1 / 26

APES UNIT 2: ECOLOGY

APES UNIT 2: ECOLOGY. = the study of how organisms interact with each other and their environment. I. Ecosystem Factors. A. Abiotic 1. Climate 4. minerals 2. Soil 5. contaminants 3. Water 6. Etc. B. Biotic 1. Animals 4. Bacteria 2. Plants 5. Protists 3. Fungi. II. Organisms.

chinue
Download Presentation

APES UNIT 2: ECOLOGY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. APES UNIT 2: ECOLOGY = the study of how organisms interact with each other and their environment

  2. I. Ecosystem Factors • A. Abiotic • 1. Climate 4. minerals • 2. Soil 5. contaminants • 3. Water 6. Etc. • B. Biotic • 1. Animals 4. Bacteria • 2. Plants 5. Protists • 3. Fungi

  3. II. Organisms • A. Adaptation (Evolution) • 1. Based on genetics and natural selection • 2. When biotic or abiotic factors change, a species may: • adapt • migrate • go extinct

  4. B. Niche = an organism’s place in the ecosystem • 1. Determined by: • a. how it deals with abiotic factors • b. how it gets food, what its food is • c. how it reproduces • d. range of tolerances • e. etc. (everything about the organism, except habitat)

  5. 2. Niche breadth • = what’s included in a niche, especially whether an organism is a generalist or a specialist • 3. Niche overlap • = when 2 species share part of their niches • 1. Usually results in Niche Partitioning (adaptations to limit competition) • 4. Competitive Exclusion Principle • = No 2 species with identical niches can coexist indefinitely at the same time and space

  6. Niche separation Number of individuals Generalistspecies with a broad niche Generalistspecies with a narrow niche Niche breadth Region of niche overlap

  7. III. Populations= groups of interbreeding organisms, all of the same species in physical proximity to each other • A. Population Curve • graph of number of organisms in a population over time 1. J- curve exponential growth 2. S-curve stable population

  8. B. Limiting Factors • resources that stop a population’s growth • C. Carrying capacity • the population an ecosystem can support or the population when a limiting factor is reached

  9. D. Threshold Population • the smallest size a population can get and still recover • E. Balance • biotic potential ( all factors that help an organism reproduce) • vs. • Environmental resistance ( all the potential limiting factors) • F. Extinction • If balance can’t be reached, organism may all die

  10. G. Mechanisms of Population Balance • 1. Predator-prey (+,-) • 2. Host-parasite (+,-) • 3. Competition (-,-) (interspecies or intraspecies) • 4. Plant-herbivore (+,-) • 5. Fire • 6. Territoriality • 7. Symbiosis • a. mutualism (+,+) c. parasitism (+,-) • b. commensalism(+,0)

  11. H. Density Dependence • 1. Density Independent Regulation • a. event affects populations no matter how dense they are • b. catastrophic occurrences, in extreme environments • c. examples: fire, hurricane, tornado • d. greatest effects on small organisms, low trophic levels

  12. 2. Density Dependent Regulation • a. event has greater effect on a population when the population is more dense • b. event is usually resource based • c. examples: food, disease, predation, water • d. greatest effects on large organisms, higher trophic levels

  13. I. Life-History Strategies • 1. r-selection • Characteristics • many offspring good dispersal • poor competitors density independent reg. • Opportunists-weeds, pests • 2. k- selection • Characteristics • parental care- few offspring larger size • constant environment good competitor • long lifespan

  14. IV. Community= all the organisms in a specific area • A. Biodiversity • 1. = the variety of organisms in an ecosystem • 2. Can vary,some are very diverse (rainforest, coral reef, salt marsh) and some are not very diverse (farm field, grassland, northern evergreen forest) • 3. Diverse ecosystems usually more stable, more productive, more interesting

  15. B. Measuring Biodiversity (use indices) • 1. Species Richness (S) • equals number of different species • Sample Data • Species A B C D E F G H I J • Habitat 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 141 • Habitat 2 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15

  16. 2. Shannon-Wiener Index • H’ = - Pi ln (Pi) • ( Pi= percentage of species “i”) • 3. Simpson Index • D= 1/  Pi2

  17. C. Ecological Succession • = the predictable change in the community make-up of an ecosystem over time, especially after a disturbance

  18. 1. Types of Succession (pg.) • a. Primary Succession • starts with an area that has not been previously inhabited by land plants • examples= bare rock, volcanic island, filled pond • b. Secondary Succession • re-establishing an area that was previously inhabited • examples= after a fire, deserted farm, after a storm

  19. 2. Each stage prepares the way for the next • 3. Climax Community • a. = the plant community that exists when succession leads to a balance and stops changing • b. the climax community is specific to different locations • deciduous forest in Maryland • rainforest in Brazil

  20. V. Ecosystems • A. Characteristics • 1. Involve biotic and abiotic parts • 2. Involves energy flow ( sun is usually source) • 3. Exchange of materials - cycles • 4. Become more complex as they mature • 5. Can vary in size

  21. B. Biomes= large terrestrial ecosystems,determined by climate and plant community (pg.130-149) • 1. Temperate Forest • 2. Grassland • 3. Desert • 4. Coniferous Forest – Taiga,Boreal Forest • 5. Tundra • 6. Savanna • 7. Tropical Rainforest

  22. C. Aquatic Ecosystems • 1. Freshwater • a. Lakes and Ponds • Two Zones • Stratification • Seasonal mixing in temperate zones • Stable ecosystem

  23. b. Wetlands • = covered with water part of the time • marsh, swamp, floodplain, bog • Very productive • good habitat (breeding, migrating) • absorb pollution, water • endangered

  24. c. Rivers and Streams • in motion- water, sediment, pollution • organisms adapt to flow rate - faster has more oxygen

  25. 2. Saltwater • a. Estuaries • where freshwater meets saltwater • bays or gulfs • very productive- often shallow • organisms adapted to changing environment- salinity, temperature, tide

  26. b. Coral Reef • made from shells of coral animals, in warm oceans • large biodiversity- like rainforest • endangered from pollution, exploitation • c. Ocean • covers 3/4 earth- large • surface is most productive • many adaptations • d. Coastal • harsh conditions - waves, tides, exposure

More Related