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Transcript
Name:_____________________________________________________Period:____Date:_______________
I. VOCABULARY:
_____________________- The scientific study of interaction between organism and their environments.
o Environments:
________________________–all the living organism that inhabit an environment
________________________– the nonliving parts of the environment
• Ex: air currents, temperature, moisture, light, and soil
______________________– is a group of organisms of one species that interbreed and live in the same
place at the same time
o Organisms compete for food, water, mates.
Determines how large each population can become
_____________________- The interacting system of a biological community and its nonliving
environment.
________________________– is a collection of interacting populations
o A change in one population in a community will cause changes in the other populations
__________________________- Place where an organism lives;
o Even in the same ecosystem, different organisms differ in their habitats.
II. SPECIES RELATIONSHIPS:
____________________- Organisms that produce their own food are called _________________.
o Ex: Plants
o all of the species of the ecosystem depend on autotrophs for nutrients and energy.
___________________________- They obtain food by eating other organisms.
o All the organisms that cannot make their own food (and need autotrophs) are
called____________________________.
o There are different levels of consumers:
Those that feed directly from producers, i.e. organisms that eat plant or plant products
are called___________________________.
How do you think we can classify consumers? ……Based on what they EAT!!
1. __________________________- consumer that eats only plants
Ex: grasshoppers, mice, rabbits, deer, beavers, moose, cows, sheep
2. ________________________________- consumer that eats only other animals.
Ex: Foxes, frogs, snakes, hawks, and spiders.
3. ________________________________– consumer that eats the remains of dead animals.
Ex: vultures, buzzards, crows, ants, beetles
1
4. __________________________- eats both plants (acting as primary consumers) and meat (acting as
secondary or tertiary consumers).
Ex: Bears --They eat insects, fish, moose, elk, deer, sheep as well as honey, grass
5. ________________________- organisms that break down the remains of other organisms.
o Found at the bottom of the food web.
Ex: Bacteria, yeast, fungi, worms and many insects
III. RELATIONSHIPS FOR SURVIVAL:
________________________– permanent, close association between two or more organisms of
different species
o 3 types:
1. ________________________– one species benefits and the
other species is neither harmed nor helped
Ex: an orchid growing on the branch of a larger plant
2. _______________________– relationship that is beneficial to
both species
Ex: acacia trees (provides food/shelter for ants) and ants
(protect tree by attacking any herbivore)
3. _______________________– one species benefits at the
expense of the other species
Ex: ticks, tapeworms live on or in the organism
IV. MATTER & ENERGY IN ECOSYSTEMS:
_______________________- Show one prey-predator relationship and how each
living thing gets its food.
o Some animals eat plants and some animals eat other animals.
o Ex: Trees/shrubs giraffes lions
o Each link in this chain is food for the next link.
o Always starts with plant life and ends with an animal.
o ____________________________-link represented by each organism
in a food chain;
Represents a feeding step in the transfer of ____________and matter in an ecosystem.
All energy in an ecosystem originates with
the___________.
Plants transform solar energy into chemical
energy (food) via photosynthesis
This is consumed by plant-eating animals, which
are in turn consumed as food.
The total energy transfer from one trophic level to the
next is only about _______, the other 90% is lost as
___________
2
Heat is lost by:
1. Organisms fail to capture and eat ________food available at the trophic level below them
2. Not all food that is captured and eaten __________________________
3. Digested food is _______________by the organism as a source of energy.
______________________- model used to express feeding relationship among the members of a
community.
o A group of interlinked ____________________
o Illustrates:
1. Who eats who?
2. ______________ = energy flow through the community
3. Functional feeding groups
4. Important ecological interactions
V. Differences between a food web & food chain:
1. ____________________ONLY show one prey-predator relationship. The source of food is also often
____________________with many animals adapting to changes in the season by eating different types
of food.
2. ____________________show a better picture of interrelationships between plants and animals.
VI. How Pollution Can Affect Organism:
__________________________= The process of increasing a chemical concentration through the food
chain (Examples: DDT and PCB)
o Animals that eat other animals have HIGHER levels of contaminants than animals that eat plants.
o Some contaminants are persistent - once they are in the animal's body, they stay there for a long time.
o So when smaller animals are eaten by bigger animals, all the contaminants stored in their tissues are
then ____________________to the bigger animal.
3
o The result of biomagnification is that animals ____________________________________
o The top predators at the end of a long food chain
may accumulate concentrations of a toxic chemical
high enough to cause serious deformities or death
even though the concentration of the chemical in the
open water is extremely low.
o The concentration of some chemicals in the fatty
tissues of top predators can be millions of times
higher than the concentration in the open water.
