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Environmental Biology and Genetics

Environmental Biology and Genetics. Energy Flow. Ecology – The study of living organisms in relation to their environment Organism – Living thing Habitat – The place where an organism lives

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Environmental Biology and Genetics

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  1. Environmental Biology and Genetics

  2. Energy Flow • Ecology – The study of living organisms in relation to their environment • Organism – Living thing • Habitat – The place where an organism lives • Population – The total number of one type of organism living in any one habitat • Community – The different populations of plants, animals and micro-organisms found in a particular habitat • Ecosystem – A natural biological unit which is made up of living and non-living parts

  3. All the energy in an ecosystem comes from the sun • Green plants are able to convert light energy from the sun into chemical energy (starch) during photosynthesis • Green plants are called producers because they are able to produce their own food • Other organisms can not produce their own food, so must eat (consume) these plants and/or animals • They are known as consumers

  4. Three types of consumers; • Herbivores - Eat only plant material • Carnivores - Eat only meat (animal) tissue • Omnivores - Eat both plant and animal tissue • An animal that hunts another animal is called a predator • The animal being hunted is the prey • Decomposers are micro-organisms ie. Bacteria and fungi, which get their energy from breaking down waste materials • Now complete pages 1 and 2 of your sheets. (Use pg 109 of the textbook to help)

  5. Food Chains / Webs • When an animal eats a plant or animal energy is transferred from the food to the feeder • The animal that eats the plant at the start of a feeding relationship is called the primary consumer (Normally a herbivore may be an omnivore) • If the primary consumer is eaten by a second animal, this second animal is called the secondary consumer (may be an omnivore or a carnivore) • Energy transfer continues the whole way along the feeding relationship. This is known as a food chain.

  6. Food Chains • A food chain always begins with a producer or detritus • Eg. Grass Rabbit Fox (Producer) (1st consumer) (2nd consumer) • The arrows indicate the direction of energy transfer.

  7. Food Webs • In nature a food chain rarely occurs in isolation • The producer may be eaten by a number of different animals, which in turn may be preyed upon by many different predators (See pg 3 of sheets, pgs 110 – 112 of text ) • Food chains interconnect at many points to form a food web • Look at the following food web and pick out at least 5 different food chains; Eagle Fox Merlin Skylark Mountain Hare Grouse Moth Larva Heather

  8. Food Webs Pick out all the food chains from this web; Fox Owl Frog Hedgehog Weasel Snail Vole Rabbit Primrose Oak

  9. Energy Loss • Not all the energy available at each step of the food chain is passed on to the next step (See sheets pg 4) • There is a significant energy loss at each step of a food chain Energy from food 100% 90% lost and is unavailable to other animals 10% is passed on to other animals (this energy is stored in the tissue of the plant or animal, until it is eaten) Some energy used Some energy not used Lost as heat undigested Used for movement uneaten

  10. Pyramid of Numbers • In most food chains there is a greater number of producers than primary consumers, and a greater number of primary consumers than secondary consumers, and so on • The final consumer is least numerous • This numerical relationship is called a pyramid of numbers. • As the organism higher in the food chain requires more food, the level before it in the pyramid is bigger • This is due to a decrease in energy being passed on.

  11. Primrose Snail Hedgehog Fox Decreasing Decreasing numbers energy Pyramid of Numbers

  12. In some food chains the producer is a single large plant and the pyramid therefore takes a different form. Oak Tree Caterpillar Shrew Owl Pyramid of Numbers

  13. Pyramid of Biomass • The biomass of a population is its total mass of living matter • The biomass at each level of the pyramid decreases • This can be represented as a pyramid of biomass • As there are so many organisms at each level of the pyramid, the weight decreases with the numbers.

  14. Primrose Snail Hedgehog Fox Decrease in biomass Pyramid of Biomass

  15. The most reliable comparison between organisms found at different levels of a food chain is in a pyramid of energy This is based on productivity This is measured as dry mass per square metre per year, before being converted into kilojoules per square metre per year. This type of pyramid will always take the shape of a true pyramid, as only a proportion of energy is transferred from one level to the next.(Complete pgs 3-6 of sheets) Test your knowledge pgs 113 + 118 of text Apply your knowledge pgs 119-122 of text Pyramid of Energy

  16. Factors Affecting The Variety of Species in an Ecosystem • Species – A group of living organisms which are so similar to one another that they are able to interbreed and produce fertile offspring

  17. Biodiversity • Within an ecosystem there is a variety of habitats • Within each habitat there is a range of populations (plants, animals and micro-organisms) • As well as being adapted to their habitat, each population is adapted to a particular ecological niche in the pattern of the community • As an ecosystem develops over a period of time the range of habitats and niches it contains increases • This gives rise to a wide diversity of species in every ecosystem • An adaptation is an inherited characteristic that makes an organism well suited to survival in its environment

  18. Some adaptations involve the structure of the organism’s body, or a behavioural response to a particular environmental stimuli • Adaptation can leave some species unable to cope with other/different habitats, environmental conditions • This means that some species will only be found in an area where the conditions are suitable to its survival needs, influencing its distribution in the ecosystem • A stable ecosystem contains a balance of interdependent producers, consumers and decomposers • (Complete pgs 7 and 8 of sheets, use pgs 123-128 of text) • Test your knowledge pg 127

  19. Importance of Biodiversity • 1. Could provide us with future life changing medicines • 2. May provide us with a genetic storehouse in many wild species which could help humans and plants recover from disease • 3. Could provide us with future varieties of food • 4. May add to our education of the nature around us. (Sheets page 14, see text pgs 139-140)

  20. Factors such as pollution and grazing reduce the variety of species in an ecosystem • They act selectively on populations disadvantaging some species and allowing others to thrive by eliminating their competition.

