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Place in order from smallest to largest:
Biome Biosphere Community Ecosystem Population Species
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Day 1 Objective I can explain the relationship between animals and the biosphere
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The Biosphere
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What is the Biosphere? Combined portions of the planet in which all of life exists, including land, water and atmosphere Extend from 8-km above Earth’s surface to 11-km below the surface of the ocean.
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Levels of Organizations
Species Group of organisms so similar to one another that they can breed and produce fertile offspring Population A group of individuals that belong to the same species and live in the same area
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Community Ecosystem Biome
All the different populations that live together in a defined area Ecosystem Collection of all the organisms that live in a particular place, together with their nonliving environment Biome A group of ecosystems that have the same climate and dominant communities
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Ecosystems Influenced by a combination of biotic and abiotic factors
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Biotic vs. Abiotic Biotic Factors Abiotic Factors
The biological influences on organisms within an ecosystem Ex: birds, trees, mushrooms, and bacteria Abiotic Factors Physical or nonliving factors that shape ecosystems Ex: temperature, precipitation, humidity, wind, nutrient availability, soil type, and sun light
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What is a Biome? Areas that have distinctive climates and organisms
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What are the Major Land Biomes?
Tropical Rain Forest Temperate Forest Taiga Savanna Temperate Grassland Desert Tundra Mountain
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How are Biomes Named? According to their plant life
Plant life determine which organisms live there
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Organisms in Biomes Plants & animals have adapted to specific environments Threatened by human activities
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Water Ecosystems Either Freshwater or Marine Freshwater = no salt
Marine = salt water
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Freshwater Ecosystems
Includes lakes, ponds, rivers, streams and wetlands Distinguished by: Depth of the water How fast the water moves Availability of mineral nutrients, sunlight, and oxygen
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Marine Ecosystem Identified by the presence of salt water
Includes estuaries, coral reefs, oceans and ice caps
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Day 2 Objective I can describe: human interactions with organisms and the interactions with each other
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What is Biodiversity? Term used to indicate the number and types of species on Earth There are now an estimated 1.5 million species of living organisms
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Why is Biodiversity important?
Earth’s greatest natural resource Species of many kinds have provided us with: Food: beef, chicken, salad Industrial Products: paper, rubber Medicines: painkillers, antibiotics, anticancer drugs
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How can humans reduce biodiversity?
Altering habitats Hunting species to extinction Introducing toxic compounds into food webs Introducing foreign species to new environment
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Habitat Alteration When land is developed, natural habitat may be destroyed Habitats supply organisms what they need Habitat destroyed means that organisms will die Ex: Florida Panther
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Introduced Species Invasive Species
Non-native animals that thrive in new territory where they are free of predators, diseases, or resource limitations that may have controlled their population in their native habitat Can cause the extinction of native species Ex: Pythons in Florida
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Extinction Occurs when a species disappears from all or part of its range Caused by habitat destruction, introduced species, and hunting Endangered Species If a species numbers have fallen so low that it is likely to become extinct
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Endangered Species Act
Began in 1973 Protect plants and animals near extinction Protect the land where the organism lives Helps to bring the organisms population up
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What Eats What in an Ecosystem
Producers Makes its own food Plants, trees, algae Consumers Gets energy by eating other organisms Animals
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Herbivore Carnivores Omnivore Only eat producers
Cows, sheep, deer, grasshoppers Carnivores Only eat other consumers Lions, hawks, spiders Omnivore Eat both producers and consumers Bears, pigs, humans
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What is a Food Chain A sequence in which energy is transferred from one organism to the next as each organism eats another
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What is a Food Web? A group of interrelated food chains No one path
Shows feeding relationships in an ecosystem
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What is a Trophic Level? Each step in the transfer of energy through an ecosystem Each time energy is transferred, less of it is available to organisms at the next trophic level Producer Primary Consumers Secondary Consumers Tertiary Consumers
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Day 3 Objective I can explain the effect Man has had on the earth
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Land Use: Mining Strip Mining Mountain Top Removal Subsurface Mining
Land Reclamation Law states one must put back two times as much as mined
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Land Use: Agriculture Practices
Old Methods Summer fallows (rest field for a season) Spraying the fields with water Pesticide spraying methods Salinization
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Newer Methods No till Methods Contour Farming Terracing Alley Cropping
Cover Crops Integrated Pest Management
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Land Use: Industrial Clear cut land to place industrial plants
Hazardous waste produced Thermal Pollution: water too hot Chemical waste entering water system
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Land Use: Housing and Development
New subdivisions are cropping up due to the population growth in areas Land is cleared for commercial use Retail businesses Medical facilities
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Overgrazing Occurs when animals are allowed to graze in areas and the plants are not allowed to grow back Poorly managed agriculture practices
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Deforestation Removal of a forest or stand of trees for a fuel source (charcoal) or timber Conversion of forestland to farms, ranches & subdivisions 2011 half of the world’s forest were destroyed
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Forest Fire vs. Wild Fire
Controlled burns by the forestry service every 4 to 7 years Wild Fire Created naturally or by man that destroys the forest
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Effects of Fires More fires bring warmer spring and summer temperatures More burning forests produces more CO2 in the air Global Warming
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Day 4 Objective I can explain the benefits and effects of Urbanization
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What is Urbanization? The movement of people from rural areas to cities Depend on resources outside the city
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Why are big cities growing?
Increase in birth rates Immigration Poor are moving to larger cities and away from rural areas
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How are cities growing Cities have grown from 2% to 45% since 1950
By 2050, 66% of all people in the world will live in urban areas 75% of the U.S. population lives in urban areas occupying 3% of the country’s land area
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Effect of Cities Heat Island
The enormous amount of heat is in the center of the city 3º to 5º C (5º--9ºF) higher than the surrounding countrysides
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Benefits of Urban Development
Better education system Medical services Social Service programs
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Problems of Urban Development
Infectious diseases Inadequate water system Poor sewer systems Exposure to pollution
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Population Growth US has over 300 million people
Growth is determined by biotic potential and carrying capacity
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What is Carrying Capacity?
Is the maximum population a habitat can support indefinitely Population exceeds it, for long periods, degrades its environment and reduces future carrying capacity
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