Ecology. The study of organisms and their interaction with the environment

Similar documents
What is Ecology? Abiotic (non-living) Biotic (living)

Intro to Ecology. Chapter 18

Ecology Module B, Anchor 4

What is ECOLOGY? The study of the biotic and abiotic factors in an environment and their interactions.

SY 2018/ st Final Term Revision. Student s Name: Grade: 10A/B. Subject: Biology

THE EARTH S BIOSPHERE

Theme 7 Review: Ecology

Allegheny-Clarion Valley School District

OGT Intervention. Ecology and Cellular Processes

Ecology. The scientific study of interactions between organisms and their environment

Ecology Review. Name: Date: Period:

Relationships in Ecosystems

3-1 What is Ecology?! The study of the. interactions among organisms and between organisms and their environment

Warm Up Exercise. Based on your knowledge of the carbon cycle, what do you think might happen if vast areas of forest are cleared?

Ecological Levels of Organization

Bio 112 Ecology: Final Practice Exam Multiple Choice

What is Ecology? Includes land, air, and water as well as life. Living organisms are NOT distributed uniformly throughout the biosphere.

BIOL 300 Foundations of Biology Summer 2017 Telleen Lecture Outline. Ecology and Ecosystems

Unit 2: Ecology. Chapters 2: Principles of Ecology

Ecology. Mrs. Flannery

What is Ecology? The study of the interactions between organisms and the living (biotic) and nonliving (abiotic) components of their environment.

Introduction to Ecology

Introduction to Ecology

Energy Movement. How Life Interacts. Food Chains. Trophic Levels. Levels. Pathway which shows how matter and energy is moved through an ecosystem

Ecology: The Flow of Matter and Energy In An Ecosystem. - the scientific of between and their, focusing on transfer

Ecology Unit Guide Due October 2nd Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday 14 Biochemistry Test Corrections

Frumkin, 2e Part 1: Methods and Paradigms. Chapter 1: ECOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH

Ecology is the study of the interactions among living things, and between living things and their surroundings.

Principles of Ecology

Principles of Ecology

Ecology Unit Guide Answers Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday 24- Intro and Review Lab Safety

ECOLOGY LECTURE NOTES Ch Ecology-

Ecology the study of the interactions between organisms and the living and nonliving components of the environment

CHAPTER 2: PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY 11/29/16

What do you mean by environment?

Biology Chapter Two. Principles of Ecology

Ecology Greek "oikos" = house study of the interactions among living things, and between living things and their environment

2.D.1-Environmental Influences

1.) What is Ecology? Living world is like a household with an economy every organism plays a role

What is Ecology? QGdH3QU

COMMUNITY ECOLOGY. Interspecific Interactions. Ecosystems unit

2018 ECOLOGY YEAR 2 (2018) PART ONE GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY

CHAPTER 55: Community Ecology

Chapter 36: Population Growth

extinction rates. (d) water availability and solar radiation levels are highest in the tropics. (e) high temperature causes rapid speciation.

SCIENCE 1206 UNIT 1 INTRODUCTION TO ECOLOGY

What Keeps Us and Other Organisms Alive?

WHAT IS ECOLOGY? Ecology- the scientific study of interactions between organisms and their environments, focusing on energy transfer

Energy and Matter in COMMUNITIES AND ECOSYSTEMS

Chapter 12 & 13. Interactions of life The Nonliving Environment

Niche and Habitat a species plays in a community. What it does all

ECOLOGY 2/18/2017. Ecology. Levels of Organization. Factors Affecting Organisms. Ecology of Organisms

12. How could forest fire change populations in the ecosystem? Populations could be destroyed or have to relocate,

Bio 112 Ecology: Final Study Guide

The Law of Conservation of Matter. Matter cannot be created nor destroyed Matter only changes form There is no away

Biology Ecology

What is a producer? Plants and their relatives ie algae

Regents Living Environment Ecology and Human Impact on Ecosystems

Semester 1: Unit 3 ECOLOGY

Energy Flow Through an Ecosystem:

Ch.23 INTER-RELATIONSHIPS OF ORGANISMS WITH EACH OTHER AND WITH THEIR ENVIRONMENT Part II Study after Field Study has been completed

Study Guide A. Answer Key. Principles of Ecology

WHAT IS ECOLOGY? Ecology- the scientific study of interactions between organisms and their environments, focusing on energy transfer

BIOLOGY NOTES. Ecology is the study of how organisms interact with each other and their environment

Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology

Science 1206 Unit 1 Test Please shade the letter of the best possible answer on the scan sheet provided.

