Ecology Chapters 3-6Chapters 3-6 1 Organisms and their environments 2.

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Transcript of Ecology Chapters 3-6Chapters 3-6 1 Organisms and their environments 2.

EcologyEcologyChapters 3-6Chapters 3-6

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Organisms and their Organisms and their environmentsenvironments

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What is ecology?

• Study of interactions among organisms and their environments

• Includes relationships between living and nonliving

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Aspects of ecologyAspects of ecology

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Biosphere

• Portion of the Earth that supports life

• Extends from high in the atmosphere to the bottoms of the oceans

• Thin, but diverse

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Abiotic factors

• Nonliving parts of the environment

• Air currents, temperature, moisture, light, soil

• Determine which species can live in an area

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Biotic factors

• Living parts of the environment

• All organisms inhabiting an environment

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Levels of organizationLevels of organizationDependence on others for food, shelter, reproduction, or protectionDependence on others for food, shelter, reproduction, or protection

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Species

• A group of organisms that can interbreed and produce fertile offspring

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Population

• All organisms of the same species inhabiting a certain area

• May compete for food, water, or other resources

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• Some species have adaptations that decrease competition• Different forms during development frogs

• Different colors for closely related species cichlid fish

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Community

• Collection of interacting populations in a certain area

• Changes in one population causes changes in others

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Ecosystems

• Interactions of biotic and abiotic factors in a certain area

• Terrestrial, freshwater, marine

• Energy flows between populations and the environment self-sustaining

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Organisms in Organisms in ecosystemsecosystems

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Habitat

• Place where an organism lives

• Contains organisms of different species

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Niche

• Role and position of species in an environment

• How it meets it’s needs food, shelter, reproduction

• Includes interactions with biotic and abiotic factors

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Niche cont.

• One species = one niche

• Advantageous decrease in competition

• Competition arises with overlapping niches

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Predator/prey relationships

• Predators are carnivores and omnivores

• Prey are herbivores

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SymbiosisSymbiosis Relationships in which there exists a close association among organisms of Relationships in which there exists a close association among organisms of different speciesdifferent species

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Commensalism

• One species benefits and the other neither benefits or is harmed

• Sharks and pilot fish

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Mutualism

• Both species benefit

• Ants and acacia trees

• Humans and bacteria

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Parasitism

• One species benefits and the other is harmed

• Dogs and fleas

• Humans and tapeworms

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Symbiosis: a review

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Nutrition and energy Nutrition and energy flowflow

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How organisms obtain How organisms obtain energyenergy

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Autotrophs producers

• Use energy to synthesize their own nutrients

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Phototrophs use energy from the sun

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Producers

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Chemotrophs use energy from chemical compounds

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Heterotrophs consumers

• Obtain energy and nutrients from the environment

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Herbivores plants only

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Carnivores animals only

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Omnivores both plants and animals

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Scavengers carrion and refuse (clean-up)

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Decomposers break down dead and decaying organic matter (recycle nutrients)

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Matter and energy flowMatter and energy flow

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Food chains patterns of flow

• The arrows indicate the direction of energy flow• Grass Mouse Owl

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• Energy is lost at each level in the form of heat food chains only have up to 5 levels

• Levels are called trophic levels

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Food webs represent all possible feeding relationships

• Made of overlapping food chains

• More realistic most organisms depend on more than one species for food

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Ecological pyramids

• Show relative amounts of energy or matter by trophic level

• Initial source of energy is the sun

• 10% rule only 10% of the available energy is passed from one trophic level to the next

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Energy Pyramid:

Shows the relative amount of energy available at each trophic level.Only part of the energy that is stored in one trophic level is passed on to the next level.

