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Chapter 2 Ecosystems
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Ecosystems: What are they? The biotic and abiotic factors in a specified area that interact with each other. Plants and animals’ interaction with their abiotic environment –Organisms try to reduce the effects of factors by adapting: waxy coats, pine needles, cactus spines
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abioticbiotic Radiation Space Rainfall Temperature Elevation Humidity Wind Landform pH Salinity Food Immigration Emigration Natality Mortality Predation Parasitism Scavenging Competition
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Structure of Ecosystems Feeding relationships Non-feeding relationships Limiting factors
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Feeding relationships: Trophic Categories Producers create organic molecules by capturing light energy and converting into food energy Consumers feed on producers and without such would not exist Primary consumers (herbivores): Secondary consumers (carnivores): Omnivores: Detritus feeders and decomposers Detritus feeders can be primary or secondary Decomposers are primary detritus feeders
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Trophic relationships Food chains are feeding pathways such as predator-prey and parasite-hostFood chains Food webs: are complex diagrams of feeding relationshipsFood webs Trophic levels exist:Trophic levels –All producers are on the first level –All primary consumers are on the second level –All carnivores (secondary consumers) are on the third level
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Biomass pyramid All organic matter is biomass All biomass can be related to the producers About 10% of energy from one level moves to the next:% of energy –Because so little energy is transferred, it is necessary that most organisms are on the first level – limitations on this transferral create the pyramid –If organisms eat high on the pyramid, then fewer organisms can be supported.
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Non-feeding Relationships Mutualism Competition –Reduction can be achieved by habitat and niche formation –If niches overlap, the competition increases
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Limiting Factors Availability of factors affect the survival of an organism such as temperature, light, oxygen, CO2, and precipitation ↓ Law of Limiting Factors: quantities of any single factor above or below optimum levels will limit growth, reproduction, and survival
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Global Biomes Climate –temperature and pecipitation determine biomes biomes Microclimate and abiotic factors: -light intensity, soil types, topography Biotic factors: organisms’ presence affecting another (shade, chemicals, presence of producers)
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World Distribution of Biomes
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Implications for Humans 3 revolutions: Neolithic: –Special skills –Settlements –Agriculture Industrial: creation of modern world Energized by fossil fuels More concentrated waste Greater increase in human population Environmental: Need to create sustainable human systems Need to reduce concentrated waste and use waste as a resource
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