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Published byWinifred Hunter Modified over 9 years ago
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Ecology Notes
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Ecology: The study of the interactions among organisms and their environment.
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Environment: Abiotic Factors: non-living factors (rocks, air, sun, water) Biotic Factors: Living factors (plants, animals)
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Ecological Organization: Species: one type of living thing Population: a group of a species Community: all the populations in an area Ecosystem: the community and the physical environment Biosphere: the earth
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Autotrophs Organisms that make their own food (plants)
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Heterotrophs: Organisms that must eat to get energy (animals) Herbivores: eat plants Carnivores: eat animals Omnivores: eat both plants and animals Scavengers: eat dead animals Decomposers: eat dead material/ recycles nutrients
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Predator/ Prey Relationship Predator: does the eating Prey: gets eaten
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Environmental Limits on Population Size Habitat: Where an organism lives
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Niche: Role or job of a species. (reduces competition)
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Competition: competing for limited resources (food, water, space)
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Growth curve for unlimited or exponential growth.
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Finite resources: Limited resources. Limiting factors: any factor that limits population growth. (lack of food, water, space…)
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Carrying capacity: The maximum number of species a habitat can support.
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Organism relationships Symbiosis: organisms that live and depend on another organism to live. Commensalism: One benefits, one is neutral Mutualism: Both benefit Parasitism: One benefits, one is harmed.
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Energy Flow Energy flow: All energy comes from the sun. Plants turn it into food, animals eat plants, animals eat animals… Only about 10% of energy gets passed on to the next organism. 90% gets used up by movement, growth, heat, etc.
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Food Chain: a series of organisms through which food energy is transferred.
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Food Web: Several interacting food chains. Producers: = autotrophs = plants Consumers: = heterotrophs = eat the food Decomposers: break down food
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Energy Pyramid: a diagram showing the amount of energy at the different trophic levels
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Biomass Pyramid: diagram showing the amount of mass at each trophic level
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Material Cycles Carbon Cycle (carbon, hydrogen, oxygen)
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Photosynthesis: light + CO 2 + H 2 O glucose + O 2 Respiration: glucose + O 2 energy + CO 2 + H 2 O
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Water cycle
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Nitrogen Cycle: Nitrogen is in proteins N 2 = not useable NO 3, NH 3 = useable by plants and animals
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Ecological Succesion: The process by which an existing community is slowly replaced by another community. Primary Succession: starts with rocks Secondary Succession: after a disaster, starts with dirt.
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Human Impact Renewable resources: Trees, food Non-renewable resources: Coal, oil, natural gas, metals
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Air Pollution From: factories, cars Problems: health problems, acid rain
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Water Pollution From: garbage, waste from factories, increase water temperature Problems: chemicals are toxic to animals, heat decreases the amount of oxygen in the water. Nitrates: from sewage… too much algae growth reduces oxygen levels
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Biodiversity Creates a more stable ecosystem. More food options for organisms More potential cures for diseases
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Loss of Habitats Natural disasters Roads, buildings, pollution
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Biological Magnification Poison becomes more concentrated in animals as you go higher in the food chain.
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Exotic Species Foreign plants and animals Take food, nests, and other resources from native plants and animals. Have no predators so population levels are uncontrolled.
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Acid Rain Caused by Air Pollution Acidic water kills vulnerable organisms such as fish eggs.
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Greenhouse Effect vs. Global Warming Greenhouse effect = good Our atmosphere traps heat so we don’t freeze at night Global warming = bad Increased amounts of greenhouse gasses (CO 2, H 2 O, CH 4 ) trap more heat and increase the global temp.
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Ozone Layer Ozone = O 3 Located in upper atmosphere Blocks ultraviolet rays which cause cancer CFC’s break down ozone.
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