4
VII. Nutrient Cycles
The Water Cycle
1. Water cycles between the oceans, atmosphere and land.
A. Water enters the atmosphere as__________________________, a gas, when water evaporates from
the ocean or other bodies of water.
o
Evaporation—the process by which water changes from a _____________ to a __________.
B. Water can also enter the atmosphere by evaporating from the leaves of plants—Transpiration.
C. Precipitation--________________,___________________, ______________, or ___________
o
The sun heats the __________________________________.
o
Warm, moist air rises and cools.
o
Eventually, the water vapor condenses into tiny droplets that form __________________.
o
When the droplets become large enough, the water return to Earth’s surface.
D. Run-off—Precipitation runs along the surface of the ground until it enters a river or a stream that
carries the run-off back to an ________________ or lake.
E. Seepage—Rain also seeps into the soil, some of it deeply enough to become ___________________.
Water in the soil enters plants through the ________________________, and the water cycle begins
anew.
Condensation
Condensation
Precipitation
Transpiration
Seepage
Precipitation
Evaporation
Surface Run-
Ground Water
5
The Carbon Cycle
1. Every__________________________ molecule contains the element ___________________.
A. Carbon and oxygen form ___________________________ gas (CO2), an important component of the
_______________________________________.
B. Carbon dioxide is taken in by plants during ___________________________________ and is given
off by plants and animals during _________________________________.
•
Cellular respiration is a process where cells transform chemical energy (sugar) into a useable form of
energy (____________).
2. Four main types of processes move carbon through its cycle:
A. Biological processes, such as_________________________________, _______________________,
and ____________________________, take up and release carbon and oxygen.
B. Geochemical processes, such as ___________________ and volcanic activity, release carbon dioxide
into the atmosphere and oceans.
C. Mixed biogeochemical processes, such as the burial and decomposition of
________________________________________ and their conversion under pressure into _______
and ____________________________(fossil fuels), store carbon underground.
D. Human activities, such as ____________________, cutting and ___________________ forests, and
burning ___________________________ (car emissions, electricity), release carbon dioxide into the
atmosphere.
Burning of
Fossil Fuels
CO2 in Atmosphere
Cellular
Respiration
Coal and Petroleum
Decomposition of
dead organisms
Photosynthesis
6
The Nitrogen Cycle
1. All organisms require nitrogen to make ______________________, which in turn are used to build
_______________________.
A. Nitrogen gas makes up 78% of Earth’s _______________________________.
B. Nitrogen containing substances such as ____________________ (NH3), _________________ (NO2-),
and _____________________ (NO3-) are found in the wastes produced by many organisms and in
dead and _____________________organic matter.
C. Nitrate is major component of plant ________________________________.
2. Nitrogen gas is the most abundant form but only certain ______________________ can use this form.
A. Such bacteria live in the __________ and on the _______________ of plants.
B. These bacteria convert nitrogen gas into ammonium-- ______________________________________
C. Other bacteria in the soil convert ammonia into ________________and _______________.
3. Once the nitrites and nitrates are available,______________________ (plants) can use them to
make_________________________.
o
____________________then eat the producers and reuse the nitrogen to make their own proteins.
4. When organisms die, ________________________________return nitrogen to the soil as ammonia.
5. Other soil bacteria convert nitrates into nitrogen gas--_________________________________. This
process releases nitrogen into the atmosphere once again.
Nitrogen Gas in Atmosphere
Denitrification
Nitrogen
Fixation
Decomposers
return ammonia
to soil
Nitrates
(NO3-)
Nitrites
(NO2-)
7
VIII. A Change in Communities OVER Time: SUCCESSION
___________________= orderly, natural changes that take place in the communities of an ecosystem
o The community of organisms inhabiting an area ________________changes.
o __________________________________ since it can take decade or centuries for one type of
community to completely succeed another.
Figure 1: Succession of plant species on abandoned fields in North Carolina. Pioneer species
consist of a variety of annual plants. This successional stage is then followed by communities of
perennials and grasses, shrubs, softwood trees and shrubs, and finally hardwood trees and shrubs.
This succession takes about 120 years to go from the pioneer stage to the climax community.
___________________________________= establishment of a community in an area of exposed rock that
does not have any topsoil.
o Ex: ______________flowing from a volcano destroys everything in its path, but when it cools it
forms new land
o Ex: ________________gradually deposit silt along their banks, creating new soil in which plants
can take root.
o After some time, primary succession slows down, and the community becomes fairly_________.