Classifying our Biotic Environment (Trophic Levels) Ecology. Ecology is study how things interact with other and else in the.

Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. Monday, May 16, 16

Ecology and Environmental Science. Blank Copy of Student Packet

What is Ecology? Ecology Crash Course! Ecology is the study of the interactions between living things and the environment.

WHAT IS ECOLOGY? Ecology- the scientific study of interactions between organisms and their environments, focusing on energy transfer

1. be tolerant to some secondary compounds, 3. All of these. 4. Three of these. 5. Two of these

Ecology Review A: Top Ten

SUSTAINING ECOSYSTEMS

SC20F Ecology Unit Review Name:

Ecosystem consists of the organism which live in a particular area, the relationship between them, and their physical environment.

Keystone Biology Remediation B4: Ecology

Chapter 3: Ecosystems

Unit 6: Ecosystems Module 15: Ecological Principles

1. What are the 8 levels of organization in ecology? 1. Biosphere Ecosystem Community Population

Ecology the scientific study of interactions between different organisms and between organisms and their environment or surroundings

REVIEW 8: ECOLOGY UNIT. A. Top 10 If you learned anything from this unit, you should have learned:

Biological Systems. primary productivity, dissolved oxygen, ecosystems and species diversity

Ecosystems and Communities. What is climate?

Ecology Energy Flow Ecosystem Structure Interactions Among Species Population Dynamics Reproductive Patterns

SCIENCE 1206 UNIT 1 INTRODUCTION TO ECOLOGY

SCIENCE 2200 UNIT 1 INTRODUCTION TO ECOLOGY

Unit 1: What IS science? Name Date Period

Welcome Back! The Final is Coming! 12/13/16

Vocabulary. ecosystem p.79. population p.82. community p.82. niche p.82. herbivores p.84. carnivores p.84. omnivores p.84. decomposers p.

Honors Biology Unit 5 Chapter 34 THE BIOSPHERE: AN INTRODUCTION TO EARTH S DIVERSE ENVIRONMENTS

ECOLOGY. The study of how organisms fit into their environment and interact with it and each other.

8/7/ Levels of organization- biologist study nature on different levels, from a local to global scale a. Organism- a individual living thing

Population Density Emigration Immigration. Population Crash Predation Symbiosis. Exponential Growth Commensalism Mutualism

1. Students will describe the energy pathways through the different trophic levels of a food web or energy pyramid. Groups of Organisms: Producer:

ANSWER KEY - Ecology Review Packet

What do you know? You may have heard the term Eco-Friendly. Do you know what Eco stands for? What is Ecology?

Chapter 2 Interactions in Ecosystems

What is a trophic level? Draw a trophic pyramid on the board and label the levels. How much energy is passed up at every level?

Chapter 55: Ecosystems

Transcription:

Ecology The study of organisms and their interaction with the environment

Ecology Biosphere broadest, most inclusive level of organization - deepest part of the ocean to 6 miles above the earth - all organisms are found within the biosphere The biosphere is divided into biomes.

The Biosphere- includes all life forms of all sizes in all habitats. The biosphere is a thin layer at Earth s surface that extends from about 9km above the Earth s surface down to the bottom of the ocean. Observe a visual model of Earth's spheres.

Ecosystems found within the biosphere all organisms and non-living environment - biotic factors living components of the environment - abiotic factors physical and chemical characteristics of the environment interdependence/interconnectedness disturbance affects all organisms organisms alter their environment and are influenced by the environment

Ecosystems

Food webs Predator an organism that captures and consumes another organism (plants too poison spines) Prey an organism that is caught and devoured Natural Selection favors adaptations that improve predation and improve avoidance for prey

Food Web Relationships Producers autotrophs; base of any food chain Gross primary productivity rate at which producers capture energy Producers add biomass by making more organic material The rate at which biomass accumulates is the net primary productivity. Only energy stored as biomass is available to other organisms

Food Webs & Chains Food chain a single pathway of feeding relationships among organisms in an ecosystem that results in energy transfer Food web interrelated food chains in an ecosystem showing all the feeding relationships among the organisms

Food Chains

Food Webs

Trophic Diagrams A trophic level indicates the organisms position in the sequence of energy transfers Producers are the first trophic level in an ecosystem Consumers heterotrophs Herbivores eat producers (plants) second trophic level Carnivores eat other consumers Omnivores eat both producers and consumers Detritivores feed on dead organisms, leaves, wastes Decomposers decay dead organisms

Trophic Diagrams

Energy Transfer in Food Webs The energy transfer between trophic levels can vary from 1% to 20 %. This means the top trophic level will always be smaller than the one below it.

