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Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
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I. Organisms and their environments Main Idea: The interactions of biotic & abiotic factors in a community or ecosystem form a tight web
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A. What is Ecology? 1. The scientific study of interactions among organisms and their environment. *Ecology comes from the greek word oikos meaning house and ology-to study*
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2. Reveals interdependence 3. Scientist who study it = Ecologist
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B. Aspects of Ecological Study
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1. -the portion of earth that supports life -scientist study the diversity of organisms & factors that effect them
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2. Abiotic Factors a. air currents b. temperature c. moisture d. light e. soil f. rainfall g. available nutrients
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3. Biotic Factors a. plants b. animals c. bacteria d. fungi e. protists
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C. Levels of Organization 1. Ecologist study interactions among organisms at several different levels. Know list on page 36
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2. Levels include: a. Organism- one individual living thing
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b. Population- group of one species that interbreed and live in the same place.
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c. Biological Community- collection of interacting populations that occupy the same geographic area
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d. Ecosystems- interactions among populations in a community and the physical surroundings. Mobile, AL
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D. Organisms in Ecosystems
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1. Habitat-place an organism lives.
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2.Niche-role and position a species has in its environment.
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3. Living Relationships a. Symbiosis- Living together
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b. Symbiotic relationships include: (1) Commensalism-one species benefits and the other species is unaffected.
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(2) Mutualism- both species benefit. Termites and intestinal flagellates: Sea anemone and the clown fish
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(3)Parasitism- one organism derives benefit at the expense of another.
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II. Flow of energy in an Ecosystem
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Main Idea: Autotrophs capture energy, making it available for all members of a food web
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A. How organisms obtain energy 1. Autotrophs-make their own nutrients from an energy source.
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2. Heterotrophs- cannot make their own energy-they must feed on other organisms.
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3. Heterotrophs include: a. herbivores-plant eaters
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b. carnivores-kill and eat meat
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c.Scavengers-eat already dead animals (don’t kill)
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d. Omnivores- eat meat and plants
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e.Decomposers- breakdown complex molecules. (detrivores)
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B.Models of Energy Flow
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1. Food Chain a. Shows how matter and energy move through an ecosystem. b. Simple-shows one possible route. c. Algae fish heron d. Consist of 3-5 steps.
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2. Trophic Levels a. Trophic levels = feeding step b. Feeding = energy transfer
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3. Food Webs A model representing the many interconnected food chains and pathways in which energy can flow.
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4. Ecological Pyramids a. Energy Pyramid- shows how energy flows through an ecosystem.
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b. Numbers pyramid * number of individuals at each level decreases b/c there is less energy to support them
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c. Biomass Pyramid Expresses weight of living material at each trophic level
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III. Cycles in the Biosphere Biogeochemical Cycles- exchange of matter through the biosphere
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- Matter, in the form of nutrients moves through the organisms at each trophic level. - Matter cannot be replenished by sunlight. - Matter must be constantly recycled.
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-Nutrient Cycles include:
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A. Water Cycle
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B. Carbon/Oxygen Cycle
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c.Nitrogen Cycle
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d. Phosphorus Cycle
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