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Published byDeirdre Stewart Modified over 9 years ago
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What determines the size of a population? Limiting Factor – any factor that restricts the size of a population › Can be biotic, such as availability of food › Can be abiotic, such as access to water Example: fish in a pond -why can’t there be 1000?
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Abiotic Factors such as light, temperature, and soil can influence a species’ ability to survive Tolerance Range – the abiotic conditions that a species can survive in Near the top and bottom limits, species will have poorer health, growth, and reproduction In the middle range, species will be healthiest (optimal range)
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Too much to the left or right (extreme) has very low population
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Some species have broad tolerance ranges, while others have narrow Species with a broad (wide) tolerance range will survive in more places › Example: Orchids (narrow) vs. grass (broad) Orchids are fragile, need very specific conditions Grass can grow anywhere
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In aquatic ecosystems, there are 2 main abiotic factors: › 1. Salt concentration › 2. Availability of oxygen, sunlight, and nutrients Sunlight only travels so deep, so most oxygen is at the water’s surface for photosynthesis
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TerrestrialAquatic -sunlight or shade-sunlight in water -water availability (rivers, etc) -nutrient availability -nutrient availability (in soils) -acidity (acid rain into lakes) -temperature -salinity (salt)
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Abiotic factors determine where a particular species can live Biotic factors determine a species’ success › Example: a deer can survive in the abiotic conditions of a forest, but they are best suited for open woodlands (more food/watch for predators)
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The main biotic factor is interaction between species Example: a birch tree and maple tree compete for sunlight and soil nutrients Example: Squirrels compete with each other for food
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RelationshipDefinitionExample
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RelationshipDefinitionExample Competition2 individuals fight for the same resource -foxes and coyotes fight for mice and rabbits
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RelationshipDefinitionExample Predation1 individual feeds on another -lynx prey on snowshoe hares
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RelationshipDefinitionExample Mutualism2 individuals benefiting from each other -plants give us oxygen, we give plants carbon dioxide
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RelationshipDefinitionExample Parasitism1 individual lives on/in a host organism -tapeworms are parasites of humans and pets
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RelationshipDefinitionExample Commensalism1 individual benefits, the other is neutral -a bird uses a tree for a home, but the tree doesn’t benefit or get harmed
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As populations increase, so does the demand for food, water, shelter, and space › Eventually, there won’t be enough resources Carrying Capacity – the maximum population that a given ecosystem can sustain › Example: can a tiny forest have 3000 grizzly bears? Why? What is the max? › Example: When planting vegetables in a garden, can you plant them super close together?
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