BIOTIC AND ABIOTIC RESOURCES OF ITS HABITAT 1 SPECIES PER NICHE RULE!!!!!!!
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS 1 SPECIES PER NICHE RULE LEADS TO RESOURCE PARTITIONING – THE DIFFERENTIATION OF NICHES THAT ENABLES SIMILAR SPECIES TO COEXIST IN A COMMUNITY
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS PREDATION LEADS TO DIVERSE ADAPTATIONS IN BOTH PREDATOR AND PREY – PREDATION DEF – PREDATOR DEF – PREY DEF – PARASITISM A PARASITE LIVES ON, OR IN, ITS HOST AND OBTAINS ITS NUTRITION FROM THE HOST; MAY BE CONSIDERED A FORM OF PREDATION – CO-EVOLUTION A SERIES OF RECIPROCAL ADAPTATIONS IN TWO SPECIES
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS PREDATION CAN LEAD TO UNUSUAL RELATIONSHIPS – MIMICRY ONE SPECIES COMES TO LOOK LIKE ANOTHER, UNRELATED, SPECIES TWO MAJOR FORMS – BATESIAN MIMICRY VS MULLERIAN MIMICRY
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS BATESIAN MIMICRYMULLERIAN MIMICRY
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS PREDATION HELPS MAINTAIN DIVERSITY IN COMMUNITIES – KEYSTONE SPECIES A SPECIES THAT EXERTS A STRONG CONTROL ON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE BECAUSE OF ITS ECOLOGICAL ROLE, OR NICHE
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS PREDATION HELPS MAINTAIN DIVERSITY IN COMMUNITIES KEYSTONE SPECIES A SPECIES THAT EXERTS A STRONG CONTROL ON COMMUNITY STRUCTURE BECAUSE OF ITS ECOLOGICAL ROLE, OR NICHE
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS SYMBIOTIC RELATIONSHIPS HELP STRUCTURE COMMUNITIES SYMBIOTIC RELATIONSHIPS – AN INTERACTION BETWEEN TWO OR MORE SPECIES THAT LIVE TOGETHER IN DIRECT CONTACT
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS SYMBIOTIC RELATIONSHIPS – 3 MAJOR TYPES PARASITISM COMMENSALISM MUTUALISM
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS
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DISTURBANCE IS A PROMINENT FEATURE OF MOST COMMUNITIES – DISTURBANCE EVENTS SUCH AS STORMS, FIRE, FLOODS, DROUGHTS, OVERGRAZING, OR HUMAN ACTIVITIES THAT DAMAGE BIOLOGICAL COMMUNITIES, REMOVE ORGANISMS FROM THEM, AND ALTER THE AVAILABILITY OF RESOURCES
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS DISTURBANCES CAN LEAD TO ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION – ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION TRANSITION IN A SPECIES COMPOSITION IN A COMMUNITY
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION – TWO LEVELS PRIMARY SUCCESSION – A COMMUNITY ARISES IN A VIRTUALLY LIFELESS ARE WITH NO SOIL
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION – TWO LEVELS SECONDARY SUCCESSION – WHEN A DISTURBANCE HAS DESTROYED EXISITING COMMUNITY BUT LEFT THE SOIL INTACT
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION – EVENTUALLY RESULTS IN A CLIMAX COMMUNITY A PERMANENT FINAL STAGE IN SUCCESSION; MATURE, STABLE COMMUNITIES THAT WILL PERSIST INDEFINITELY
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS STANDARD ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION EXAMPLES INCLUDE
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS NOT ALL DISTURBANCES ARE NECESSARILY A BAD THING
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS ECOSYSTEM-LEVEL ECOLOGY – ECOSYSTEM A BIOTIC COMMUNITY AND THE ABIOTIC ENVIRONMENT WITH WHICH IT INTERACTS
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS ENERGY FLOW AND CHEMICAL CYCLING ARE THE TWO FUNDAMENTAL PROCESSES IN ECOSYSTEMS – ENERGY FLOW THE PASSAGE OF ENERGY THROUGH THE COMPONENTS OF THE ECOSYSTEM – CHEMICAL CYCLING THE CIRCULAR MOVEMENT OF MATERIALS WITHIN THE ECOSYSTEM – **ENERGY FLOWS IN AND OUT, WHEREAS CHEMICALS ARE RECYCLED
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS TROPHIC STRUCTURE IS A KEY FACTOR IN ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS – TROPHIC STRUCTURE A PATTERN OF FEEDING RELATIONSHIPS – FOOD CHAIN THE SEQUENCE OF FOOD TRANSFER FROM TROPHIC LEVEL TO TROPHIC LEVEL
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS TROPHIC STRUCTURE – PRODUCERS – PRIMARY CONSUMERS – SECONDARY CONSUMERS – TERTIARY/QUATERNARY CONSUMERS – DETRITIVORES – SCAVENGERS VS DECOMPOSERS
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS FOOD CHAINS INTERCONNENT, FORMING FOOD WEBS – A NETWORK OF INTERCONNECTING FOOD CHAINS
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS ENERGY SUPPLY LIMITS THE LENGTH OF FOOD CHAINS – BIOMASS THE AMOUNT, OR MASS, OF LIVING ORGANIC MATERIAL IN AN ECOSYSTEM – WHY ARE THERE SO FEWER TERTIARY CONSUMERS??
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS ENERGY SUPPLY LIMITS THE LENGTH OF FOOD CHAINS – PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY THE AMOUNT OF SOLAR ENERGY CONVERTED TO CHEMICAL ENERGY (ORGANIC COMPOUNDS) BY AN ECOSYSTEMS AUTOTROPHS DURING A GIVEN TIME PERIOD
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS ENERGY SUPPLY LIMITS THE LENGTH OF FOOD CHAINS – RULE OF 10 ONLY 10% OF ENERGY IS PASSED TO NEXT TROPHIC LEVEL – PRODUCTION PYRAMID MEAT IS A LUXURY!
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS CHEMICALS ARE RECYCLED BETWEEN ORGANIC MATTER AND ABIOTIC RESERVOIRS – THE PART OF THE ECOSYSTEM WHERE A CHEMICAL ACCUMULATES OR IS STOCKPILED OUTSIDE OF LIVING ORGANISMS
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS
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EUTROPHICATION – ADDING NUTRIENTS IN PONDS AND LAKES CAUSES PHOTOSYNTHETIC ORGANISMS TO RAPIDLY MULTIPLY
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COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS HUMANS CAUSE A LOT OF PROBLEMS!! WHAT CAN WE DO TO ALLEVIATE THESE PROBLEMS? WELL, WE NEED TO SKIP A CHAPTER TO FIND OUT… BUT DON’T WORRY, WE’LL COME BACK TO IT
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