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Intro to Ecology

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Intro to Ecology. Ch. 18.1 Intro to Ecology. Ecology is the study of the interactions between organisms and the living and nonliving components of their environment. Key Ecology Concepts: Interdependence Levels of Organization Energy Transfer Biogeochemical Cycles - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Intro to Ecology
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Page 1: Intro to Ecology

Intro to Ecology

Page 2: Intro to Ecology

Ch. 18.1 Intro to EcologyEcology is the study of the interactions between organisms and the living and nonliving components of their environment.

Key Ecology Concepts:InterdependenceLevels of OrganizationEnergy TransferBiogeochemical CyclesProperties of PopulationsSpecies InteractionsSuccessionTerrestrial & Aquatic EcosystemsHuman Impact

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Levels of Organization

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Ch. 18.2 Ecology of Organisms

Components of an Ecosystem:

Habitat- the place where an organism lives.

Biotic Factors- living parts of the environment.Abiotic Factors- nonliving parts of the environment.

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Organisms in a changing environment:

How organisms survive within a limited range of environmental conditions (abiotic factors):

Tolerance Curve Model

Organisms can adjust their tolerance to the factors by acclimating.

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Control of Internal Conditions:Environments fluctuate in their various abiotic factors. How do organisms respond?

Conformers- do not regulate their internal conditions; depend on their external environment. Example: reptiles

Regulators- use energy to control their internal conditions. Example: mammals

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Escape from Unsuitable Conditions:

1. Organisms only being active during certain parts of the day. Example: Desert animals

2. Dormancy- long term strategy where the organism goes in to a state of inactivity. Example: bears hibernating

3. Migration- organism moving to a more favorable habitat.

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NicheNiche describes the role an organism has within its environment. Examples: conditions the organism can live in; resources it uses; methods it uses to obtain resources; # of offspring it produces; reproduction time; all other interactions with the environment.

Generalists- species with a broad niche. Example: opossum

Specialist- species that have narrow niches. Example: koala, panda

Page 9: Intro to Ecology

Chapter 18.3 Energy TransferProducers- organisms that can produce their own food; also called autotrophs. Examples: plants, bacteria, protists.

Bacteria use the process of chemosynthesis; use energy in inorganic molecules to produce carbohydrates.

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Consumers- heterotrophs that must obtain energy by consuming other organisms.

1. Herbivores

2. Carnivores

3. Omnivores

4. DetritivoresDecomposers

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Energy Flow

Trophic Levels represent position of an organism within food chains and food webs.

As steps within a food chain/web increase, only 10% of the available energy is passed to the next organism. Because of the rapid decrease in available energy, trophic levels are limited.

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Ch. 18.4 Ecosystem RecyclingBiogeochemical Cycles- how water, carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, calcium, and sulfur pass between living organisms and nonliving structures.

Organisms need these substances to grow and survive, but the substances need to be in a certain form to be useful. The cycles of these substances convert them in to usable forms.

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Water Cycle

-evaporation-transpiration-condensation-precipitation-percolation

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Carbon Cycle

-photosynthesis-cell respiration-decomposition-combustion

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Nitrogen Cycle

Nitrogen Fixation: converting nitrogen gas using bacteria to a usable form (nitrates).

Recycling Nitrogen from Decomposition:1. Ammonification (NH3 to NH4

+)

2. Nitrification (NH4+ to nitrates)

Denitrification (nitrates to N2)

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Phosphorus Cycle


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