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What are they and how do they work?. Cell Review  Smallest functional unit of life  Cell theory  All living things are made of cells  Single or multi-cellular.

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Presentation on theme: "What are they and how do they work?. Cell Review  Smallest functional unit of life  Cell theory  All living things are made of cells  Single or multi-cellular."— Presentation transcript:

1 What are they and how do they work?

2 Cell Review  Smallest functional unit of life  Cell theory  All living things are made of cells  Single or multi-cellular  Prokaryotic  Eukaryotic

3 http://www.cic-caracas.org/departments/science/Topic1.php

4 http://www.uvm.edu/~inquiryb/webquest/fa06/mvogenbe/

5 Ecology  Study of how organisms interact with one another and with their physical environment (matter and energy)  Connections in Nature

6 Levels of Organization http://www.ux1.eiu.edu/~cfruf/bio3002/levels_ecology.htm

7 Species  Set of individuals that can mate and produce fertile offspring  Classification system  KPCOFGS  Genus species or Genus species

8 Population  Group of individuals of the same species hat live in the same place a the same time  Variation – genetic diversity  Habitat – where they live

9 Community  Biological community  All the populations of different species that live in a particular place

10 Ecosystem  Community of different species interacting with one another and with their nonliving environment (soil, water, other forms of matter, and energy)  No clear boundaries  Not isolated

11 Biomes  Large regions of land with distinct climates and certain species  Especially vegetation  Aquatic Biomes  Marine  Freshwater (2%)

12 http://www.life.illinois.edu/bio100/lectures/s97lects/04Ecosystems/BiomeMap.gif

13 Biosphere  The Global ecosystem in which all organisms exist and can interact wit one another  Parts of the  atmosphere  hydrosphere and  geosphere where life exists

14 Atmosphere  Thin spherical envelope of gases surrounding the earths surface  Troposphere – greenhouse gases  Stratosphere – ozone layer

15 http://qwickstep.com/search/?q=5+layers+of+the+atmosphere

16 Hydrosphere  All the water on or near the earth’s surface  Liquid, solid, gas forms  71% in Ocean

17 Geosphere  Earth’s core, mantel and outer crust http://thegeosphere.pbworks.com/

18 3 Factors work together within the Spheres

19 Gravity  Allows the planet to hold onto its atmosphere  Enables movement and cycling of chemicals through air, water, soil and organisms

20 Recycling of Matter within and between Ecosystems

21 One way flow of high quality energy

22 http://maps.grida.no/go/graphic/greenhouse-effect

23 2 components of an Ecosystem  Abiotic  Nonliving components  water, air, nutrients, rocks, heat, solar energy  Biotic  Living and once living biological components  Plants, animals, microbes

24 Range of Tolerance  Different species and their populations thrive under different physical and chemical conditions

25 Limiting Factor Principle  Too much or too little of any abiotic factor can limit or prevent growth of a population, even if all other factors are at or near the optimal range of tolerance  Contributes to population control  Examples?

26 Trophic(feeding) levels  Producers  Autotrophs  “Self – feeders”  Photosynthesis 6CO 2 + 6H 2 O = light = C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2  Chemosynthesis

27 Trophic(feeding) levels  Consumers  Heterotrophs  “Other – feeders”  Herbivores, Carnivores, Higher- level Carnivores, Omnivores,  Decomposers, Detritivores

28 Page 61 Science Focus

29 http://apesnature.homestead.com/chapter2.html The movement of nutrients (blue arrows) and energy (red arrows) and both (brown arrows) through the ecosystem

30 Food Chains  Sequence of organisms, each of which serves as a source of food or energy for the next http://producersconsumers.wikispaces.com/11

31 Food Web Complex network of interconnected food chains http://envirosci.net/111/niches/niches.htm

32 Useable energy decreases  Ecological efficiency  % of usable chemical energy transferred from one tropic level to the next  Typically 10%  Pyramid of Energy Flow

33 http://www.mlms.logan.k12.ut.us/~mlowe/speds2o2b.html

34 http://www.tutorvista.com/biology/ecological-pyramids

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