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Chapter 1 . Interactions of Living Things. Make a list of all the things that are found in a pond ecosystem Which of the things are living and which are nonliving?. Bellringer. All living things are connected in a web of life .
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Chapter 1 Interactions of Living Things
Make a list of all the things that are found in a pond ecosystem Which of the things are living and which are nonliving? Bellringer
All living things are connected in a web of life. Ecology is the study of the interactions of organisms with one another and with their environment. Section 1: Everything is Connected
Biotic – all of the organisms that live together and interact with one another in an environment • Abiotic – the part of the environment that consists of nonliving factors Two Parts to an Environment:
The 5 Levels of Organization of the Environment • The organism – one single individual living in an environment
A Population – A group of similar organisms in the same species that live together
A Community – all of the populations of species that live and interact in an area
An Ecosystem – made up of a community of organisms and the abiotic environment of the community
Find examples of each level of organization in this Salt marsh environment
Section 2 Living Things Need Energy
Bellringer • This is a flowering plant called Indian Pipe. It has no chlorophyll or chloroplasts. • Can this plant still be a producer? • If not, where does it get the energy to survive?
All living things need energy to survive. Organisms can be divided into three groups based on how they get their energy:
Producers – organisms that use sunlight directly to make food using a process called photosynthesis • Most are plants but also includes algae and some bacteria • Examples: Grasses, algae, trees
Consumers – Organisms that eat other organisms • There are several kinds of consumers:
1)Herbivore – only eats plantsExamples: grasshoppers, prairie dogs, bison
2) Carnivore– only eats animalsExamples: coyotes, hawks, badgers, owls
3) Omnivores – eat both plants and animals • Examples: grasshopper mouse, humans • Scavengers are omnivores that eat dead plants and animals. • Examples:turkey vulture
Decomposers – organisms that get energy by breaking down dead organisms • Examples: bacteria and fungi • Remove stored energy from dead organisms • They produce simple materials such as water and carbon dioxide which can be used by other living things • Decomposers are important because they are nature’s recyclers!
A food chain is a diagram that shows how energy in food flows from one organism to another Food Chains and Food Webs
A food web is a diagram that shows the feeding relationships between organisms in an ecosystem
An arrow goes from one animal to the next, showing where energy is going. The arrows point toward who is receiving the energy, or who is doing the eating. • Example above: Energy is moving from the grass, to the mouse, to the owl. Or the grass is eaten by the mouse, and the mouse is eaten by the owl. `
An Energy Pyramid is a triangular diagram that shows an ecosystem’s loss of energy, which results as energy passes through the ecosystem’s food chain. • An energy pyramid has a large base and a small top • Less energy is available at higher levels because only energy stored in the tissues of an organism can be transferred to the next level.
One species can be very important to the flow of energy in an environment • Example is Gray Wolves • Wolves are at the “top of the food chain” which means they are consumers that control a lot of other populations because they prey on large animals • When the gray wolf population declined, other species, such as elk, were no longer controlled • This led to overgrazing • This led to lack of food for the elk and all other species dependent on the grass for food. • Soon almost all of the populations in the area were affected by the loss of the gray wolves • In 1995 Gray Wolves were reintroduced in an attempt to restore the natural energy flow, bringing populations back into balance. Wolves and the Energy Pyramid
Balance in Ecosystems • As the wolf population returns, they will reduce the number of elk, which will allow more plants to grow, so the numbers in populations of animals that eat the plants will increase.
Section 3 Types of Interactions
Make a list of predators that are also prey Bellringer
Most living things produce more offspring than will survive. • Example: Frogs lay hundreds of eggs. Why don’t ponds and such become overrun with frogs? • An organism, such as the frog, will interact with abiotic and biotic factors that can control population size. Interactions with the Environment
Limiting Factors • Populations cannot grow without stopping because the environment contains a limited about of food, water, living space, and other resources • Limiting factors – resource that is so scarce that it limits population size
Carrying Capacity • Carrying capacity – the largest population that an environment can support • If a population becomes larger than its carrying capacity, limiting factors cause individuals to leave or die
Four Main Ways that Species and Individuals affect each other are: Interactions Between Organisms
Competition – when two or more individuals or populations try to use the same resource such as food, water, shelter, space or sunlight. • Occurs between individuals within a population • Example: elks competing for food in the winter • Also happens between populations • Example: different types of trees competing for sunlight
Predators and Prey • The organism that is eaten is the prey • The organisms that eats the prey is called the predator • Example: When a bird eats a worm, the bird is the predator and the worm is the prey
Predator Adaptations – any characteristic that makes a predator better at catching prey
Prey Adaptations – any characteristic that keeps prey from being eaten
Defensive Chemicals: • skunk or beetle smells, • the acid of bees, ants, wasps, and • deadly toxins on the skin of some animals like a poison arrow frog
Warning coloration – A physical advertisement that predators should look for another meal; • predators will avoid any animal that has the colors and patterns they associate with pain, illness, or unpleasant experiences. • The most common warning colors are bright shades of red, yellow, orange, black, and white Locust Borer (beetle) Yellow Jacket
Symbiosis – a close, long-term association between two or more species • Individuals in a symbiotic relationship can benefit from, be unaffected by, or be harmed by the relationship
There are 3 groups of Symbiotic Relationships: • Mutualism – symbiotic relationship in which both organisms benefit • Example: Bacteria living in your intestines Clown Fish and Sea Anemone
Commensalism – A symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits and the other is unaffected • Example: sharks and remoras
Parasitism – A symbiotic association in which one organism benefits while the other is harmed • The organism that benefits is the parasite • The organism that is harmed is the host • The parasite gets nourishment while the host is weakened • Sometimes a host dies • Example: Mosquito and human
Coevolution – When a long-term change takes place in two species because of their close interactions with one another • Example: the ant and the acacia tree • Takes place between any organisms that live close together, but changes happen over a very long period of time
Coevolution and Flowers • A pollinator is an organism that carries pollen from one flower to another • Flowers have changed over millions of years to attract pollinators • Because flowers and their pollinators have interacted so closely over millions of years, there are many examples of coevolution between them.