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Option G: Conservation Ecology G1 Community Ecology (pg 328-338)

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Presentation on theme: "Option G: Conservation Ecology G1 Community Ecology (pg 328-338)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Option G: Conservation Ecology G1 Community Ecology (pg 328-338)

2 Species – any group of organisms that can mate, creating a viable offspring Population – a group of a specific species living in specific ecosystem Community – All populations in a given ecosystem at a given time.

3 Factors that affect the distribution of plant species in an ecosystem include: pH, temperature, water, light, salinity, and available mineral nutrients,.

4 Biomass is the combined weight of the biological material from living, or recently living organisms. A highly productive ecosystem will produce a lot of biomass. How to calculate biomass: Pg 329

5 Factors affect the distribution of animal species in an ecosystem include: temperature, water, breeding sites, food supply, available territory.

6 One way to see how different factors affect species population size is through quadrat sampling. Pg 328 Inquiry box

7 Mark-Recapture Sampling

8 Every organism has specific biological characteristic that affect the way it will interact with the abiotic and biotic resources in its environment. This causes the organism to fit into a specific niche. Fundamental niche – the set of resources individuals in a population could use under ideal conditions Realized Niche – The set of resources an individual in a population uses under actual environmental conditions

9 Competitive Exclusion

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11 Competition over resources can happen between different species or between members of the same species. The population size of the weaker species could decline, one species could modify its behaviour to use different resources, or one population could migrate.

12 Predation – where one species preys on another Predator prey cycles often follow a sinusoidal curve, where both populations have similar fluctuations, but one population lags behind the other.

13 Mutualism – a relationship where both organisms benefit (+/+ relationship) Ex: Oxbirds pick parasites off of the skin of the impala Ex: bacterial living in our stomachs and large intestines

14 Parasitism – a relationship where one species benefits and the other is harmed, but not usually killed Herbivory – primary consumers who live off of plants.

15 Disruption of Community Equilibrium often happens through natural disasters and introduction of exotic species. Ex: European Rabbit introduced to Australia in 1859


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