1 / 24

Catalyst: 3/14

Catalyst: 3/14. Look at the picture below. In your catalyst box, write out 2 columns: Living/ nonliving. Write a list of the LIVING objects you notice on the picture and the NONLIVING objects. Ecology. …the study of how organisms interact with each other and their environments. Introduction.

maleah
Download Presentation

Catalyst: 3/14

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. Catalyst: 3/14 Look at the picture below. In your catalyst box, write out 2 columns: Living/ nonliving. Write a list of the LIVING objects you notice on the picture and the NONLIVING objects.

  2. Ecology …the study of how organisms interact with each other and their environments

  3. Introduction • Groups of animals live in specific habitats. • There are two factors included in every habitat: • Biotic factors • Living things, like…? • Abiotic factors • Nonliving things, like…?

  4. Like a set of nesting dolls… • We can think about the interactions and types of living things by organizing them into groups, smallest to largest. • An organism is any individual living thing. • Example: hummingbirds • A population includes all members of one species that live in the same area. • Example: all the hummingbirds in West Adams

  5. …bigger and bigger groups! • A community includes all of the different species that live in the same area. • Example: all the birds, ants, maple trees, dogs, etc. that live in Los Angeles • An ecosystem includes both the community and the abiotic factors. • Example: the Los Angeles community plus the cars, buildings, rocks, air…

  6. The organisms in a habitat can be organized in the following way… ecosystem community species population

  7. Organism Organism • An species is a group of the same living thing, such as alligators.

  8. Population Population Organism Organism • A population is a group of the same species that lives in one area.

  9. Community Community Population Population Organism Organism • A community is a group of different species that live together in one area.

  10. Ecosystem Ecosystem Community Community Population Population Organism Organism • An ecosystem includes all of the organisms as well as the climate, soil, water, rocks and other nonliving things in a given area.

  11. Biome Ecosystem Ecosystem Community Community Population Population Organism Organism • A biome is a major regional or global community of organisms characterized by the climate conditions and plant communities that thrive there.

  12. Tropical • Tropical Rain Forest: warm temperatures and abundant rainfall occur all year. • Plants: lush thick forests. • Animals: monkey, parrots, snakes, lizards, iguanas

  13. Grassland • Grassland: primary plant life is grass. Occurs in a variety of climates. Moderate rainfall • Plants: Buffalo grass, coneflowers, goldenrods, clover • Animals: coyotes, eagles, bison, bobcats.

  14. Desert • Desert: very dry climate. Very little rainfall. • Plants: cacti, store water or have deep root systems. • Animals: Many animals are nocturnal (why?). Insects, arachnids, reptiles, and birds.

  15. Temperate • Temperate biomes: Deciduous and Rain forests • Plants: oaks, beeches, maples, redwoods • Animals: cardinal bird, squirrel, bears

  16. Taiga • Taiga: cooler climates. Winters are long and cold, often lasting 6+ months. 30-85 inches rainfall/year. • Plants: Coniferous trees. • Animals: animals with heavy furs

  17. Tundra • Tundra: subzero temperatures. Very little rainfall • Plants: arctic frost • Animals: artic fox, snow owl

  18. Food webs • All organisms need FOOD to survive! • Food webs show what eats what.

  19. Eat or be eaten • Here are some important terms that will help you describe interactions in a food web. 1. Producer (autotroph) • can make its own food • forms the base of the food web

  20. Mmmmm…delicious. 2. Consumer (heterotroph) • cannot make its own food There are several words that describe consumers… • Prey: the hunted • Predator: the hunter • Herbivore: eats plants • Carnivore: eats animals • Omnivore: eats both plants and animals

  21. Hey, you gonna eat that? 3. Decomposer • Breaks down dead organisms • Examples: bacteria, maggots, fungi, worms • Complete the circle of life by returning nutrients to the soil

  22. Your mission… • Label the organisms on the coloring sheet you don’t know. (use the next slide to help you) • Color in the organisms. • In your Notebooks: • WRITE THREE examples of how the organisms might interact. Use vocabulary words from your notes. • Use the organisms to create a sample food web. (must show at least 5 organisms)

  23. daisy r sea urchin mussels flounder raccoon spider crab monarch butterfly clam hermit crab rat snake gull horseshoe crab white-tailed deer screech owl oak egret cardinal harbor seal puffer whelk bass cattail red-winged blackbird sea star skate right whale oriole

  24. *How do different species of organisms interact with each other? Agenda [insert date] • Intro to ecology: notes • Food webs • Coloring sheet

More Related