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Biodiversity Ecological Systems Ecology is the study of living things and the way they interact with the physical environment. Understanding this is important in determining what role organisms play in the Earth’s system and how to sustain them for future generations. Ecologist- Someone who studies the interactions of the living and non-living world. Careers • Environmental Consultant • Research Scientist • Professor Biotic- Any living or once living organism including plants, animals, bacteria and fungi. Abiotic- Any nonliving factors of the environment that interact with the biotic world. They include air, water, rocks, soil, minerals, temperature & light. Organism: Organisms that can breed together and produce fertile offspring. Population: A group of the same species that live in a specific area. Community: The interaction of different populations that live in a particular area. Habitat- An organism’s specific food, water, shelter and space requirements needed for an organism to survive. Ecosystem The interaction of a community of organisms with the abiotic factors in a specific area. The size of an ecosystem varies depending on the region being studied. Aquatic Ecosystem-Water Based Terrestrial Ecosystem-Land Based Biosphere Life supporting portions of the Earth made up of air, land, fresh water, and salt water. Level of Organization Definition 1. Organism One of a species 2. Population All the members of one species in an area 3. Community All the members of the different interacting species in an area 4. Habitat An organism’s specific food, water, shelter and space requirements needed for an organism to survive. 5. Ecosystem All the members of a community plus the abiotic factors influencing them. 6. Biosphere Life supporting portions of Earth composed of air, land, fresh water, and salt water. Biodiversity Decomposers Not everything in the environment gets eaten. Many plants and animals die long before they become anyone else’s lunch. Trees shed their old leaves and animals leave droppings containing the indigestible parts of their food – such as plant fibers or bones. The dead organisms are still vital to life, because they contains chemicals that are the basic building blocks of all living things. These chemicals get recycled into the environment with the help of organisms called decomposers. Decomposers consume and break down dead organisms. Valuable nutrients to be recycled into the ecosystems. Decomposers can live on any soil with an organic component, and even live in marine ecosystems where they are sometimes called bottom feeders. Earthworms digest rotting plant and animal matter as they ingest soil. The waste that comes out of their bodies at the other end contains the important minerals, all ready for plants to take up again. Scavengers are decomposing organisms that feed on larger detritus or dead organisms. Examples are • Vultures • Insects • Crabs Scavenger: Mosquito feeding on a leaf Scavenger: Eagles feeding on detritus Many decomposer species such as bacteria, fungi and protists are unable to ingest large lumps of matter; instead they live by absorbing and metabolizing nutrients on a molecular scale. Bacteria are tiny, microscopic organisms. Some kinds live on other living things – for instance, there are millions inside your gut helping you to digest your food. Others live on dead things, and help break them down into the minerals in the soil. Fungi release chemicals to break down dead plants or animals into simple substances. They absorb some of these substances for growth, but others are released back into the environment. Fungi Biodiversity Ecological Systems Food Chain: • Used to show how matter and energy is transferred from producers, consumers. Food Web: • A diagram that more completely shows the transfer of matter and energy within an ecosystem. It shows how many organisms are connected. Flow of Energy: • The arrows in a food chain or food web indicate the flow of energy from one organism to the next. Food Web Ecologists study how energy moves through an ecosystem by assigning organisms in that ecosystem to a specific level. Biotic Pyramid: • A graphic organizer based on the organism’s source of energy. 1st trophic level: • Producers (plants and plankton) 2nd trophic level: • Primary Consumers (herbivores) 3rd trophic level: • Secondary Consumers (carnivores/omnivores) 4th trophic level: • Tertiary Consumers (higher level consumers) Decomposers can be assigned to either end of the energy pyramid. Decomposers break down producers and consumers at all trophic levels. Whenever one organism eats another, chemical energy in the form of matter is transferred to a higher trophic level. A large portion of the energy cannot be used by the consumer so the majority is “lost” at each level. When it is “lost” it is transformed into heat or given off as waste. Because energy is lost, each level cannot support as many organisms as the level before it.