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Natural cyclesNatural cyclesRecycling of matter and energyRecycling of matter and energy

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Water cycle pattern of water movement

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Carbon cycle

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Nitrogen cycle

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Communities Communities

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Living in the communityLiving in the community

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Limiting factors

• Biotic or abiotic factors that restrict numbers, reproduction, or distribution of organisms

• Through interdependence, factors that limit organisms populations may have an indirect effect on another

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Limiting factors:

• Food availability

• Predators

• Moisture

• Soil pH

• Sunlight

• Temperature

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Ranges of tolerance

• Ability to withstand fluctuations in limiting factors

• Varies between species and individuals

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SuccessionSuccession Natural changes and species replacements taking place in an ecosystemNatural changes and species replacements taking place in an ecosystem

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Occurs in stages

• May take decades or centuries

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Primary succession new sites

• Pioneer species first to arrive• Colonize bare rock turns to soil

• Lichens and mosses

• Thin soil allows grasses soil gets deeper

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Primary succession cont.

• Grasses give way to shrubs deeper soil

• Eventually trees can colonize

• Climax community stable, mature community that changes little• Disrupted only by natural disasters

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Secondary succession

• Soil present

• Sites devastated by natural disasters or human intervention

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• Faster than primary

• Pioneer species are different

• Can also happen to ponds

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Biomes Biomes Large groups of ecosystems sharing the same type of climax communitiesLarge groups of ecosystems sharing the same type of climax communities

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Aquatic biomesAquatic biomesMarine and freshwater (75%)Marine and freshwater (75%)

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Marine biome 97% (largest)

• Contains largest amounts of biomass plankton

• Most stable (unchanging) biome

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Freshwater biome 3%

• Lakes only top few feet warmed by sun• Limiting factor

• Decomposers at bottom recycle nutrients

• Running water contains more O2

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Estuaries

• Mixing of fresh and saltwater

• Salinity changes with tide increases biodiversity

• Used as breeding grounds by many species

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Terrestrial biomesTerrestrial biomes

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Tundra

• Circles the poles, tops of mountains

• Treeless thin soil supports only grasses and shrubs

• Cold temperatures slow decay slow nutrient recycling

• Short growing season limiting factor• Permafrost permanently frozen ground

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Taiga (coniferous forest)

• Just south of the tundra

• Cone-bearing trees• Pine, fir, hemlock, and spruce

• Warmer and wetter than the tundra

• Harsh winters, short and mild summers

• No permafrost

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Desert driest

• Sparse plant life

• Plant adaptations:• Spines instead of leaves

• Extensive root systems

• Rapid growth and development

• Thick tissue water conservation

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Grassland interior of continents

• Not enough rainfall to support trees

• Includes prairies, steppes, and savannas

• Largest terrestrial biome

• Breadbaskets fertile soil

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Temperate deciduous forest

• We live here!

• Broad-leaved hardwood trees that lose their leaves annually

• Soil composed of top layer (humus) and bottom layer (clay)

• More rainfall than taiga

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Tropical rainforest

• Warm, wet, constant temperature and humidity

• Highest in biodiversity• Year-round growing conditions

• Multitude of possible habitats

• Soil poor in nutrients quickly absorbed by plants

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Population biologyPopulation biology

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Principles of population growth

• Population growth increase in size of population over time

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Not linear J-shaped curve

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Exponential growth

• As population increases, growth rate increases• Initial growth is slow due to small number of reproducing

organisms

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Principles cont.

• Limiting factors eventually stop growth• Food supply

• Living space

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Carrying capacity

• Number of organisms of 1 species the environment can support• Under births exceed deaths

• Over deaths exceed births

• Would be infinite without limiting factors

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Carrying Capacity

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Patterns of reproductive Patterns of reproductive growthgrowthDepend on environmental conditionsDepend on environmental conditions

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Unpredictable environments rapid life histories

• Small body size

• Rapid growth and development

• Early reproduction

• Short life-span

• Mice

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Stable environments slower

• Large body size

• Slow growth and development

• Reproduce slowly

• Long life-span

• Sea turtles

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Environmental limitsEnvironmental limits

