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Ecology – Organisms & Their Environment Dr. Childs Science Computer Lab Spring, 2005
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Ecology Ecology is the interaction of living organisms and their environment This lesson will emphasize: Relationships between organisms Food webs
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Biotic & Abiotic Factors Biotic Factors - Living organisms Abiotic Factors– Nonliving
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Biotic Factors Plants & Animals
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Abiotic Factors Soil Sunlight Water Climate Rocks Air
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Aquatic Ecosystem Population Community Ecosystem Terrestrial Ecosystem Organism Relationships Marine Ecosystem
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Organism - A single living individual
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Population - -A group of organisms of the same species - -Live in same area - - Interact & interbreed
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Community - -Populations of different species of plants and animals that live together and interact with each other
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Ecosystem - -A community with biotic and abiotic factors. - -terrestrial land - -aquatic fresh water - -marine salt water
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Ecosystem
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Terrestrial Ecosystem - -Terrestrial ecosystem - -Examples: - - forest - desert - - field - jungle - - large dead tree
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Aquatic Ecosystem - -Aquatic ecosystem - -Examples: - - lake - stream - - river
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Marine Ecosystem - -Marine ecosystem - -Examples: - - ocean - estuary - tidepools
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Community Interrelationships - -Symbiosis: - -Mutualism - -Commensalism - -Parasitism - -Predation
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Mutualism - -Both organisms benefit Clownfish & anemone Insects and flowers Lichen – algae & fungi Termite protozoa – digests cellulose
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Commensalism - -One organism benefits, other not harmed Remora fish on turtle Barnacles on mussel Cattle egrets with cows Spanish moss on oak
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Parasitism - -One organism benefits, other harmed, but not killed Tapeworm in intestine Ticks on dog Fungus on human Malaria in human blood
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Predation - -One organism benefits (predator), other is killed (prey)
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Food Chains Food chains show how animals get their food. They also show how energy is gained and lost in an ecosystem.
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Autotrophs Produce own carbon compounds (sugars) Energy from sunlight - photosynthesis Includes algae and plants
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Heterotrophs Carbon compounds from other organisms Fungi (include decomposers) Protozoa and animals
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Herbivores Herbivores are animals that eat only plants Flat grinding molars
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Carnivores Carnivores are animals that eat other animals - - Meat-eaters
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Carnivores Pointed canines for grasping and tearing
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Omnivores Omnivores are animals that eat both plants and animals
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Omnivores Both sharp canines & grinding molars
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And our favorite Pizza-vores
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Food Chains Sunlight Producer Secondary consumer Primary consumer Scavenger Decomposer
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Sunlight Sunlight is the source of energy in an ecosystem.
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Producers Producers: - are green plants - capture energy from the sun - convert to sugars by photosynthesis - fix CO 2 into sugars - release oxygen (O 2 ) - are autotrophs
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Producers Algae Microscopic plankton
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Primary Consumers / Herbivores Primary consumers eat producers / plants - herbivores - heterotrophs - among the smallest and largest creatures
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Primary Consumers / Herbivores
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Secondary Consumers Secondary consumers eat primary consumers.
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Secondary Consumers
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Scavengers Scavengers: - Eat dead and rotting meat Vulture Hyena
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Decomposers Decomposers: Digest and break down dead bodies into simple molecules. Recycle nutrients. - Includes: fungi insects bacteria worms
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Decomposers
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Food Webs - -The interactions among animals for food is never as simple as food chains. For example, bears may eat plants or small animal. Eagles may eat fish or small mammals. - -These interactions are called a “food web”.
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Food Webs - Terrestrial
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Food Webs - Marine
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Trophic Levels - - Levels is a food chain may be defined in terms as energy as “trophic levels”. - -Energy is lost through each trophic level. This energy is used to maintain the organism or even lost as heat.
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Trophic Levels - -Organisms are the same trophic level get their energy from the same sources. - -There are rarely more than 4 or 5 trophic levels because of the amount of energy lost.
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Trophic Levels Sunlight 1 st trophic Level 2nd trophic Level 3 rd trophic Level 4th trophic Level Note: grasshopper and rabbit are at the same trophic level
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Energy Pyramids Energy pyramids represent the amount of total energy in a trophic level. May be represented as “calories” or “joules” Producers are at the bottom and each trophic level in on top.
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Energy Pyramids - -The size of each level represents the biomass – the sum of the mass of all the organisms at that level. - -Be aware that sometimes the producer levels are smaller than the consumers because the producer may reproduce much faster. - - There may be only about 10% of energy from one level to the next.
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Energy Pyramid
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