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Chapter 2 Ecosystems: What They Are Copyright © 2008 Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc.
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2.1 - Ecosystems: What Are They? Ecosystems: A grouping of plants, animals, and microbes occupying an explicit unit of space and interacting with each other and their environment. Ecotone: Transitional region between different ecosystems.
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Ecotones on Land Shares many of the species and characteristics of both ecosystems May also include unique conditions that support distinctive plant and animal species Ex. edge of a forest, marshland
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Terrestrial-to-Aquatic-System Ecotone
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How Ecosystems Are Formed Abiotics Plants Animals (moisture and temperature ) (+ moisture = forest) (temperature = forest type) (lynx or bobcat) predict
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Ecosystem Types in the United States Coasts and oceans Farmlands Forests Fresh waters Grasslands and shrub lands Urban and suburban areas
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Ecosystems: A Description Biotic (communities): grouping or assemblage of plants, animals, and microbes. Species: different kinds of plants, animals, and microbes in the community. Populations: number of individuals that make up the interbreeding, reproducing group.
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How Habitat and Animal Diversity Are Related Habitat Diversity Animal Diversity Diversity = number of different species
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2.2 - The Structure of Ecosystems Autotrophs are the basis for ecosystems.
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Inorganic vs. Organic *Some autotrophs can use energy in inorganic chemicals to form organic matter from CO 2 and water = chemosynthesis. Ex. some bacteria
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Consumers = Heterotrophs Primary consumers = herbivores = rabbit: eat plant material Secondary consumers = carnivores = predators = coyotes: prey are herbivores and other animals.
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Consumers = Heterotrophs Parasites = predator = either plant or animal: prey are plants or animals.
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Detritus Food Web *decomposers are primary detritus feeders
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Trophic Categories
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Trophic Relationships: Food Chain Third-order Consumer (C 3 ) Secondary Consumer (C 2 ) Primary Consumer (C 1 ) Producer (P)
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Trophic Relationships Among Producers and Consumers
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Trophic Level Energy Flow Producer 10,000 Kcal Third-order Consumer Secondary Consumer Primary Consumer - 100x - 10x 100 Kcal 10 Kcal 1Kcal
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Biomass Pyramid
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Trophic Levels: Pyramid of Biomass or Pyramid of Energy 1 2 3 4 5 Which level is occupied by: producers? primary consumers? secondary consumers? third-order consumers?
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Symbiotic Relationships + And + = Mutualism. Both species benefit by the interaction between the two species. Honey bee and flower + And 0 = Commensalism. One species benefits from the interaction and the other is unaffected. Remora fish and shark
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Symbiotic Relationships + And - = One species benefits from the interaction and the other is adversely affected. Examples are predation, parasitism, and disease. - And - = Competition. Both species are adversely affected by the interaction.
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Resource Partitioning: Reducing Competition *this allows organisms to avoid competition and all benefit.
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Abiotic Factors Law of Limiting Factors: “Every species (both plant and animal) has an optimum range, zones of stress, and limits of tolerance with respect to every biotic factor.”
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Survival Curves Illustrate Law of Limiting Factors
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Application of the Law of Limiting Factors Compare the “tolerance” differences for a trout and a catfish using water: temperature (cold or warm). oxygen concentration (high or low). salinity (high or low).
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Oxygen Tolerance Curves for Two Different Fish Species What do you think the temperature tolerance curves for each fish species would look like?
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2.3 - Climate and Major Biomes
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Identify Biomes A to E Based on Temperature and Precipitation Levels: Answers Next Slide Precipitation Temperature Low High A B C D E
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Answers to Previous Slide A has high temperature and low moisture = hot desert B has low temperature and low moisture = cold desert (tundra with permafrost) C has medium temperatures and moisture = grassland D has high temperature and moisture = rain forest E has low temperature and high precipitation = arctic poles
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Effects of Latitude and Altitude
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Microclimates
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2.4 - The Human Presence Three revolutions Neolithic Industrial Environmental Red Sky in the Morning by James Gustave The Inconvenient Truth by Al Gore
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How Humans Modify Their Physical Environments to Meet Their Needs Produce abundant food - agriculture Control water flow rate and direction - irrigation Overcome predation and disease Construct our own ecosystems Overcome competition with other species
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