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Ecology Review
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What Is Life? 8 Life Characteristics Made of one or more CELLS (cell theory) Displays organization (atoms organism) Metabolism (Acquire Materials and Energy) Maintains homeostasis Grows & Develops Respond to Stimuli Reproduce Adaptations evolve over time
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Ecology The study of the interaction of living things with each other physical environment From Greek “oikos” – a place to live “logos” - study
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Energy pyramid On average only 10% of energy at one trophic level is available to the next
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Biotic factors of an ecosystem Population All the members of the same species that inhabit a particular area Community All of the members of all species that inhabit a particular area Ecosystem All Biotic and abiotic factors
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Abiotic Factors (nonliving components) ____________ Ex. Biotic Factors (living components) _______________ Ex.
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Biosphere All of Earth’s ecosystems Lithosphere - land Hydrosphere - water Atmosphere - air
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Biome Characteristics Composed of large regions. Certain plant & animal species. Have specific climate with similar plants and animal adaptations.
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Categories of Biomes Tundra Taiga Grasslands Deserts Deciduous Forests Tropical Rainforests Other Biomes Chaparral Savanna Coniferous Forest
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Biomes of the world
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Decomposers Soil nutrients Simple Food chain
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Categories of Biotic Organisms Producer Consumer autotrophs -plants in most ecosystems -phytoplankton (protists, bacteria) -chemosynthesis or photosynthesis 6CO 2 + 6H 2 O → C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2
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Decomposers saprophytes -external digestion -mostly bacteria and fungi detritivores -feed on partially decomposed matter -e.g. crabs, termites, worms scavengers -e.g. vultures, crows, lobsters
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Consumers heterotrophs -feed on producers or consumers herbivores -plant eaters -primary consumers carnivores -meat eaters -secondary (tertiary) consumers omnivores -eat both plants and animals
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Trophic Levels = all organisms feeding at a particular level (refer to energy pyramid: > 4 levels hard to support)
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Food Web – a summary of the feeding relationships in a community
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Trophic level – position in the food chain –basal (lowest level) –intermediate – act as predators and prey –top predators – have no predators
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Keystone Predator – one that has a dominant effect on community composition –reduce competition among prey species –allow poorer competitors to persist Top predators aren’t always keystone predators –abundance –feeding patterns
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Stability in Food Webs A community is stable if –it doesn’t change much in response to environmental changes, or –it returns to its previous state after a disturbance Early models suggested that larger food webs are unstable
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Current view: more diverse food webs are more stable –more species = weaker interactions on average –species influenced by many weak interactions have more stable populations than species with few strong interactions Field research suggests most interactions in nature are weak.
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Carnivores Herbivores Producers No predators Limited only by food Limited by predation Limited by competition and resources
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