A stable, mature community that undergoes little of NO succession is called
a________________________________.
_________________________________= the sequence of community changes that takes place when a
community is disrupted by natural disasters or human actions
Ex: Hurricanes, forest fires, farmers abandoning fields
IX. Biomes
____________________= a large group of ecosystems that share the same type of climax community
Two factors that will determine which biome will be dominant on land:
1. ____________________
2. ____________________
8
2) World Biomes:
1) ____________________________________
Characteristics: treeless, long cold winters, little winter sun, poor soil, little rain (less than
5 in)
__________________________________________– permanently frozen ground
Location: Canada, Russia, Alaska
Vegetation: grasses, moss, lichen
Animals: insects, fox, rodents, caribou, reindeer
2) ________________________________________
Characteristics: coniferous forest, poor soil, long severe winter
Location: Canada, N. Europe, N. Asia
Vegetation: pine, fir, hemlock, spruce
Animals: rabbits, lynx, caribou, moose, woodpecker
3) _________________________________________________(where we live!)
Characteristics: deciduous trees, 4 seasons, vegetation exhibits seasonal changes
o ___________________________________– trees lose leaves in winter
Location: East US, Europe
Vegetation: Maple, Oak, Birch, Hickory
Animals: bear, deer, robin, raccoon
4) _________________________________________________________________
Characteristics: warm, wet, humid, most diversity, up to 17 feet of rainfall annually
Location: islands, equatorial regions
Vegetation: broad lush plants, flowers, vines, palms, fruit trees
o lush with many layers in the canopy that support an incredible
___________________of life.
Animals: monkey, sloth, frogs, snakes, parrots
5) ___________________________________________________
Characteristics: ideal growing season, good soil quality, little precipitation does not
support trees, but grasses and herbs are present in great abundance.
Location: central regions
Types:
o Prairie – US
o Steppe – Russia
o Savanna – Serengeti
o Pampas - Argentina
Vegetation: grass, grains, crops, wildflowers
Animals: bison, prairie dogs, birds, lions, elephants
6) _________________________________________________
Characteristics: dry & arid, less than 10 in of rainfall
Location: SW US, N. Africa, Middle East
o Hot Deserts- Mojave, Sahara
o Cold Desert- Gobi
Vegetation: Plant cover is sparse, and characterized by drought tolerant brushes,
succulent (cacti, creosote bushes)
Animals: rodents(gerbils, jerboas and kangaroo rats), snakes, lizards, scorpions, turtles,
hawks
9
X. Population Dynamics
All species occur in groups called _________________________________________
______________________________________________ = factors that are biotic or abiotic that
keep a population from continuing to increase indefinitely
•
2 Types of Population-Limiting Factors:
density-independent factors
density-dependent factors
______________________________________________________ = Any factor in the environment that
does not depend on the number of members in a population per unit area
Usually ______________________ (natural phenomena)
Ex:
Weather events (tornadoes, floods, hurricanes)
Fire
Human alterations of the landscape
Air, land, and water pollution
______________________________________________________= Any factor in the environment that
depends on the number of members in a population per unit area
Usually _________________________
Ex:
Predation
Disease- (high population density--> disease quickly spreads)
Parasites
Competition – food, space limitations
The ______________________________________________________(PGR) explains how fast a given
population grows.
________________________________________________________occurs when the growth rate is
proportional to the size of the population.
__________ populations grow exponentially until some limiting factor slows the population’s
growth.
10
The population’s growth slows or stops following exponential growth, at the population’s
__________________________________________________.
A population stops increasing when the number of births is less than the number of deaths or
when emigration exceeds immigration.
____________________________________________ = The maximum number of individuals
in a species that an environment can support for the long term.
limited by the energy, water, oxygen, and nutrients available.
Population exceeds carrying capacity- deaths outnumber births because resources are not
available to support all individuals
11
Food Web Worksheet
Identify the:
1. Producers (2)
2. Primary Consumers (4)
3. Secondary Consumers (4)
4. Herbivores (3)
5. Carnivores (4)
6. Omnivores (1)
7. What elements are missing from this
food web? ______________________
8. All energy in an ecosystem originates with the _______________.
9. The total energy transfer form one tropic level to the next is only about _______%, the
other ______% is lost in the form of heat.
10. A tick feeds on the blood of a rabbit. What type of symbiosis is this? ________________
11. A squirrel eats the berries and spread the berry-plants seeds in its feces. What type of
symbiosis is this? ______________________________
12. Barnacles adhering to the skin of a whale. What type of symbiosis is this?
_________________
13. Look at the food web above. What would happen if a disease killed the entire grasshopper
population?
