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Ecology (Get out ISN we are taking notes). Homework Due Friday Lab reports due Friday Test Tuesday (study). The study of the interactions that take place among organisms and their environment. Biosphere. The part of Earth that supports life Top portion of Earth's crust
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Ecology (Get out ISN we are taking notes) Homework Due Friday Lab reports due Friday Test Tuesday (study)
The study of the interactions that take place among organisms and their environment
Biosphere • The part of Earth that supports life • Top portion of Earth's crust • All the waters that cover Earth's surface • Atmosphere that surrounds Earth.
Ecosystem • All the organisms living in an area and the nonliving features of their environment
Populations • All of the same species in an ecosystem www.intrasystems.gr www.nkf-mt.org.uk
Community • All the populations in an ecosystem
Competition • All living things compete for • Food • Space • Competition limits population growth www.opim.wharton.upenn.edu
Limiting Factors • Anything that restricts or controls the number of individuals in a population • Includes living and nonliving features of the ecosystem www.bahamascommerce.com
Carrying Capacity • The largest number of individuals of one species an ecosystem can support www.wwt.org.uk
Quiz Ecosystem Brain pop
Symbiosis • Any close relationship between species en.wikipedia.org
Mutualism • A relationship in which both species benefit Pollination www.biology.clc.uc.edu Cleaner fish Lichens: algae + fungus www.orn.mpg.de www4.tpgi.com.au
Commensalism • A relationship in which one species benefits and the other is neither helped nor harmed Shark & remora Barnacles on whale www.community.webshots.com www.cbu.edu
Parasitism • A relationship in which one organisms benefits and the other is harmed Mistletoe Tick www.wcosf.org www.oznet.ksu.edu
Cooperation • Organisms working together toward a common end or purpose http://special.newsroom.msu.edu http://forger.ca/
Predator - Prey • Predators are consumers that capture and eat other consumers, called prey http://www.uga.edu
Brain pop Relationships Gummy Bear Activity
Get out ISN both mini labs will go in there this is still Ecology notes Reminder Homework Due tomorrow! Lab re-writes due tomorrow if you got your back and made below a 70.
Natural Selection Charles Darwin Natural Selection-Determines which individuals have the best adaptations for reproductive success.
Biotic factor- The organisms in an ecosystem (living) • Abiotic factor- non-living things
What makes something“LIVING”? • Growth • Cells • Movement • Respiration • Complex chemical reactions (digestion, metabolism, muscle contraction, etc) • Reproduction
Habitat • The place in which an organism lives • provides the kinds of food and shelter, the temperature, and the amount of moisture the organism needs to survive
Biodiversity The diversity of life. The different organisms found on the Earth.
Autotrophs Autotrophs - often make their own food by using sunlight, photosynthesis, carbon dioxide, and water to form sugars which they can use for energy. Autotrophs are important because they are a food source for heterotrophs (consumers). Some examples of autotrophs include plants, algae, and even some bacteria.
Heterotrophs Heterotroph-an organism that depends on complex organic substances for nutrition.
Producers • Most are photosynthetic • Use light energy to produce food • Some are chemosynthetic • Use stored chemical energy to produce food • All producers are Autotrophic • Produce their own food for energy
Producers Plants Algae
Consumers • Heterotrophic • Consume other organisms as food for energy • Herbivores-eat only plants • Carnivores-eat only meat • Omnivores- eat plants and meat
Consumers • Detritivores-receive energy from dead organisms • Decomposers-responsible for decay and returning nutrients back into environment
Trophic Level and Energy Pyramid Each organism represents a trophic level on the energy pyramid.
Energy Transfer Only 10% of the energy from one trophic level is transferred to the next.
Food Chain Shows how each living organism obtains food. What eats what. Primary Consumer Producer Secondary Consumer
Succession • Natural, gradual changes in the types of species that live in an area; can be primary or secondary. • Primary – begins in a place without soil • Secondary – where soil already exists
Succession Series of environmental changes that occur in a predictable way. STEPS THAT OCCUR OVER TIME
Succession Time
Types Of Succession Primary Succession And Secondary Succession
Primary Succession Development of newly formed land where NO plants or animals have EVER lived.
HOW DOES NEW LAND GET FORMED • Volcano • Glaciers
The Island of SurtseyExample of Primary SuccessionNew LandFormed from an underwater volcano
Newly formed Island of Surtsey, Iceland On November 15, 1963, an island was born.
Aerial view of Surtsey years later. What could the green area be?
Secondary SuccessionNew plant life that occurs after all plant life has been destroyed.