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CH. 24.3.  Living organisms need a constant supply of energy.  Producers are organisms that use an outside energy source like the Sun to make energy-

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Presentation on theme: "CH. 24.3.  Living organisms need a constant supply of energy.  Producers are organisms that use an outside energy source like the Sun to make energy-"— Presentation transcript:

1 CH. 24.3

2  Living organisms need a constant supply of energy.  Producers are organisms that use an outside energy source like the Sun to make energy- rich molecules.  Plants are our primary (main) producers  Green plants, as well as, microscopic organisms like euglena and plantlike organisms called algae are examples of producers

3  Organisms that cannot make their own energy-rich molecules are called consumers.  Consumers obtain energy by eating other organisms.  Herbivores eat only plants. They include rabbits, deer, and other plant eaters.  Carnivores are animals that eat other animals. Frogs and spiders are carnivores that eat insects.

4  Omnivores (including pigs and humans) eat mostly plants and animals.  Decomposers (including fungi, bacteria, and earthworms) consume wastes and dead organisms.  Scavengers- eat only dead animals  Competition- fighting for food and resources in a community/ecosystem

5  Not all relationships among organisms involve food. Many organisms live together and share resources in other ways.  Any close relationship between species is called symbiosis.  Mutualism is a relationship in which both species benefit.  An example of mutualism is when alga lives within the tissue of a fungus. Alga will supply energy to fungus and the fungus will provide a protected space in which the alga can live.

6  Commensalism one organism benefits and the other is not affected.  An example of commensalism is when a clown fish swims inside of a sea anemone’s poisonous tentacles without begin harmed.  Parasitism is when one organism benefits but the other is harmed.  An example of parasitism is when a roundworm attaches itself to the inside of a puppy’s intestine and feeds on nutrients in the puppy’s blood.

7  A niche refers to how an organism survives, how it obtains food and shelter, how it finds a mate and cares for its young, and how it avoids danger.  Special adaptations that improve survival are often part of an organism’s niche. For example, milkweed plants contain a poison that prevents many insects from feeding on them  Individual organisms often cooperate in ways that improve survival. A white-tailed deer that detects the presence of wolves will alert the other deer in the herd.

8  1. All consumers either eat producers or consume animals that rely on producers for their food.  2. grass --- rabbit----coyote  4. A habitat is the place an organism lives.  Their niche is how they perform all tasks needed to survive.


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