General Ecology Terms 1. Biotic of or relating to life; caused or produced by living beings. Ex....

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General Ecology Terms 1. Biotic of or relating to life; caused or produced by living beings. Ex. plants, animals, any organism. 2. Community all the populations of organisms living in a given area. 3. Consumer There are two kinds: Primary consumers are organisms that eat plants. Secondary consumers are organisms that eat animals that eat plants. Also called carnivores. 4. Decomposers An organism that feeds on dead material and causes its mechanical or chemical breakdown. For example: Fungi and bacteria are decomposers. 5. Ecosystem All the living organisms interacting with each other and the non-living characteristics of an area. 6. Habitat A native environment of an animal or plant which provides food, water, shelter and space suitable to its needs. 7. Limited factor The condition which inhibits the expansion of a species. 8. Populations individuals of one species that occupies a particular geographic area 9. Producer Green plants that produce their own food from soil and sunlight. 10. Succession The gradual change of one community by another.

Transcript of General Ecology Terms 1. Biotic of or relating to life; caused or produced by living beings. Ex....

General Ecology Terms1. Biotic of or relating to life; caused or produced by living beings. Ex. plants,

animals, any organism.2. Community all the populations of organisms living in a given area.3. Consumer There are two kinds: Primary consumers are organisms that eat

plants. Secondary consumers are organisms that eat animals that eat plants. Also called carnivores.

4. Decomposers An organism that feeds on dead material and causes its mechanical or chemical breakdown. For example: Fungi and bacteria are decomposers.

5. Ecosystem All the living organisms interacting with each other and the non-living characteristics of an area.

6. Habitat A native environment of an animal or plant which provides food, water, shelter and space suitable to its needs.

7. Limited factor The condition which inhibits the expansion of a species.8. Populations individuals of one species that occupies a particular geographic area 9. Producer Green plants that produce their own food from soil and sunlight.10. Succession The gradual change of one community by another.

Ecology Terms

11. organic Pertaining to compounds containing carbon. Also refers to living things or the materials made by living things.

12. inorganic Not containing carbon. Not from living things. Ex., minerals, water, oxygen, etc.

13. biosphere The portion of the earth and its atmosphere in which living organisms exist or that is capable of supporting life.

14. heterotroph "eats others." An organism that must consume other organisms to fuel its metabolism

15. autotroph "self eater." Organisms capable of producing their own food.

Ecology

branch of science concerned with the interrelationship of organisms and their environments.

Photosynthesis & Chemosynthesis

Producer Green plants that produce their own food from soil and sunlight

autotroph "self eater." Organisms capable of producing their own food.

Food Chain food chain/food web All

the interactions of predator and prey, included along with the exchange of nutrients into and out of the soil. These interactions connect the various members of an ecosystem, and describe how energy passes from one organism to another.

Food Web

Ecological Pyramids Ecologist use

ecological pyramids to represent the energy relationships among trophic levels.

There are 3 types of ecological pyramids.

Pyramid of Energy A pyramid of

energy the total amount of incoming energy at each successive level.

Notice that energy (in the form of heat) is lost going from one trophic level to another.

Pyramid of Biomass A pyramid of biomass

show the total mass of living tissue at each level.

This pyramid of biomass shows for example, that a large amount of grass is needed to feed a single rabbit and a large number of rabbits is needed to nourish a single hawk.

Pyramid of Numbers A pyramid of numbers

illustrates the total number of organisms at each level

In a grassland, for

example, a large amount of grass (producers) is needed to support the herbivores (primary consumers).

“However”

2000 grass plants25 voles1 barn owl

Pyramid of Numbers pyramids of numbers do not

always appear as pyramids. Look at this one

If the producer (in this example an oak tree) is a large plant, then the number of primary consumers which feed on the producer (caterpillars in this example) will be much larger in numbers.

Water Cycle

Carbon and Oxygen Cycle

Phosphorus cycle

Nitrogen Cycle79% of the air is nitrogen

Denitrification: When nitrogen in compounds is released into the air

Nitrification the oxidation of ammonium compounds in dead organic material into nitrates and nitrites by soil bacteria (making nitrogen available to plants)

Nitrogen fixation the assimilation of atmospheric nitrogen by soil bacteria and its release for plant use

Biotic Factors Biotic relating to, or

caused by living organisms

Biotic factor Factors such as parasitism, disease, competition and predation (one animal eating another) would also be classified as biotic factors.

Abiotic Factors refers to nonliving

objects, substances or processes.

: The abiotic factors of the environment include light, temperature, and atmospheric gases.

Symbiosis - Organisms and their interactions with other organisms

Parasitism-relationship in which one species, the parasite, benefits at the expense of the other, the host

Symbiosis- Mutualism

An association between organisms of two different species in which each member benefits

Symbiosis - Commensalism

relationship between two organisms of different species in which one derives some benefit while the other is unaffected.

Succession The gradual and

orderly process of change in an ecosystem brought about by the progressive replacement of one community by another until a stable climax community is established.  

* Lichens*

Pond Succesion

Mount St. Helens

1982

19822002

Growth of Populations To study the

relationships between organisms, ecologists need to know how organisms change over time. How many individuals are born? How many die? How many organisms live in an area at any given time? To answer these questions, ecologist study populations.

Exponential growth

Growth is accelerating. When introduced into a favorable environment with an abundance of resources, a small population may undergo geometric, or exponential growth.

Logistic Growth When growth encounters

environmental resistance, (competition, predation, parasitism, crowding and death due to natural disasters) populations experience an S-shaped or logistic growth curve.

Limiting Factors

Density Dependent Factors Become limiting only when the population density (the number

of organism per unit area) reaches a certain level. These factors operate most strongly when a population is large

and dense They do not affect small, scattered populations greatly.

Predation

Density Independent Factors

Affect all populations in similar ways, regardless of the population size

Unusual weather, natural disasters, seasonal cycle, and certain human activities, such as damming rivers and clear-cutting forests are all examples of density-independent limiting factors

Tsunami

Using Your Conservation Project Answer the following Questions.

1. Identify four different populations.

2. Identify four biotic factors.

3. Name one primary consumer.

4. Identify two autotrophs.

5. Identify two heterotrophs.

6. Identify four abiotic factors.

7. Identify four organic items.

8. Name one secondary consumer.

9. Identify two producers.

10. Identify four inorganic items.

11. Identify two decomposers.

12. Using 4 organisms illustrate a basic food chain.

13. Using 10 organisms illustrate a basic food web.

14. Using 4 organisms illustrate a energy pyramid.

15. Explain the problem that is causing your environment to be destroyed. (at least 20 words)