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Explore the study of interactions between organisms and their environment, including interdependence, levels of organization, adaptations, species interactions, and energy transfer.
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Ecology • Ecology is the study of interactions between organisms and the living and nonliving components of their environment. • Organisms depend in some way on other living and nonliving organisms.
Interdependence • Interdependence- Dependence on each other or one another • Examples: • Hare and lynx • Hare and grasses/shrubs • Birds and insects
Levels of Organization • Biosphere- • broadest; earth and atmosphere that supports life
Levels of Organization • Ecosystem- • all of the organisms and nonliving environment found in a particular place
Levels of Organization • Community- • all interacting organisms living in an area
Levels of Organization • Population- • members of a species that live in one place at a time
Levels of Organization • Organism- • individual
Ecology of Organisms • Biotic vs. Abiotic Factors • Biotic- living factors in the environment • Ex. Plants, animals • Abiotic- non-living factors in the environment • Ex. Climate, soil
Ecology of Organisms • Niche • The specific role, or way of life of a species within its environment • What is the difference between a habitat and a niche?
Exit Slip • An ecosystem contains? • Hunting season on deer increases the amount of grass/shrubs is an example of? (word for things depending on one another) • A biotic factor in a pond is? Abiotic factor?
Ecology of Organisms • Conformers- do not regulate their internal conditions • Regulators- use energy to control some of their internal conditions
Ecology of Organisms • Two ways species can escape unfavorable conditions: • 1. Dormancy- state of reduced activity • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dzz9LZ554NM • 2. Migration- Move to a more favorable habitat
Ecology of Organisms • Generalists • Organisms forage on a variety of food; feed on what is available • Specialists • Focus on a specific food source
Species Interactions • Predation • Predator- organism preys on other organisms • Prey- animal taken by predator as food • Examples?
Adaptations • Predator Adaptations • Adaptations that help predators acquire food • Chemical • Rattlesnack vs. Rat • Camouflage • Chameleon • Speed • Cheetah
Prey Adaptations • Jesus Lizard Adaptations that increase chance of survival Chemical Combat Camouflage Speed Mimicry
Prey AdaptationsMimicry • Batesian • Harmless species mimics a harmful species • Octopus Defense • Mullerian • Two or more species share similar warning colors or attributes
Exit Slip • What are two ways carbon enters the atmosphere? • How is carbon removed from the atmosphere? • Give one example of a predator adaptation and one prey adaptation. • What is the difference in Mullerian and Batesian Mimicry?
Plant Adaptations Defense Catching Prey Venus Fly Trap
Competition • Interspecific • Competition among members of different species • Ex. Lions and Cheetahs • Prey on the same food (one will have less food)
Competition • Intraspecific • Competition among members of the same species • Ex. Trees of same species competing for light, nutrients • Ex. Deer fighting for territory and mates
Symbiotic relationship • Parasitism • One organism benefits, the other is harmed • Ticks and humans/animals
Symbiotic Relationship • Mutualism • Both organisms benefit • Birds cleaning teeth
Symbiotic Relationship • Commensalism • One organism benefits, the other is unaffected • Shark and remora fish
Review 1. Example of a biotic and abiotic factor on a farm. 2. What is the niche of a turkey? 3. What is interdependence?
Energy Transfer • Producers • Autotrophs- manufacture food for themselves • Ex. Plants, Bacteria • Consumers • Heterotrophs- get energy by feeding on other organisms
Energy Transfer • Types of Consumers • Herbivore-plants only • Carnivore-meat only • Omnivore-both plants and meat • Detrivores-dead plant and animal matter • Decomposer-break down dead and decaying organic matter
Ecology of Organisms Generalists Specialists Herbivores • Omnivores
Energy Transfer • Trophic Levels • Position an organism occupies in the food chain • What it eats, and what eats it…
Food Chain vs. Food Web • Food Chain • Food Web
Biomes • Tundra • Coldest temps • Very little precipitation • Thin topsoil over permafrost • Mosses, small woody plants
Biomes • Taiga • Cold • Low in nutrients • Evergreen trees
Biomes • Temperate Grassland • Good precipitation • Deep layer of topsoil • Rich in nutrients • Most have been transformed to farmland
Biomes • Savanna • Dry, thin topsoil • Tall grasses • Scattered trees
Biomes • Chaparral • Little precipitation • Rocky, thin topsoil • Low nutrients • Shrubs and small trees
Earth’s Layers • The earth is made up of 4 layers: • Biosphere • Atmosphere • Hydrosphere • Geosphere
Atmosphere • 78% Nitrogen • 21% Oxygen • Greenhouse gases
Greenhouse Effect • 1) Energy from the sun passes through the atmosphere and heats the earth’s surface • 2) Some of the heat radiates away from earth • 3) Some of the heat radiates into space • 4) Some heat is absorbed by gases and returned to earth
Hydrosphere • All of the water on earth • Only 3 percent of surface water is freshwater • Most is in the form of glaciers