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Adaptations, Environmental Change and the Carbon Dioxide – Oxygen Cycle Summative Review Test: Thursday, April 13th Carbon Dioxide-Oxygen Cycle Plants and animals are linked for survival through the carbon dioxide – oxygen cycle. Plants undergo photosynthesis to make their own food. Plants need sunlight, water and carbon dioxide in order to go through photosynthesis. Plants give off oxygen during photosynthesis. Animals take in the oxygen from the plants and give off carbon dioxide. Plants take in the carbon dioxide from the animals and use it for photosynthesis. Add carbon to the atmosphere: Factories Cars Burning fossil fuels Erupting volcanoes Animal respiration Burning wood Cutting down trees Oxygen: Planting more trees increases oxygen Plants remove carbon dioxide from the air Environmental Changes Overhunting and overfishing can harm or destroy populations of organisms. o Example: On the East Coast, fish called cod used to be very common. Overfishing caused these populations to decline so much that they are now very rare in these areas. The larger predatory fish that depended on these fish had to move or find other sources of food. Humans can also accidentally introduce new organisms into ecosystems. These organisms can use up food, space, and water that other organisms need. These animals or plants are called invasive species. They often grow faster or use food that the native species depended on. o For example, an Asian Tiger Shrimp was introduced to waters here in the United States. It is causing native shrimp populations to decline. The Tiger Shrimp grows to be larger, eats more, and grows faster than the populations that grow naturally in those waters. If species are removed from an ecosystem, then it can change the food web. The organisms that eat that species would have to find another food source. o For example, if rabbits were removed from a prairie animals like coyotes might starve or have to find another food source. The coyote population might decrease. The grasses that the rabbits eat would overgrow without the rabbits to eat them. Humans use Earth’s resources. We take up space, grow and eat food, breathe air, use energy, and produce waste. Humans have a greater effect on their environment than ever before. o For example, humans sometimes drain wetlands to build houses and other structures. They sometimes turn fields into landfills for trash. These changes may help humans find shelter and get rid of waste, but they can harm the other living things in the surrounding environment. They might also build roads through forests which would harm animals. Animals change their environment too. o For example, beavers build dams in streams. This can cause a large lake to form which would give fish more room to live. Adaptations Plants: Obtain Water: long root systems that spread out or go deep Conserve Water: leaves with hair to shade plant, small and leathery to keep from losing water, seasonal leaves that grow after it rains or no leaves at all Obtain sunlight: large in size, turn with movement of the sun Protection: spines, poisonous or taste bad, bacteria on spines Stay Warm: dark color to absorb heat, small size, grow in clumps Animals: Food o Type of teeth to eat meat, plants or both o Beaks: Cracking seeds catching food in Water with pouch tearing and eating meat Movement o Feet: Swimming perching o nectar digging hooves for Protecting feet Tails: thick strong tails for balancing and protection, long thin tails for swinging in trees Protection o Mimicry- resemble another organism that is poisonous or harmful o Camouflage- blend in with their environment o Body Coverings- fur, blubber, scales (protect against cold or hot) o Awareness of Surroundings- antennae, whiskers, eyesight, hearing o Warning colors Vocabulary to Know: Migration: the seasonal movement of animals from one place to another Hibernation: when an animal becomes still in an enclosed space and reduces bodily functions to save energy Mimicry: the resemblance of an organism to another organism or to its surroundings that gives it a better chance of survival