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Bio.2.1.1 Analyze the flow of energy and cycling of matter (water, carbon, nitrogen and oxygen) through ecosystems relating the significance of each to maintaining the health and sustainability of an ecosystem. Bio.2.1.3 Explain various ways organisms interact with each other (including predation, competition, parasitism, mutualism) and with their environments resulting in stability within ecosystems.
Organisms that can mate an produce fertile offspring • species
Group of the same organisms in an area • population
All interacting populations in an area • community
All biotic and abiotic factors in an area • ecosystem
Place in order from smallest to largest: ecosystem, species, community, population • Species • Population • Community • Ecosystem
Permanent relationship between 2 organisms • symbiotic relationship
One organism is helped and the other is hurt • parasitism • Examples: • Tapeworms • Ticks • Fleas • Viruses
One organism is helped and one is unaffected • commensalism • Examples • orchids on trees • barnacles on a whale • Cyanobacteria on a polar bear
Both are helped • Mutualism • Examples • Lichens – algae and fungi • sea anemone and clownfish • Cleaner shrimp and sharks
Bio.2.1.4 Explain why ecosystems can be relatively stable over hundreds or thousands of years, even though populations may fluctuate (emphasizing availability of food, availability of shelter, number of predators and disease).
Which does the ecosystem have to have more of at first? _____ What happens to the prey population as predators increase? ______ Prey Prey would decrease
Non-living factors in environment • abiotic factors • Examples • Temperature • acidity of soil • Soil • Water • Oxygen • nutrients
Living factors in the environment • biotic factors • Examples • Animals • Plants • Bacteria • Fungi • Protists
The total number of species a population can support is the _____. It is reached because of ______. • carrying capacity • limiting factors
Resources, Disease, Predator/Prey are _______ limiting factors. • density-dependent
Extreme temperature changes, natural disasters, destruction of a habitat are ___limiting factor • density-independent
Increased birthrate and decreased death rate cause a population to ______. • increase
Which age bracket has the largest percentage of people? • 40-50 (baby boomers) This is a fairly stable population
Which sex in living longest? females
Predictable changes in a community overtime is called ______. It will continue until a ____is reached. • Succession • Climax community
Succession on rock like after a volcanic eruption of after a glacier recedes is called _________. • primary succession
The first organisms to grow are called the______. An example on rock is a ______. • pioneer species • lichen
Succession on soil is called ______. First organisms to grow are ___. • secondary succession • grasses and weeds
The three parts of a stable ecosystem are ____________. • Producers • Consumers • Decomposers
Organisms with the most energy in a food web are the ____. They have the greatest impact on the ecosystem because without them there would not be food and energy for the others. • Producers (autotrophs)
Producers primarily make their own food by the process of • photosynthesis
Producers take in the atmospheric gas _____ and produce _____ an organic compound and _____ which is released into the atmosphere. • carbon dioxide • Glucose • oxygen
All organisms take in the atmospheric gas ____and use it to break down ______ in the process called _________which releases ______. • Oxygen • Glucose • cellular respiration • carbon dioxide
Decomposers like ____ and ______ breakdown organic matter and put the nutrients back into the soil. • Bacteria • Fungi
Oxygen is necessary for ____, _____, and _______. • Respiration • Combustion • Decomposition
Carbon dioxide is necessary for ___________. • photosynthesis
The most abundant gas in the air you breathe is _____ but your body cannot process it to make ____ and _______. • Nitrogen • Proteins • nucleic acids
_____ in the soil convert nitrogen gas into the usable form of ammonia, nitrates, and nitrites so plants can use it. We get the correct form of nitrogen we need from the plants or animals that have eaten plants. • Bacteria
Water gets into the atmosphere by ____, _____, and ______. • Evaporation • Transpiration • Respiration
Who are the herbivores? Worm Snail rabbit
Who are the carnivores? Lizard eagle
Who are the producers? grass
Who are the primary consumers? Worm Snail Rabbit bird (when eating grass)
Who are the secondary consumers? bird (when eating the worm) Lizard eagle (when eating rabbit)
What happens if the bird population is reduced? Eagles eat more lizards and rabbits making them decrease Snail population increases
What trophic level does the lizard belong to? Third (count auto and heterotrophs)
If a toxin were introduced to the food web, which organism would it show up most in? eagle
Who are the autotrophs? grasses
Which component was left out of the food web? decomposers (if it was there, all arrows would point toward it)