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Keystone. Ecology Review. Levels of Organization. Ecosystem—biotic & abiotic Community—all biotic factors Pollution—only one group (species) of organisms. Comparing Biotic and Abiotic Factors. Biotic—all living or once living organisms Abiotic —all non living factors.
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Keystone Ecology Review
Levels of Organization • Ecosystem—biotic & abiotic • Community—all biotic factors • Pollution—only one group (species) of organisms
Comparing Biotic and Abiotic Factors Biotic—all living or once living organisms Abiotic—all non living factors
Food Chain in an Antarctic Ecosystem • A food chain shows ONE possible feeding pathway. • The arrow always goes into the mouth of the eater
Food Web in an Antarctic Ecosystem • A food web shows all possible feeding relationships in a ecosystem
Energy Transfer Through Trophic Levels • Only 10% of energy from each level is available to be passed on to the next level. • Most of it gets used or lost as heat. That’s why more organisms on bottom than top
Symbiosis—close, long term relationship b/w to organisms (at least one benefits Parasitism, mutualism, commensalism
Parasitism The parasite benefits while the host is hurt
Mutualism • Both organisms benefit
Commensalism • One benefits while the other is neither hurt nor helped
Water Cycle • Key processes are • Evaporation • Transpiration • Precipitation
Carbon Cycle Photosynthesis & Respiration are the two main steps
Nitrogen Cycle • Nitrogen fixing bacteria change nitrogen gas into a useable form for nitrogen for plants (& then animals) • Denitrification puts nitrogen gas back into the atmosphere
Phosphorus Cycle Phosphorous moves from phosphate deposited in rocks , to the soil, to living organisms and finally to the ocean
Succession—gradual sequential regrowth of a community of a species in a area Two Types: Primary Secondary
Primary Succession Occurs where the land has not supported any prior life, bare rock, newly formed islands (soil lacks nutrients or any life left behind)
Secondary Succession Occurs where soil has previously existed and some life is still left behind.
Carrying capacity— number of individuals the environment can sustain • Limiting factor— any factor the restrains the growth of a population (space, sunlight, food, water, mates)