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Populations and Ecosystems. Science for Teachers. Ecology. Study of the relationships between organisms ( biotic ) and their nonliving ( abiotic ) environment. Biotic Factors. Abiotic Factors. Nonliving part of the environment Soil Water rocks Climate Temperature Air Sunlight.
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Populations and Ecosystems Science for Teachers
Ecology • Study of the relationships between organisms (biotic) and their nonliving (abiotic) environment
Biotic Factors Abiotic Factors Nonliving part of the environment Soil Water rocks Climate Temperature Air Sunlight • Living part of the environment • Plants • Animals • Fungi • Bacteria • Protists
Habitat • Where an organism lives • Organism’s home • Describe various habitats • Adaptations
Niche • Organism‘s way of life • How the organism fits into its environment
Levels of Organization • Organism—single complete living thing
Levels of Organization • Population—group of individuals of the same species that live in the same area
Levels of Organization • Community—all the populations of different species that live in an area
Levels of Organization • Ecosystem—all of the organisms that live in a particular place along with the nonliving, physical environment
Levels of Organization • Biosphere—all the living an nonliving things on Earth
Producers • Autotrophs • Organisms that use energy from sunlight or chemicals to produce their own food • Includes plants, algae, and some bacteria
Consumers • Heterotrophs • Organisms that cannot make their own food • includes animals, fungi, and bacteria
Types of Consumers • Herbivores—eat only plants • Cows, caterpillars, deer • Carnivores—eat only animals • Wolves, owls, lions • Onmivores—eat both plants and animals • Humans, bears, crows
Decomposers • Breaks down dead organisms for food • Recycles nutrients • Includes fungi and bacteria
Food chain • Shows who eats whom in an ecosystem • Steps that show the transfer of energy
Food Web • Several connected food chains • Aquatic • Terrestrial
Food Web Stress • Overgrazing • Overpopulation • Natural Disaster • Non-native species • Human impact • Positive • Negative
Competition • Organisms of the same or different species attempt to use the same resources
Carrying Capacity • Largest number of individuals of a population that a given environment can support
Limiting Factors • Causes the growth of a population to decrease • Factor that restricts the number of individuals in a population • Food • Space • Water • Shelter
Relationships • Predator-prey • Parasitism • Mutualism • Commensalism • Interdependence
Survival • Living • Extinct • Endangered • http://www.agfc.com/wildlife-conservation/endangered.aspx#list