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Density-dependent factors

• Increased effects as population size increases

• Disease

• Competition

• Parasites

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Density-independent factors

• Not related to population size

• Temperature

• Droughts

• Storms

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Organism interactions Organism interactions limit population sizelimit population size

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Predation

• Both predator and prey populations show a cycle of increases and decreases over time

• Cuts down on competition for resources

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Effects of crowding and stress

• Competition causes stress

• Results:• Aggression

• Decreased parental care

• Decreased fertility

• Decreased resistance to disease

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Human population Human population growthgrowth

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Demography

• Study of human population growth characteristics

• Growth rate, age structure, geographic distribution

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• Has been increasing exponentially over the last few hundred years

• Elimination of competition, increased food supply, disease control

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Effects of birthrates and death rates

• Growth = birthrate – death rate

• Can provide clues to a country’s growth

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Effects of age structure

• Rapid growth higher number of younger people

• China vs. Japan

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Effects of mobility

• Immigration moving into a population

• Emigration moving out of a population

• No effect of world population

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Biological Diversity and Biological Diversity and ConservationConservation

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Biodiversity variety of life in an area

• Tropical regions 2/3 of all land species

• Important due to species interdependence• Effects on 1 population cascade to others

• Predator-prey relationships

• Symbiotic relationships

• Biodiversity brings stability

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Importance to humans

• Plants cycle O2 and CO2

• Diverse diet

• Provides basis for new species of agriculture

• Improve health digitalis and other medicines

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Loss of biodiversityLoss of biodiversity

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Threatened species

• Population size is decreasing rapidly

• African elephant, loggerhead turtles

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Endangered species

• Population size is so low that extinction is possible

• Florida manatees, California condors, peregrine falcon

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Extinction

• Disappearance of a species

• Due to natural processes and human activity

• Passenger pigeon, dodo

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Threats to biodiversityThreats to biodiversity

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Habitat loss

• Razing forests for agriculture or construction

• Mining coral reefs for building materials or jewelry

• Overgrazing land

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Habitat fragmentation

• Separation of wilderness areas from other wilderness areas

• Like islands lose biodiversity due to isolation

• Clearing land or building roads

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Biotic issues

Not enough food for large predators migrationOften species can’t reestablish themselves

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Abiotic issues

• Can change climate

• Dust Bowl in Oklahoma

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Habitat degradationHabitat degradationDamage by pollutionDamage by pollution

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Global warming

• Increase in global temperature due to high atmospheric CO2 levels

• Pollution and overpopulation

• Gradual melting of polar ice caps and change in global climate

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Acid rain

• Precipitation with low pH

• Sulfur and nitrogen from industry combine with atmospheric water vapor to form sulfuric and nitric acids

• Damages plant tissues

• Changes acidity of soil and lakes

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Effects of acid rain

Habitat destruction Defamation of man-made artifacts

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Chlorofluorocarbons CFCs

• Break down ozone layer

• Gradual increase in damaging solar radiation

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Fertilizers and animal wastes

• Washed into large bodies of water by runoff

• Cause algal blooms

• Destruction of coral reefs

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Effects of algal blooms

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Solid wastes

• Landfills

• Take up space

• Pollute soil and ground water

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Landfills

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Pesticides

• Get into the food chain and harm other animals

• DDT and the American bald eagle

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Biological Magnification

• Toxins increase in concentration in organisms at higher trophic levels

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Introduction of exotic species

• No natural predators

• Out-compete native species

• Zebra mussels, purple loosestrife

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Strategies of Strategies of conservation biologyconservation biology

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Legal protection of species

• Endangered Species Act 1973• Prohibits trade of endangered or threatened species

• Clean Water/Air Acts

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Preserving habitats

• Nature preserves and national parks

• Habitat corridors strips of protected land used by migratory animals

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Reintroduction programs

• Release organisms into areas where the species once lived

• Not always successful• Expensive

• Animals become domesticated

• Gray wolf

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Captivity

• Permanent zoos

• Temporary rehabilitation centers (Sea World)

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Alternative energy sources

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The End!The End!146