12
FARM AREA FOOD WEB & CHAIN:
Directions:
1) Construct a food web using the animals listed below in the box. This ecosystem represents a farm
area. The corn is the main source of food for many of the herbivores in the area. You do not have to
draw pictures; you can just use the animal names and draw arrows between them.
o CORN
o SNAKE (eats: mouse, squirrel)
o CATERPILLAR (eats: corn)
o DEER (eats: corn)
o CROW(eats: corn, snake, mouse, caterpillar)
o MOUSE (eats: corn, caterpillar)
o COUGAR (eats: deer, mouse, snake, squirrel)
o SQUIRREL (eats: corn)
o DECOMPOSERS (microorganisms)
2) What niche do the caterpillar, squirrel & deer have in this ecosystem? ____________________
3) What niche does the cougar have in this ecosystem? __________________________
4) Construct a food chain using 3 organisms from above (remember you must start with a producer!).
13
Populations Dynamics Worksheet
1) What is the difference between density-independent factors and density-dependent
factors?
2) List 2 density-independent factors.
a. ________________________________________
b. ________________________________________
3) List 2 density-dependent factors.
a. ________________________________________
b. ________________________________________
4) List 2 factors can limit the carrying capacity of a population?
a. ________________________________________
b. ________________________________________
5) Which type of population growth model does the graph on
the right represent? __________________
6) Using the graph below, why does the population growth level
off at 10,000?
14
Ecology Review Worksheet
Vocabulary Matching:
___1. Feeds on dead organisms
___2. Study of how living things relate to each other and to their
environment
___3. Step in the passage of energy and matter through an ecosystem
___4. Relationship between organisms in which one benefits and the other
is neither harmed nor benefited
___5. Relationship between organisms in which one organism benefits and
the other is harmed
___6. Breaks down dead organisms
___7. Simple model for showing how matter and energy move through an
ecosystem
___8. Place where an organisms spends its life
___9. The role an organism has in an ecosystem (carnivore, omnivore, etc)
___10. Manufactures food using energy from the sun; makes their own
food
A. food web
B. mutualism
C. succession
D. niche
E. heterotroph
F. commensalism
G. autotroph
H. scavenger
I. community
J. trophic level
K. decomposer
L. ecology
M. food chain
N. parasitism
O. habitat
P. carrying capacity
___11. Obtains energy and nutrients from autotrophs
___12. Network of interconnected food chains
___13. Group formed by several populations
___14. Relationship between organisms in which BOTH organisms benefit
___15. Orderly, natural changes that take place in the communities of an ecosystem
___16. The maximum number of individuals in a species that an environment can support for the long
term.
Short Answer: Provide the correct answers.
1) All energy originates with the ______________.
2) A stable, mature community that undergoes little or NO succession is called a
____________________________________________.
3) A forest fire destroys 10,000 acres of a forest and new grasses are starting to grow. This is an
example of______________________________________________.
4) _______________________________________ is the establishment of a community in an area
of exposed rock that does not have any topsoil.
5) The process of increasing a chemical concentration through the food chain is called
___________________________________.
15
6) A large group of ecosystems that shares the same type of climax community is called a
___________________.
7) The total energy transfer from one tropic level to another is about _______%.
8) List two biotic factors in an environment.
a. ____________________________________
b. ____________________________________
9) List two abiotic factors in an environment.
a. ____________________________________
b. ____________________________________
10) What two factors determine where each biome is located on the earth?
a. ____________________________________
b. ____________________________________
11) The clownfish has shelter in the sea anemone and the sea anemone get food that the fish brings.
What type of symbiosis is taking place between a clownfish and sea anemone? Why?
12) A tree provides a habitat for lichens, allowing it to receive ample sunlight. What type of symbiosis is
taking place between a tree and lichen? Why?
13) A dog is infected with heart worms that weaken the heart muscles. What type of symbiosis is taking
place between a dog and heart worm? Why?
14) Look at the following food chain: Plant
insect
a. How does energy flow in the food chain?
small bird
hawk
Biome Identification: Desert, Taiga, Tundra, Rainforest, Temperate Forest, Grassland
_______________________1. The biome where we live (Pennsylvania)
_______________________2. Has a lot of reptiles and rodents; succulents (cati)
_______________________3. Receives about 17 feet of rain per year!
_______________________4. Little precipitation; does not support trees, but grasses and herbs are
abundant
_______________________5. Vegetation exhibits 4 seasonal changes
_______________________6. Lies below the tundra and has different species of fir and spruce trees
_______________________7. Permafrost is present
16
Unit Learning Map (7 days):
Ecology
Mrs. Hostetter
Class: Biology B: PA standard: 3.3.10: Explain the structural an functional similarities
and differences found among living things
Optional
Instructional Tools:
Unit Essential Question(s):
Biome Project
How are organisms
affected by the abiotic &
biotic factors in the
environment?