  21. Reduction in Biodiversity • Human activity can reduce biodiversity through the destruction of habitats (Pages 8-13, see text pgs 129 - 138), ie; • Disruption of food webs • Grazing • Pollution – Acid rain - Sewage - Thermal pollution • Deforestation • Desertification • Mass extinction • Over-hunting • Habitat destruction

  22. Disruption of Food Webs • Food webs are generally more stable than food chains, and can normally withstand small/ temporary disruptions • If , however an organism is affected by an external factor, then this will have a knock-on effect in a food chain • A chain having only a few links will be more seriously affected than a longer chain • Myxomatosis is an example of an external factor which nearly wiped out the rabbit population in Britain

  23. Grazing • Grazing can be of an advantage to some plant species and a disadvantage to others • If natural grasslands go un-grazed, some of the stronger species will thrive on the available resources, causing other weaker species to die • This reduces biodiversity • If on the other hand, animals are left to over-graze, this can also lead to a reduction in biodiversity • This is because the plants are not able to grow and reproduce.

  24. Pollution Acid Rain • Caused by the burning of fossil fuels (coal, oil) • Release sulphur dioxide (poisonous gas), damages many plant species • Ie.different Lichen species tolerate different levels of SO2pollution • As air pollution increases, the variety of lichen species decreases • Water and land environments can also be affected by pollution Ie. a reduction in the number of fish species

  25. Sewage • Untreated sewage may be released into rivers in densely populated areas if the sewage works become overloaded • This provides food for bacteria (which feed on organic waste) • (Organic waste ie. Dead skin cells, faeces, urine, hair, plant/animal food waste)

  26. As sewage bacteria oxygen fish etc. • This could result in loss of clean water species ie. Loss of species diversity

  27. Thermal Pollution • Some power stations use local river water to cool their generators • When the water is returned to the river it is considerably warmer, and causes thermal pollution

  28. Deforestation • The complete clearing of vast areas of natural forests and the failure to plant new forests in their place; • Loss of regular water flow, so loss of sponge effect = rivers fail to provide a regular supply of water for human consumption and irrigation • Loss of rain water from hillsides = flooding of low-lying downstream areas, cannot be cultivated

  29. Erosion of fertile top soil = fertility of hillside reduced, rivers, lakes, irrigation channels and dams become blocked, muddy and undrinkable • Less water evaporation into atmosphere = reduction in rainfall, so drier climate • More CO2 (burning) not removed by photosynthesis and less O2 = extra carbon dioxide may add to the greenhouse effect.

  30. Desertification • Removal of protective shrubs and plants which act as wind breaks which normally hold the soil together • Removal causes the soil to dry out and lose fertility.

  31. Mass Extinction, Over-hunting and Habitat destruction • Fossil fuels take millions of years to form, and are quickly becoming depleted due to over use • As they take so long to form it will take as long again to form more • Hundreds of birds and animals have become extinct over the centuries, and many more are in danger

  32. Two major contributors are over-hunting and habitat destruction • Human activities are causing the current wave of extinction to run at about 400 times its natural rate. • (See pgs 8-13) • Test your knowledge pg 141 of text.

  33. Behavioural Adaptationsin Animals • Animals exhibit behavioural responses to their environment • Behavioural responses/adaptations are of survival value to the animal • The way an animal responds depends on the environmental stimulus which it has triggered its internal receptors • Theses receptors are linked with the sense organs which in turn communicate with the nervous system • The sense organ detects an environmental stimulus then transmits nerve impulses through the nervous system, causing an effector to create a behavioural response • The effector could be muscles or glands. (See pgs15-17)

  34. Pg 16/17 Activity 2.1, text pgs 143 - 144 • Pg 17/18 Activity 2.2, text pgs 145 -147 • Testing your knowledge pg 147 of text.

  35. Competition Between Plants • If any of the following resources are in short supply plants will compete with one another for them; • Light • Water • Soil Nutrients • Same species plants will have intense competition for these resources. (See sheets pgs 19- top 20, text pg 147) • Pg 19 Activity 2.3, text pgs 148 – 149.

  36. Competition Between Animals • Animals will compete with one another for resources such as; • Food • Water • Shelter (See sheets pg 20, text pgs 150 - 152) • Test your knowledge pg 152 of text.

  37. Applying your knowledge pgs 153 – 158 of text • What you should know pgs 158 – 160 of text.

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