Ecology Notes - wadsworth.k12.oh.us

64
Ecology Environmental Interactions

Transcript of Ecology Notes - wadsworth.k12.oh.us

Page 1: Ecology Notes - wadsworth.k12.oh.us

Ecology Environmental Interactions

Page 2: Ecology Notes - wadsworth.k12.oh.us

What is ecology?

• “Eco”= environment, house

• “Ology”= study of

• Ecology- the scientific study of interactions

among organisms and their environment or

surroundings

• The study of ecology looks primarily at the

biosphere, or area where all life exists.

• “Bio”= Life

• “Sphere”= circle, zone

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How do we organize and group

life?

• A species is a group of organisms so

similar to one another that they can

breed and produce fertile offspring

• A species is the most specific grouping

of life

• Example= grey wolf

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• All the wolves that live in one area

would be called a population, or group

of individuals that belong to the same

species and live in the same area.

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• If we wanted to look at all the

different populations that live

in an area, we would be

looking at a community, or the

assemblage of different

populations that live together

in a defined area.

• Keep in mind that a

community only involves the

living, or biotic factors!!

Ex. All the animals and plants in a

forest

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Bringing it all together…

• The next level of

organization is the

ecosystem.

- In an ecosystem, we

study a collection of all

the living organisms that

live in a particular place

together with their

nonliving, or abiotic,

environment.

Ex. Forests

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The final step…

• The final and largest level of

organization (excluding the biosphere),

is the biome.

• Biomes are groups of ecosystems that

have the same climate and similar

dominant communities…

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Biomes of the World…

• Tropical Rainforest

• Tropical Dry Forest

• Tropical Savanna

• Temperate Grassland

• Desert

• Temperate woodland and scrublands

• Temperate Forest

• Northwestern coniferous forest

• Boreal Forest (Tiaga)

• Tundra

• Mountains and Ice Caps

• Bodies of Water

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What makes them unique and

different from one another?

• Location around the globe

• Climate

• Dominant plant and animal species

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Tropical Rainforest

– Climate: hot, wet

– Soil: thin, poor

– biodiversity: high

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Tropical Dry Forest

– Climate: warm, alternating wet and dry

– Soil: rich

– biodiversity: average

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Tropical Savanna

– Climate: warm, seasonal rainfall

– Soil: compact

– biodiversity: average

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Deserts

– Climate: variable temps., low rainfall

– Soil: rich in minerals, poor in organics

– biodiversity: average to low

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Temperate Grasslands

– Climate: warm summers and cold winters,

moderate precipitation

– Soil: fertile

– biodiversity: average

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Temperate Woodland and

shrubland

– Climate: warm, dry summers and cold,

moist winters

– Soil: thin, poor

– biodiversity: average

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Temperate Forest

– Climate: warm summers and cold winters,

year round precipitation

– Soil: fertile

– biodiversity: average

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Northwestern Coniferous Forest

– Climate: mild temperatures, abundant

precipitation fall, winter, and spring

– Soil: rocky, acidic

– biodiversity: average

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Boreal Forest

– Climate: mild summers and long, cold

winters, moderate precipitation

– Soil: acidic, poor

– biodiversity: average

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Tundra

– Climate: short, soggy summers and long,

dark, cold winters, low precipitation

– Soil: poorly developed, permafrost

– biodiversity: low

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And the rest…

• Mountains

• Ice Caps

• Aquatic Biomes

– Oceans

– Lakes

– Rivers

– Ponds

– Etc.

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Energy Flow Through an

Ecosystem

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Ways of acquiring energy

• Autotrophs- can make their own

energy by converting the energy of the

sun into food. These organisms are

also called producers.

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Acquiring Energy Con’d

• Heterotrophs- Organisms that get

their energy by consuming other

organisms. Also known as

consumers.

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Can an organism be both???

• YES!!!

– Venus flytrap

– sun dew

– Pitcher plant

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One more way to “power up”

• Chemotrophs are able to combine

different chemical compound (without

light) to make power. This process is

called chemosynthesis.

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How they all interact…

• When an organism obtains energy by

eating only plants, it is called a

herbivore…

• If they eat only meat, they are

carnivores…

• Eating plants and meat make an

organism an omnivore…

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Bottom Feeders…

• Detritivores feed on the remains of

plants and animals along with other

dead material called detritus.

• This includes worms, snails, mites,

and….

crabs

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“Stinky dead animals,” brought

to you by…

• Decomposers- break down organic

matter

• Examples: bacteria, fungus

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Putting them all together…

• Feeding relationships are shown using

two different graphs, food chains and

food webs.

– Food chains show a series of steps in

which organisms transfer energy by

eating and being eaten.

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Webs…

• Food webs are a network of complex

interactions that show feeding

relationships.

– Webs are better at showing actual

interactions on a large scale

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The levels of organization

• Each step in a food chain is called a

trophic level.

• They go as follows: Top level carnivores

1st level carnivores

herbivores

producers

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Trophic levels

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Trophic levels con’d

• Available energy at each level is

shown on an ecological pyramid.

• Numbers represent percentage of

original sunlight energy still available

for use…

• Available energy: – Producers= 100%

– Herbivores (primary consumers)= 10%

– 1st level carnivores (2ndary consumers)= 1%

– 2nd level carnivores (tertiary consumers)= .1%

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Ecological pyramid

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Community Interactions

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A few terms…

• Biotic factors- biological (living)

influences on organisms within an

ecosystem • Ex. Trees, birds, people, etc.