Concept
Concept
Concept
Concept
Food Webs
Succession
Biomes
Population Dynamics
Lesson Essential Questions:
Lesson Essential Questions:
Lesson Essential Questions:
Lesson Essential Questions:
What stages are
involved in an
ecosystem
changing over
time?
What
characteristics
identify each
biome on the
Earth?
How can you
compare the
different models
used to quantify
the growth of a
population?
How does energy
flow through the
ecosystem?
Vocabulary:
Ecology
Biotic factors
Abiotic factors
Population
Community
Ecosystem
Habitat
Producer
Consumer
Herbivores
Carnivores
Scavengers
Decomposers
Niche
Food chain
Food web
Tropic levels
Symbiosis
Commensalism
Mutualism
Parasitism
Biomagnification
Vocabulary:
Succession
Primary succession
Secondary succession
Climax community
Vocabulary:
Biomes
Tundra
Taiga
Temperate Forest
Tropical Rainforest
Grassland
Desert
Vocabulary:
Density-independent factors
Density-dependent factors
Exponential growth
Carrying capacity
17
Ecology Vocabulary:
1) Ecology = the scientific study of interaction between organism and their environments
2) Biotic factors = all the living organism that inhabit an environment
3) Abiotic factors = the nonliving parts of the environment
4) Population = a group of organisms of one species that interbreed and live in the same
place at the same time
5) Ecosystem = the interacting system of a biological community and its nonliving environment
6) Community = is a collection of interacting populations
7) Habitat = place where an organism lives
8) Producer = organisms that produce their own food are called autotrophs
9) Consumer = they obtain food by eating other organisms
10) Herbivores = consumer that eats only plants
11) Carnivores = consumer that eats only other animals
12) Scavengers = consumer that eats the remains of dead animals
13) Omnivores = eats both plants (acting as primary consumers) and meat (acting as secondary or tertiary
consumers)
14) Decomposers = organisms that break down the remains of other organisms
15) Niche = a role that an organism has in the environment (omnivore, carnivore, herbivore, etc.)
16) Food chain = shows only one prey-predator relationship and how each living thing gets its food
17) Food web = shows a better picture of interrelationships between plants and animals
18) Tropic levels = link represented by each organism in a food chain
19) Symbiosis = permanent, close association between two or more organisms of different species
20) Commensalism = one species benefits and the other species is neither harmed nor helped
21) Mutualism = relationship that is beneficial to both species
22) Parasitism = one species benefits at the expense of the other species
23) Biomagnification = the process of increasing a chemical concentration through the food chain
24) Succession = orderly, natural changes that take place in the communities of an ecosystem
Primary succession = establishment of a community in an area of exposed rock that does not have any
topsoil.
25) Secondary succession = the sequence of community changes that takes place when a community is
disrupted by natural disasters or human actions
26) Climax community = a stable, mature community that undergoes little of NO succession is called
27) Biomes = a large group of ecosystems that share the same type of climax community
Two factors that will determine which biome will be dominant on land: Temperature and precipitation
18
28) Tundra = treeless, long cold winters, little winter sun, poor soil, little rain (less than 5 in); Permafrost
– permanently frozen ground
29) Taiga = coniferous forest, poor soil, long severe winter
30) Temperate Forest (where we live!) = deciduous trees, 4 seasons, vegetation exhibits seasonal changes
31) Tropical Rain Forest = warm, wet, humid, most diversity, up to 17 feet of rainfall annually
32) Grassland = ideal growing season, good soil quality, little precipitation does not support trees, but
grasses and herbs are present in great abundance.
33) Desert = dry & arid, less than 10 in of rainfall; succulent plants
34) Density-independent factors = Any factor in the environment that does not depend on the number of
members in a population per unit area; usually abiotic ( Ex: weather events, fire, human alterations of
the landscape, pollution)
35) Density-dependent factor = Any factor in the environment that depends on the number of members in a
population per unit area; usually biotic (predation, disease, parasites, competition)
36) Exponential growth occurs when the growth rate is proportional to the size of the population.
37)
38) Carrying capacity = The maximum number of individuals in a species that an environment can support
for the long term.
19