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Ecology

Ecology. Ecology. The study of interactions among organisms and between organisms and their environment, or surroundings. Biosphere. Combined portions of the planet in which all life exists (land, water, air, organisms). BIOME.

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Ecology

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  1. Ecology

  2. Ecology • The study of interactions among organisms and between organisms and their environment, or surroundings.

  3. Biosphere • Combined portions of the planet in which all life exists (land, water, air, organisms)

  4. BIOME • Group of ecosystems that have the same climate, similar soil and distinctive plants and animals • See textbook pp. 98-104 • HANDOUT: Biome Group Project • DUE: Nov. 25 • Worth: 50 points

  5. BIOTA (living) Organisms Animals Plants Fungi bacteria ABIOTA (nonliving) environment Soil Air water Ecosystem

  6. Biomes of the World

  7. Communities • Groups of populations living in the same area • Like these desert animals

  8. Populations • Groups of individuals all of the same species • EX: All the Long-nosed Leopard Lizards of the Mojave Desert

  9. Scales of Ecological Organization

  10. Ozone Thinning at Antarctica

  11. Energy Flow • Sunlight is the main source of energy for life on Earth.

  12. Chemosynthetic Organisms • Some organisms rely on inorganic chemicals rather than the sun for energy. • All bacteria, manufacture carbohydrates and other organic molecules from the oxidization of sulfates or ammonia.

  13. Chemosynthetic Microbes

  14. Videos • Explore life at a hydrothermal vent.

  15. Autotrophs • Organisms that use sunlight to produce energy. • Use inorganic compounds to make organic molecules. • PLANTS • Also called PRODUCERS

  16. Photosynthesis • Process by which autotrophs harness sunlight in a chemical reaction to change inorganic compounds into energy-rich carbohydrates and oxygen.

  17. Heterotrophs • Organisms that rely on energy from other organisms • Also called CONSUMERS

  18. Types of Consumers • Herbivores – eat only plants • Carnivores – eat animals • Omnivores – eat both plants and animals • Detritivores – feed on animal remains and dead matter • Decomposers – break down organic matter • Scavengers-predator eats corpses it killed or others killed (raccoons, vultures, beetles)

  19. Decomposers • Bacteria fungi earthworms beetles

  20. Herbivores (Primary Consumers) • Eat producers

  21. Carnivores • Eat other animals

  22. Spaghetti worms have tentacles range out from a burrow in rock or sediment to collect the small particulate detritus that the worm feeds on. Detritivores amphipods tearing plant debris and organic detritus into "bite sized" pieces and eating it

  23. Omnivores Eat plants and animals

  24. Scavengers • Vultures • Ants • Crows • spider

  25. Food Chain • Desert Food Chain Video (DesertUSA) • Energy flows from the sun or inorganic compounds in one direction to autotrophs (producers) and then to heterotrophs (consumers).

  26. Food Chain Simulation • Sunny Meadows

  27. Producers? Consumers?

  28. Primary producers (organisms that make their own food from sunlight and/or chemical energy from deep sea vents) are the base of every food chain - these organisms are called autotrophs. • Primary consumers are animals that eat primary producers; they are also called herbivores (plant-eaters). • Secondary consumers eat primary consumers. They are carnivores (meat-eaters) and omnivores (animals that eat both animals and plants). • Tertiary consumers eat secondary consumers. • Quaternary consumers eat tertiary consumers. • Food chains "end" with top predators, animals that have little or no natural enemies.

  29. Food Web: links all the food chains of an ecosystem together

  30. Trophic Level • Each step of a food chain or food web

  31. Ecological Pyramid Note that only 10% of the energy is transferred to organisms at the next trophic level

  32. Biomass Pyramid • Amount of tissue in a trophic level

  33. Biomass • Total amount of living tissue within a given trophic level

  34. Pyramid of Numbers

  35. Compare • Pyramid of Numbers Pyramid of Biomass

  36. Ecological Pyramids Lab Activity

  37. Ecological Pyramid Activities • A. Biome Bags • Divide into Producers, Primary Consumers, Secondary Consumers, Tertiary Consumers • Weigh for Biomass Pyramids • Count for Pyramid of Numbers

  38. Ecological Pyramid Activities • B. Cedar Glade Pyramids • Energy pyramid with list of species • Water volume to represent % of energy transferred to the next trophic level

  39. Draw names of Biomes • Divide contents into four smaller bags:Producers, Primary Consumers, Secondary Consumers, Tertiary Consumers

  40. CAUTION: • If your pyramid does not look like it will support the food chain, then make adjustments. • Remember the fox, rabbit, and grass online simulaltion.

  41. Biomass Pyramid

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