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Interactions in ecosystem. Populations in Ecosystems. A population is a group of organisms that belong to the same species and lives in a particular place at the same time. Abundance – the number of individuals. Density – how crowded. Number of organisms per unit area.
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Populations in Ecosystems • A population is a group of organisms that belong to the same species and lives in a particular place at the same time. • Abundance – the number of individuals. • Density – how crowded. Number of organisms per unit area.
What influences a population? Death rate Birth rate Life expectancy
Populations constantly fluctuate, particularly populations that are linked in a predator prey relationship. • Predator – uses another organism as a food source. • Prey - an organism that is eaten as a food source.
Interrelationships among Organisms • Some organisms compete for the same resources, and live together in a community, so have words to describe the relationships between organisms:
SYMBIOSIS • Where two different species live together in a close association. • The association benefits at least one of them and the other is not disadvantaged. • There are two common types of symbiosis
MUTUALISMA relationship between two organisms in which both benefit. • The alga and fungus make up lichen . • The alga provides food and oxygen for photosynthesis. • The fungus provides the moist environment necessary for the alga.
All grazing herbivores rely on symbiotic bacteria or protozoa in their digestive system. • Bacteria in the digestive system can digest cellulose. • The bacteria have a habitat with a constant environment and amply supply of food. • The kangaroo obtains access to an additional food source.
COMMENSALISMA relationship between two organisms in which only one benefits and the other is unaffected. • The anemone fish and the sea anemone • The anemone fish live among the tentacles and gain protection from predators. • The anemone appears to receive no benefit.
Aphids are small, soft-bodied, near defenseless insects that feed on plant sap. They feed by inserting a pointed, strawlike mouth structure called a stylus into the vascular tissues (internal piping) of the plant and sucking the plant juices out. Plant sap, a combination of water and sugars, is low in other nutrients, however, and the aphid must process a great deal of plant sap in order to get the amino acids and other nutrients it needs. Most of the sugars and water, therefore, are excreted as waste through a pair of structures called cornicles located near the rearend of the insect.
The remora fish & the shark • The remora gains a free ride and feeds on scraps from the shark’s food but appears to be of no service to the sharks.
PARASITISM • A relationship in which one organism lives in or on another and feeds from it. • The organism in which a parasite lives in or on is called the host. • Well adapted parasites cause little harm to their host. Their host remains healthy and able to provide them with a habitat and food.
Tapeworm • Many tapeworms live attached to the lining of the digestive system of their host animal and absorb digested food without casing any serious harm.
HYDATIDS • Other parasites irritate their host and some cause disease which can kill their host. Disease causing parasites are called pathogens.
Food webs • Energy in an ecosystem originally comes from the sun • Energy flows through Ecosystems from producers to consumers • Producers (make food) • Consumers (use food by eating producers or other consumers)
Feeding Relationships Energy flows through an ecosystem in one direction from producers to various levels of consumers
Feeding Relationships • Food Chain • Simple Energy path through an ecosystem • Food Web • More realistic path through an ecosystem made of many food chains
Name the Producer, Consumers & Decomposers in this food chain:
Food Chain 3rd Order consumer 2nd Order Consumer 1st order Consumer 4th Order Consumer Producer(trapped sunlight & stored food)
Niche of a Producer • Captures energy and transforms it into organic, stored energy for the use of living organisms. • May be photoautotrophs using light energy (e.g. plants) • May be chemoautotrophs using chemical energy (e.g. cyanobacteria)
Producers • Sunlight is the main source of energy for most life on earth. • Producers contain chlorophyll & can use energy directly from the sun
Consumers Heterotrophs eat other organisms to obtain energy. • Omnivores (Humans) • Eat Plants & Animals • Detritivores (Scavengers) • Feed On Dead Plant & Animal Remains (buzzards) • Decomposers • Fungi & Bacteria
Trophic Levels • Carnivores/Omnivores • Make Up The Remaining Trophic Levels Each level depends on the one below it for energy.
Trophic Levels Each Level In A Food Chain or Food Web is a Trophic Level. • Producers • Always The First Trophic Level • How Energy Enters The System • Herbivores • Second Trophic Level
Consumers Heterotrophs eat other organisms to obtain energy. (e.g. animals) • Herbivores • Eat Only Plants • Carnivores • Eat Only Other Animals
Photoautotroph Producer That Captures Energy from the sun by: • Photosynthesis • Adds Oxygen to the atmosphere • Removes Carbon Dioxide from the Atmosphere Algae
Autotrophs • An Autotroph is any organism that can produce its own food supply! • Autotrophs are also called Producers • Plants, algae, some protists, & some bacteria are examples
Ecological Pyramids Graphic Representations Of The Relative Amounts of Energy or Matter At Each Trophic Level May be: Energy Pyramid Biomass Pyramid Pyramid of Numbers
Biomass Pyramid Biomass – All organic material in an ecosystem.
Natural Cycling of Ecosystems Ecosystems are important because of the way that they are cyclic in terms of resources and nutrients We can track the flow of these things through the ecosystem by studying different cycles: -- Water cycle -- Carbon Cycle -- Nitrogen Cycle -- Oxygen Cycle -- Energy cycle -- this includes food webs, chains, and pyramids
www.globalchange.umich.edu/.../image001.jpg • www.sci.sdsu.edu/.../Lect21/Image296.gifhttp://io.uwinnipeg.ca/~simmons/16cm05/1116/53-x3-Commensalism.jpg