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Warm up. What is an ecosystem? What is a community?. Warm up. What is an ecosystem? What is a community? One of the main points about an ecosystem is the interaction between biotic and abiotic factors. A community is groups of populations interacting with one another.
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Warm up • What is an ecosystem? • What is a community?
Warm up • What is an ecosystem? • What is a community? • One of the main points about an ecosystem is the interaction between biotic and abiotic factors. • A community is groups of populations interacting with one another.
Investigation 4, Part 2 Mono Lake Food Web
Objective • Students will understand food webs as evidenced by completing an accurate portrayal of the Mono Lake Food web
Mono Lake • One way the organisms in the Mono Lake system interact is by eating each other. (Nom, nom….Lunch!) • This is called a feeding relationship. • I have sets of cards of important organisms from Mono Lake. • Each card contains: • Photo • Common and scientific name • Life cycle and population dynamics • How it gets food • It’s role in the ecosystem
Mono Lake Cards • Organize the cards, picture side up. • Use the arrow strips to show feeding relationships between the organisms. (Who eats who?) • Every organism should be included in this chart. • If an organism is involved in more than one feeding relationship, indicate that with more than one arrow
Arrow Direction • Do spiders and flies have a feeding relationship? • Who gets eaten? • How do you represent that relationship? • Fly Spider
Arrow Direction • Do spiders and flies have a feeding relationship? • Yes • Who gets eaten? • The spider eats the fly • Fly Spider • The arrow goes from the fly to the spider even though the spider eats the fly. The arrow represents the energy of the fly going into the spider.
Food Chain • In an ecosystem, many organisms survive by eating other organisms. • The benefits of the food eaten by one organism can then move to one and then another organism as each one is eaten. • The path that food takes from one to another organism is called a food chain.
Draw the arrows in: • Planktonicaglae Brine shrimp • California Gull Coyote
Food Web • I saw lots of organisms in your groups that were connected by more than one arrow. • Some organisms like phalaropes eat more than one organism. • Some organisms like brine shrimp are eaten by many organisms. • When you connect all the arrows, the arrows cross each other in complicated ways. • A diagram that shows all the feeding relationships is called a food web.
Types of Organisms Questions • What types of organisms do not eat other organisms? • How do they survive with out eating? • Organisms that make their own food are producers. They make food that is consumed in an ecosystem. • In the Mono Lake ecosystem, the producers are algae.
Types of Organisms Answers • What types of organisms do not eat other organisms? • The two kinds of algae • How do they survive with out eating? • All living things need food/energy to survive, so they must make their own. • Organisms that make their own food are producers. They make food that is consumed in an ecosystem. • In the Mono Lake ecosystem, the producers are algae.
Types of Organisms • Producers like algae make their own food, but animals like brine shrimp and gulls do not. • How do brine shrimp and gulls get food? • Organisms that eat other organisms are called consumers.
There are many types of Consumers: • Take out your journal and jot some notes about these: • Primary or first level consumers • Secondary or second level consumers • Tertiary or third level consumers • Fourth Level consumers
Types of Consumers • Consumers that eat producers are primary or first-level consumers. • Which animal is the primary consumer?
Consumers that eat primary or first-level consumers are secondary of second-level consumers.
Consumers that eat secondary or second-level consumers are tertiary or third-level consumers.
Consumers that eat tertiary or third-level consumers are fourth-level consumers. • And so on……..
Another Type of organism • Some things never get eaten. • They die natural deaths. • These dead organisms are broken down and consumed by microorganisms called decomposers. • Bacteria and fungi are decomposers. • Everything that is not eaten by a consumer is eventually eaten by a decomposer.
Revisit your Food Web • This time show the LEVEL of the organisms in your web. • Producers on the bottom. • Primary consumers are the next level up, etc…
Some are Tricky • Red-necked phalaropes • Eat both brine shrimp and brine flies making them secondary consumers. • Also eat planktonic algae making them primary consumers.
Another Tricky example • California gulls • Eat mostly brine shrimp and flies. • Given the chance will eat eggs and chicks of snowy plovers and Caspian terns.
Question: • How can we show these dual roles on our charts? • What about decomposers? How should we show them?
Finish up Lab sheet 21.
Wrap up • Let’s talk about the questions on the sheet