Water Cycle

Nitrogen Cycle

Carbon Cycle

Niches Niche a species way of life or the role it plays in its environment; a range of conditions a species can tolerate; interactions with its environment Fundamental Niche the range of conditions that a species can potentially tolerate and the range of resources it can potentially use. Realized Niche of a species is the range of resources a species actually uses. Generalists can live just about anywhere Ex: cockroach or opposum feeds on almost anything Specialists only live in a small range of niches Ex: koala of Australia feeds only on leaves from the Eucalyptus tree

Niches A niche is different than a habitat. A habitat is an area where an organism lives while a niche is its role or position in a habitat.

Ecology Tolerance Curve the range of conditions in which an organism can survive Acclimation the process of adjusting an organisms tolerance Conformers change as their external conditions change; ectotherms (Can NOT regulate its internal environment The body temperature is regulated by the environment.) Regulators use energy to control their internal conditions; endotherms -generates their own body heat. Dormancy a state of reduced activity during periods of unfavorable environmental conditions Resources the energy and materials a species needs to survive

Competition Competition: the use of the same limited resources by 2 or more species occurs when fundamental niches overlap Competitive exclusion occurs when 1 species is eliminated from a community because of competition for resources One species uses the resources more efficiently and has an advantage that eliminates the other species Resource partitioning each species only use part of the available resources

Resource Partitioning an adaptation that enables species to use different resources when they coexist in an area. Ex: Darwin's finches. (beaks) reduces competition. Five species of warblers live in spruce and fir trees and feed on insects. Each individual species forage for insects only in a particular section of the tree. Results- Competition among the species is reduced.

Organism Relationships Parasitism a relationship where one organism lives in/on/off another causing the host organism harm Ectoparasites external parasites Endoparasites internal parasites Ectoparasite Endoparasite

Organism Relationships Mutualism a relationship between two organisms where both organisms will benefit Example: pollinators and plants Commensalism a relationship between two organisms where one benefits and the other is not affected

Succession Succession the gradual, sequential re-growth of species in an area Primary development of a community in an area that has not supported life pioneer species Slow lack of minerals for growth Secondary sequential replacement of species that follows disruption of an existing community Soil is left intact, easier regrowth

Succession

Biomes Tropical Rain Forest Tropical Dry Forest Tropical Grassland/Savanna/Shrubland Desert Temperate Grassland Temperate Woodland & Shrubland Temperate Forest Northwestern Coniferous Forest Boreal Forest Tundra

Aquatic Ecosystems

Aquatic Ecosystems

Populations in an Ecosystem Community (Biological Community) all interacting organisms living in an area Population all the members of a species that live in one place at one time Population size number of individuals (usually estimated) Population density number of organisms per area Dispersion spatial distribution of the organisms 3 patterns of dispersion: clumped/even/random (can depend upon scale at which they are looked at)

Population Dispersion Patterns

Changes in Populations All populations change over time birth rate number of births in a given period of time mortality/death rate number of deaths in a given period of time life expectancy how long an animal lives Age structure distribution of individuals among different ages in a population Growth rate the amount a populations size changes in a given time 4 processes contribute to growth rate 1. Immigration movement of individuals into a population 2. Emmigration - movement of individuals out of a population 3. Birth 4. Death Growth Rate = Birth Rate Death Rate Carrying capacity the number of individuals the environment can support over a long period of time

Changes in Populations Limiting Factors restrains the growth of a population Limiting factors that control population size: 1. Density independent factors natural disasters, weather reduce the size of the population by the same proportion 2. Density dependent factors resources; triggered by increasing population density

Ecosystem Diversity The number of species an ecosystem contains is known as the species richness (simple count) Species diversity number of species in a community compared to the abundance of each species (number of each)

Ecosystem Diversity Closer to the equator the greater the species richness. Larger area = more species = more habitats Stability community s resistance to change function of species richness