440 likes | 448 Views
Explore the study of living and nonliving parts of ecosystems and how they interact with each other. Discover abiotic and biotic factors, different biomes, habitats, food chains, food pyramids, and ecological relationships.
E N D
ECOLOGY Study of living & nonliving parts of an ecosystem (environment) & how they interact w/one another
I. 2 parts of Ecology A. Abiotic – nonliving; ex. Sun, water, temp., land, soil, air, humidity B. Biotic – living; plants (producers), animals (consumers – herbivores (plant-eaters), omnivores (both), & carnivores (meat-eaters) and decomposers (bacteria, fungi)
II. Biome – large area w/ characteristic plants, animals & conditions A. Tropical Rainforest – warm, lots of rain, plants/vines, insects, animals
B. Coniferous Forest – cool temps., conifers, (evergreens), deer, elk
C. Deciduous Forest – seasons, deciduous trees (lose leaves in fall), deer, raccoons; Kentucky
E. Tundra – cold, permafrost (permanently frozen soil), lichens, mosses, polar bears
F. Desert – DRY, many are hot during day & cold at night, cacti, reptiles, nocturnal animals
III. Habitat – physical area in which an organism lives (smaller) • Niche – way of life of a species; ex. Habitat, feeding habits, other habits, reproductive behavior What is the wolf’s niche?
B. Population – many organisms of the same species in an area; ex. all people, rabbits, trees, etc.
C. Community – many populations in an area; ex. all the deer, rabbits, trees, etc.
D. Food chains – shows energy in a habitat; what eats what; ex. grass grasshopper frog snake hawk
E. Food Pyramid – takes organisms from a food chain & puts them in a pyramid ex.
Quaternary cons. Tertiary cons. Secondary cons. Primary consumer Producer
90% energy lost at each level due to: Movement Digestion Respiration Excretion Reproduction Growth
Energy lost 10 90 100 900 1000 9000 10,000 90,000 100,000
Food Pyramid shows: • What eats what • Need more organisms at bottom to support things above it • More energy at bottom/less at top • Lose energy (90%) at each level
F. Food Web – many food chains linked together; shows interactions of all organisms in a community
G.Competition – use or defense of a resource by one individual that reduces the availability of the resource to other individuals; ex. Organisms compete for food, space oxygen shelter, etc. (called limiting factors) These two species are in direct competition for food.
H. Relationships 1. predator – organism that feeds upon another 2. prey – organism that is eaten
3. parasitism – one organism benefits while the other is harmed; ex. leeches 4. commensalism – one organism benefits & the other is unaffected; ex. clown fish live in anemones (remember Finding Nemo) because other fish avoid the stinging tentacles 5. Mutualism – both benefit; ex. flowers and bees
I. Carrying Capacity – the maximum # of organisms an area can hold
J. Community Changes: succession – series of changes that take place in a community as it ages 1.Land: grasses shrubs trees (climax community)
K. Biochemical Cycles 1. Water cycle: evaporation, transpiration, precipitation, condensation
3. Nitrogen cycle: Nitrogen “fixed” to usable form (nitrogen fixation)to form proteins