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Welcome to: Foundations of Ecology Biology 356 J. Ruesink Lecture 1 Introduction/ Adaptation.

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Presentation on theme: "Welcome to: Foundations of Ecology Biology 356 J. Ruesink Lecture 1 Introduction/ Adaptation."— Presentation transcript:

1 Welcome to: Foundations of Ecology Biology 356 J. Ruesink Lecture 1 Introduction/ Adaptation

2 What do ecologists do? How many of you are familiar with the following jobs: –Computer programmer –Marketing department –Artist –Biotechnologist Ecologist

3 What does this course cover? Basic principles of ecology Methods that ecologists use –Experiments, models, observations Graphical presentation of ecological data Interpretation of ecological data Evaluation of primary literature

4 What does this course cover? 3 Exams (20% each) –Feb 3, Feb 24, Mar 16 4 In-class exercises (5% each) 2 Literature reviews (5% each) Independent write-up of scientific study (estimating crow population size) (10%)

5 What does this course cover? Week 1, 2 Week 3, 4 Week 5-7 Week 9, 10 Week 2 Landscapes: Week 8 Fig 1.1

6 Syllabus

7 Who is my TA? Last names A-L: Shallin Busch Last names M-Z: Jon Moore

8 Different groups of organisms play different ecological roles Review material from Biology 180 –Eukaryotes or Prokaryotes –Autotrophs or Heterotrophs Plants Animals Fungi Protists Bacteria

9 Different groups of organisms play different ecological roles Review material from Biology 180 –Eukaryotes or Prokaryotes –Autotrophs or Heterotrophs Plants Animals Fungi Protists Bacteria

10 Different groups of organisms play different ecological roles Review material from Biology 180 –Eukaryotes or Prokaryotes –Autotrophs or Heterotrophs Plants Animals Fungi Protists Bacteria

11 Different groups of organisms play different ecological roles Review material from Biology 180 –Eukaryotes or Prokaryotes –Autotrophs or Heterotrophs Plants Animals Fungi Protists Bacteria

12 Different groups of organisms play different ecological roles Review material from Biology 180 –Eukaryotes or Prokaryotes –Autotrophs or Heterotrophs Plants Animals Fungi Protists Bacteria

13 Different groups of organisms play different ecological roles Review material from Biology 180 –Eukaryotes or Prokaryotes –Autotrophs or Heterotrophs Plants Animals Fungi Protists Bacteria

14 Different groups of organisms play different ecological roles Fig 1.5

15 Different groups of organisms play different ecological roles Inorganic carbon Photoautotrophs Heterotrophs (Decomposers) Dead organic matter Inorganic & organic nutrients SUN

16 Different groups of organisms play different ecological roles Inorganic carbon Photoautotrophs Heterotrophs (Decomposers) Dead organic matter Inorganic & organic nutrients SUN

17 Different groups of organisms play different ecological roles Inorganic carbon Photoautotrophs Heterotrophs (Decomposers) Dead organic matter Inorganic nutrients SUN Plants, Protists Fungi, Bacteria

18 Different groups of organisms play different ecological roles Inorganic carbon Photoautotrophs Heterotrophs (Decomposers) Dead organic matter Inorganic nutrients SUN Heterotrophs (Consumers) Heterotrophs (Consumers) Animals, some protists

19 Ecological principles Ecological systems are physical entities Ecological systems exist in dynamic steady states Maintenance of living systems requires expenditure of energy (Boundary is essential) Ecological systems undergo evolutionary change

20 Maintenance of living systems requires expenditure of energy (Boundary is essential) Fig 3.12

21 Maintenance of living systems requires expenditure of energy (Boundary is essential) Homeostasis: organism’s ability to maintain a constant internal environment despite variation in the environment

22 Ecological systems undergo evolutionary change See Ch. 1 p. 15: Natural selection requires heritable variation and differential survival and reproduction Also see Ch. 9 P. 182-3

23 Diverse life forms are a product of evolution Habitats vary. No single species can exist in all habitats. (Tradeoffs exist.) An organism’s niche represents the ranges of conditions that it tolerates and the ways of life it pursues.

24 Habitats vary.

25 An organism’s niche represents the ranges of conditions that it tolerates and the ways of life it pursues.

26 Adaptation Attributes of structure or function that suit an organism to the conditions of its environment –May be adaptations to physical characteristics of the environment –Or to biological characteristics of the environment

27 Adaptation

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30 Physical characteristics of the environment that affect plants Light Nutrients Water Temperature Carbon dioxide

31 Physical characteristics of the environment that affect plants Light Nutrients Water Temperature Carbon dioxide As you read chapter 3, you should write down examples of plant adaptations to (extremes of) each of these environmental conditions

32 Nutrients –Distribution of nutrients, as well as total amount, influences plant growth

33 Nutrients –Plants have adapted to use “pockets” of nutrients by locally increasing root density

34 Physical characteristics of the environment that affect animals Temperature Water Salt balance Oxygen (Food supply = biological)

35 Temperature –Endotherms use internal metabolic processes to adjust body temperature –Ectotherms cannot control temperature internally, only through behavior

36 Temperature –Cold adaptations Large body size (small surface to volume ratio) Storage of food Hibernation/ torpor

37 Ecological principle: Activity space Fig 9.4

38 What do ecologists do? Measure characteristics of the environment Count organisms Observe their responses to and affects on their environment

39 Today’s in-class exercise Form a group of 4 people. Hand in separate worksheets. Do a mark-recapture study to estimate the number of individuals in a population of beans. Vary the number of beans marked. Vary the number of beans sampled.


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