• Abiotic factors- physical, or nonliving,

factors that shape ecosystems • Ex. Rivers, wind, soil, temperature, etc.

• Habitat- the area where an organism

lives

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More terms…

• Niche- the full range of physical and

biological conditions in which an

organism lives and the way the

organism uses those conditions

– Baseball players – Each person on the field has a job and a specific

place to do that job, that is their “niche”

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Resources

• Resources are necessities of life and

include water, nutrients, light, food and

space.

– What happens if two organisms both want

to use the same resources??

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Resources

• This idea that no two species can

occupy the same niche in the same

habitat is called the competitive

exclusion principle.

• Though no two organisms can occupy

the same niche, they do interact in

many different ways.

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Forms of interaction

• Predation- one organism captures and

feeds on another

• Symbiosis- any relationship where

two organisms live closely together

– Forms of symbiosis:

• Mutualism

• Commensalism

• Parasitism

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Mutualism (+/+)

• This type of symbiosis provides a

benefit for both organisms involved

– Ex. Bees and flowers, hummingbird and

flowers, etc.

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Commensalism (+/neutral)

• This type of symbiosis provides a

benefit for one organism involved but

doesn’t harm or help the other

organism

– Ex. Whales and barnacles, orchids and

trees, etc.

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Parasitism (+/-)

• This type of symbiosis provides a

benefit for one organism involved but

harms the other organism

– Ex. Dog and flea, people and mosquitoes,

etc.

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How do populations grow?

• - Populations are constantly changing

in number. A few ways this happens

are:

– Deaths

– Births

– Immigration

– Emigration

• All of these factors control the

population density, or number of

individuals per unit of area…

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• Immigration (+)- the movement of an

individual into an area. Population

increases

• Emigration (-)- the movement of an

individual out of an area. Population

decreases

• One cannot happen without the other

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In what ways do populations

grow?

• If unlimited resources are available, a

population will grow at an exponential

rate, or without limitation and at a

constant rate.

– growth starts at a low number but

increases quickly

• Example: a single bacterium lands on your

food, has offspring, who have offspring, who

have offspring and so on doubling their

numbers every 20 minutes

• a few become many...

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Growth continued

• If for some reason resources do

become limited, our bacteria would

switch to a pattern of logistical growth,

or a time where a population’s growth

slows or stops after a period of

exponential growth.

– Could be caused be high death rate, low

birth rate, limited resources, etc.

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Carrying Capacity

• All growth is controlled by

an imaginary number

called the carrying

capacity.

– Carrying capacity is the

maximum population

number an area can

support long term.

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Ecological Succession

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Changes over time…

• What is ecological succession?

– A series of predictable changes that

occurs in a community over time.

• As an ecosystem changes, older inhabitants

gradually die out and new organisms move in

causing further changes to the community

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Primary Succession

• Succession that takes place where no soil

previously existed is called primary

succession.

– Soil is created through the weathering of rock

and breakdown of organic material

• May happen after a volcano or glacier

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Primary succession

• The 1st species to populate this newly

created soil is called a pioneer

species.

– These species add organic material to the

nutrient poor soil as they die.

• Ex. Lichen (fungus + algae)

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Secondary succession

• Succession that takes place following a

disturbance that destroys a community

without destroying the soil is called

secondary succession.

– What kind of disasters might do this??

• Floods, fires, hurricanes, tornadoes, etc.

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Nutrient Cycling

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Nutrients

• Nutrients are nature’s building blocks,

or all the chemical compounds that an

organism needs to sustain life.

• Essential nutrients include:

– Carbon - Iron

– Nitrogen - Zinc

– Phosphorus - Potassium

– Oxygen - Fluorine

– Hydrogen - Calcium

– Magnesium - many, many, others!!

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Limited nutrients

• When an ecosystem is limited by a

single nutrient that is scarce or cycles

very slowly, that substance is called

the limiting nutrient.

– Three of the most common limiting

nutrients are:

• Nitrogen

• Potassium

• Phoshporus

– How do farmers deal with this problem??

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Productivity

• Limiting nutrients along with overall

nutrient availability affect an

ecosystem’s primary productivity.

– This is the rate at which producers in the

ecosystem make organic matter

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Cycling nutrients

• Matter is recycled between and within ecosystems.

What kinds of matter?

– Water

– Carbon

– Nitrogen

– phosphorus

• Biogeochemical cycles are the pathways that

elements, compounds, and other forms of matter

are passed from one organism to another or from

one area to another.

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The Water Cycle

Moving H2O

• - Water is carried from the

clouds to ground through

precipitation.

• - As it moves across the

ground, some is taken back to

a gaseous form through

evaporation.

• - Plants lose small amounts of

water through transpiration.

• - As water accumulates, it

forms back into liquid water by

the process of condensation.

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The Carbon Cycle

• A large percentage of carbon is found in the

atmosphere as CO2

• CO2 is collected by plants and turned into organic

tissue during the process of photosynthesis.

• This organic matter is eaten, broken down, and

given off as waste CO2 and returned to the

atmosphere

– It can also be burnt, which also gives off CO2

• When organisms die, the carbon stored in their

bodies returns to the atmosphere as CO2 as they

decay and returned to the soil as they decompose.

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