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Levels of ecological organization
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Human Activity that changes Abiotic and Biotic Factors
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Cold Snowy Weather
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Unit 3: Ecology
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What is Ecology? The scientific study of the interactions among organisms and between their environments.
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Where do we fit in? What is our environment? The Biosphere
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What is the organization of Ecological Study?
Individual Population Community Ecosystem Biome Biosphere
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Levels of Organization
Individual- one organism (living) Ex a moose
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Levels of Organization
Population- groups of individuals that belong to the same species and live in the same area. (living-living same species) Ex many moose
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Levels of Organization
Community- groups of different populations (more than one population or different groups of species) Ex many groups of moose beavers, trees, grass (all living)
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Levels of Organization
Ecosystem- all organisms in a particular area along with the nonliving. (living and nonliving) Ex many groups of moose beavers, trees, grass, rocks, water, mountains
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Levels of Organization
Biome- group of ecosystems that have the same climate and similar dominant communities Biomes: tropical rain forest, tropical dry forest, tropical savannah, temperate grassland, desert, temperate woodland and shrubland, temperate forest, northwestern coniferous forest, boreal forest (taiga), tundra, mountains and ice caps
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Levels of Organization
Biosphere- all of the planet where life exists, includes land, water, and, air Life extends 8 km up and 11 km below the surface
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Factors that affect an ecosystem
Biotic – Living or once living Abiotic – Never living
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Biotic Factors Living factors of an ecosystem
All plant and animal life Includes even microscopic organisms
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Abiotic factors Any non-living factor of an ecosystem
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List the abiotic and biotic factors found in:
Ecosystem: School Ecosystem: pond Please provide your own example Ecosystem: Biotic Factors: Abiotic Factors:
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Is it biotic or abiotic? Birth rate? Predator / prey relationship?
Soil? Decomposing matter? Temperature? Wind? Disease?
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List 3 biotic things and 3 biotic things
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-- ecological pyramid drawing-pick one organism to begin
Your pyramid must include : Label all 6 levels Include a drawing for each level And a brief description of each picture/level DUE TOMORROW
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Carrying Capacity The size of the population that an environment can support with its resources This is created by the interaction of many different factors, both biotic & abiotic
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Carrying Capacity Graph
This is the generic carrying capacity graph Each peak represents too many Each trough represents lower than supported
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Inquiry Activity Use the smartboard activity to figure out how carrying capacity is determined
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Limiting Factors Any condition that limits growth of a population
Can be biotic or abiotic Surplus population is reduced by limiting factors
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Habitat & Niche Habitat – where an organism lives in an ecosystem
Niche – The role of an organism in its habitat Think of habitat like the address where an organisms lives and niche as the job that an organism does
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Ecosystem Interactions (Biotic)
When organisms live and interact in a community 3 basic types Competition – organisms fight for limited supplies Predation – one organism hunts and eats another Symbiosis – 2 organisms live closely together (usually one directly impacts the other)
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Competition Organisms fight for survival due to limited resources
Resource - anything used to keep an organism alive Food, water, shelter, etc… Competitive exclusion principle No 2 species can occupy the same niche in the same habitat at the same time
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Interspecific competition
Competition between species 2 or more species compete for the same limited resources Food sources Shelter Water source
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Intraspecific Competition
Competition within a species 2 or more members of a species competes for limited resources Food Water Shelter Mates Social hierarchy
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Critical thinking activity
Think, Pair, Share Do humans engage in interspecific competition? How? Do humans engage in intraspecific competition? How?
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Predation Predator / Prey relationship
Predator – organism that hunts and eats another organism Prey – organism that is hunted and eaten by another organism How is the predator a limiting factor on the prey population? How is the prey population a limiting factor on the predator population?
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Symbiosis 3 main types Mutualism – both species benefit
Commensalism – one benefits, the other is unharmed Parasitism – one benefits, the other is harmed
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Mutualism Lichens Made of a mutualistic relationship between fungus and algae Fungus provides home and some nutrients Algae provides energy through photosynthesis This patch is the lichen
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Commensalism Bluebird holes
Bluebirds use woodpecker holes made in trees after they are done looking for food in them Bluebirds get a free home Woodpeckers are neither helped nor hurt by the bluebirds using their old holes
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Parasitism Tapeworm Tapeworms live in the intestine and absorb the nutrients instead of the host The parasite harms the host by stealing nutrients
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Identify the relationship
Think, Pair, Share Identify the following relationships… 2) 1) 3)
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