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Ecology AP Readiness

Ecology AP Readiness. Mr. Snider Sherman Oaks CES socesbio.com – download this ppt. Biotic and Abiotic factors Wind circulation Biomes Ecological succession Food Chain vs Web Energy Pyramid Primary productivity Growth, K –r selection Cycles – N C O H 2 O Predator / Prey.

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Ecology AP Readiness

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  1. Ecology AP Readiness Mr. Snider Sherman Oaks CES socesbio.com – download this ppt

  2. Biotic and Abiotic factors Wind circulation Biomes Ecological succession Food Chain vs Web Energy Pyramid Primary productivity Growth, K –r selection Cycles – N C O H2O Predator / Prey Past essays 2010 A + B 2009 A 2008 A (2) + B 2007 A + B Topics

  3. Biotic and Abiotic factors • Biotic – Living Abiotic - Nonliving • Plant – Producers Primary importance • Fungus Bacteria – Decomposers 2 imp. • Animal – Consumers 3 imp. • Temperature - average & range • Rainfall – average and monthly • Soil type – thick, thin, material • Sunlight – direct, length of day (season)

  4. 2010 B

  5. Why do deserts form? • Cool dry air moves down, expands, absorbs moisture • Driven by global wind circulation • Also mountain affects – Sonora, Gobi

  6. Climatograph 2 data sets – 1 temperature (C); 1 rainfall (mm) Different graphs have different scales - Caution

  7. Desert • Less than 30 cm rain • Cold or Warm (30ͦ ) • Cacti, succulents • Hawks, snakes, lizards • Scorpions, rodents

  8. Rainforest – Tropical • Broadleaf evergreen, epiphytes: orchids, bromeliads • Rainfall over 200-400 cm • Temp - hot 25-29 C • Big cat, big snake, colorful birds, primate Most diverse • Thin soil – nutrients in plants • Near equator – 12 hr sun, daily afternoon rain

  9. Rainforest – Tropical Dry • Rain 150-200 cm • Temp 25-29 C • Seasonal dry, wet • Monsoons –heavy seasonal rains • India • Tiger, Asian elephant

  10. Savanna – tropical grassland • Low rain 30-50 cm • Short wet winter, long dry summer • Fire renewed • Grasses, shrub, acacia & boabab tree • Lions, cheetah, zebra, hyena, elephant (Lion King) • Thick soil

  11. Chaparral- Mediterranean Shrub • Long dry summer, Short wet winter • Fire renewed • Temperate • Low rain 30-50 cm • Herby plants, shrubs, small trees • Deer, goat, birds, insect, amphibians, reptiles • Us- SoCal

  12. Temperate grassland – Prairie, steppes • Seasonal temp– cold winters, hot summers • Seasonal rain, high summer, wet winter • Grass, forbs • Fire renewed • Buffalo, horse, deer, antelope (O Give me) • Burrowers – prairie dog • Deep, fertile soil

  13. Cold winters, warm summers Seasonal rains Fertile soil Maple, Oak, beech trees Deer, bears, wolverines Temperate broadleaf forest

  14. Long cold winter, short summer Low precipitation Fir, Spruce Deer, bear Northern coniferous forest - Taiga

  15. Permafrost layer Caribou, reindeer, arctic – fox, owl, wolf, lemmings Mosses, grasses Very low precipitation Dark 3 months of year Tundra (+ Alpine)

  16. Succesion • Pioneer orgainism – lichen • Primary – lichen, moss, grass, shrub, conifer, hardwood • Secondary – Fire: return to grasses • Ex. Mt. St Helens • Pond – buildup, convert to swamp then grassland

  17. 2008 A

  18. Chain vs web • Food chain – simple: who eats who • Food web – complicated: who everone is related to; if weighted, arrows different thicknesses • Reality – web; testable - chain

  19. Energy Pyramid ~ 10% added to next level as biomass ~ 90% lost to environment as heat Not all at once, each process, enzyme, mechanical energy loses up to 80% Origin of Energy – Sun ?%

  20. Autotroph – own energy Heterotroph – other energy Internal – animal External – fungus Producer Consumer (levels below) Decomposer Herbivore – plant only Omnivore – both Carnivore – meat only Saprobe – decomposer Vocab

  21. 2009 A

  22. 2007 A • Compared with other terrestrial biomes, deserts have extremely low productivity. • Discuss how temperature, soil composition and annual precipitation limit productivity in deserts • Describe a four organism food chain that might characterize a desert community, and identify the trophic level of each organism • Describe the results depicted in the graph. Explain one anatomical difference and one physiological difference between species A and B that account for the CO2 uptake patterns shown. Discuss the evolutionary significance of each difference.

  23. 2007 B • The energy flow in ecosystems is based on the primary productivity of autotrophs • Discuss the energy flow through an ecosystem and the relative efficiency with which it occurs • Discuss the impact of the following on energy flow on a global scale. • Deforestation • Global climate change

  24. K = carrying capaciity exponential growth in middle

  25. Populations • P=I+B-E-D • Populations= Immigration + Birth-Emigration-Death • Be able to calculate rates • Ex. What is the population after 5 years if the initial population is 5000 flying monkeys, the birth rate is 1/250 monkey per year, death rate is 1/500 monkeys per year, immigration is 10 monkeys per year and emigration is 50 monkies to Oz?

  26. Long lived Parental care common Fewer offspring Narrow distribution Delayed reproduction Short lived Little parental care Many offspring Wide distribution Rapid reproduction R K Answer is 4850 flying monkeys – run away

  27. 2008 A

  28. Dissolved O2 saturation graph Higher temp= lower saturation How to suffocate a fish w/o removing O2 directly – heat the water

  29. 2008 B

  30. Nitrogen Cycle – Bacteria rock

  31. Carbon Cycle

  32. Water cycle

  33. Delayed increase due to reproduction and delayed decrease due to starvation

  34. Predator prey

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