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Published byMae Armstrong Modified over 9 years ago
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A love, hate thing…
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Every organism in an ecosystem has a role or job to carry out… That job and how it uses the conditions around it is called a niche Examples include: an organism’s place in the food web; producer, consumer, decomposer. How it interacts with other living things (biotic factors) Where and how it lives out its life Resources (abiotic factors) that affect it.
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Competition Predation: predator and prey Symbiosis Mutualism Commensalism Parasitism
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Competition exists between members of the same species and between species. What are organisms competing for? Resources: food, water, living space, etc.
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Contrary to common thought… An organism won’t eat all the prey. What would happen to the predator
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Sym; together Biosis: living Symbiosis is defined as a “relationship when two organisms live closely (in or on) together. Three types
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I’ll scratch your back if you scratch mine…
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When one member in the relationship is benefited and the other…well no harm, nor help
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One member is helped by the relationship and the other is harmed.
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Orderly, natural changes and species replacements that take place in the communities of an ecosystem. Often follows a predictable, orderly pattern. Two types: Primary and Secondary
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Step 1 - Bare rock (0-1 years) Lichens grow on the bare rock (a pioneer species). As they die, the decaying lichens form soil so moss can grow. http://botit.botany.wisc.edu/images/veg/
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Step 2 - Grassland (2-4 years) Grasses and other small plants grow; out-competing the mosses for sunlight. http://botit.botany.wisc.edu/images/veg/
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Step 3 - Transitional or shrub (5-20 years) Small shrubs such as dogwood and sumac begin to dominate.
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Step 4 - Coniferous Forest (20-100 years) Pines and fir trees begin to shade out the smaller shrubs http://botit.botany.wisc.edu/images/veg/
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Pine forest
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Step 5 - Deciduous Forest (100-200 years) Large, slow-growing trees such as oak, maple and hickory replace the pines…if the abiotic factors “allow” it to happen.
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Succession that occurs after a community is disrupted by natural disasters or human activity. Examples = fire, flood… *Occurs in a shorter amount of time because soil and sometimes seeds present.
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Yellowstone National Park (after a 1988 forest fire)
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Southern WI = Prairie Baraboo = deciduous forests Northern Wa = temperate rainforest in Olympics http://botit.botany.wisc.edu/images/veg/
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