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Introduction to Ecology (Ch. 3) Why should I learn about Ecology? 1
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How are living things organized? Organisms: individuals such as a whitetail deer Populations: Group of organisms of one species 2
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How are living things organized? Community: Collection of interacting populations 3
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How are living things organized? Ecosystem: Interactions within a community plus the physical surroundings 4
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How are living things organized? Biome: A group of ecosystems that share similar climates and typical organisms 5
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How are living things organized? Biosphere: The entire planet – living and nonliving 6
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What are the parts of an environment? Biotic Factors: The living (plants and animals) Abiotic Factors: The nonliving ( rocks, air, soil, water) 7
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Where do organisms live? Habitat: Where an organism lives –Fish in a pond, fox in a forest 8
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What do organisms do in the environment? Niche: The role a species plays in a community –Wolf eats dying or weak animals 9
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How do organisms get their energy? Plants: sunlight is used by a plant to make food for itself 10
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Feeding Relationships Producers –Autotrophs: use solar or chemical energy to manufacture food 11
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Feeding Relationships Consumers –Heterotrophs: An organism that must find its food 12
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How do organisms get their energy? Animals: eat other organisms – there are many different types of eating styles Herbivores Carnivores Omnivores Scavengers Decomposers 13
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Herbivores “herb” means grass Herbivores are plant eaters Carnivores “carn” means flesh Carnivores are meat eaters 14
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Omnivores “omni” means all Omnivores eat both plants and animals 15
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Scavengers Feed on carrion, refuse and most anything edible Decomposers Feed by breaking down and absorbing nutrients from dead organisms. Create detritus. 16
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Detritivores Feed on detritus particles. They will often digest decomposers that live on the material they eat. 17
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Consumers First level (primary) consumers –Herbivores 18
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Consumers Second level consumers –Eat first level consumers 19
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Consumers Third level (Tertiary) consumers –Carnivores that mainly eat 2 nd level consumers 20
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Food Chain Shows how matter and energy move through an ecosystem Each organism represents a different trophic level Quaternary Consumer 21
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Food Webs Shows all of the possible feeding relationships in a community Several chains put together 22
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How does energy flow through an ecosystem? Energy Pyramids: shows energy decreasing at each succeeding trophic level 23
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Biomagnification 24
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How do organisms interact with each other? Symbiosis: close relationship between different species 25
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Mutualism Both species benefit from the relationship 26
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Commensalism One species benefits, the other is not harmed or benefits 27
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Parasitism One species benefits at the expense of the other –Ticks, tapeworm 28
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Predation One species benefits at the expense of the other. The other organism will lose its life because of the relationship. 29
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The Water Cycle 30
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