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Interactions Within Ecosystems Populations • Made up of a group of organisms of the same species that live together in one place at one time and interbreed. (produce offspring) • Understanding population growth is important – Populations of different species interact – Interactions can affect the number of individuals in a population Population Growth • How do populations grow and shrink? – Immigration • Movement of individuals into a population – Emigration • Movement of individuals out of a population • Growth Rate – Affected when more individuals are born than die • Population grows – Exponential growth • Numbers increase by a certain factor over a period of time • J-shaped curve graph (pg 104 in text) Exponential Growth • Logistic Growth – Exponential Growth illustrates what the population would look like if there were no outside influences – Populations are affected by certain factors like availability of habitat, predators, and disease – Populations slow and stabilize – Carrying capacity • Largest population that an environment can support • Logistic Growth – Population growth that starts with a minimum number of individuals and reaches a maximum depending on the carrying capacity of the habitat – S – shaped curve graph (pg 105) • Population starts off small • Growth rate increases due to the abundance of resources • Population reaches carrying capacity as resources become scarce • Competition for resources slows the growth rate of the population • birthrate = deathrate, no growth in population Logistical Growth Factors that Affect Population Size • • • • • Abiotic Factors Biotic Factors Human Activities Science and Technology Predator – Prey Interactions – Predation – Coevolution • Predator – Prey Interactions – Predation • Act of one organism killing another for food – Coevolution • Back and forth evolutionary adaptations as a result of interactions – Parasitism • One organism feeds on the other (host) – Herbivory • Plants adapt to protect themselves from being eaten • Herbivory – Monarch caterpillar and milkweed – Milkweed is toxic to deter herbivores but does not harm caterpillar instead it stores toxin to keep from getting eaten itself • Predation/Coevolution – Zebra has stripes to confuse predator, also long legs, stays in herds – Lion hunts in packs, camouflage with landscape • Symbiosis • Species live in close association with each other – Mutualism • both species benefit – Commensalism • one species benefits other is neither harmed or helped • Parasitism – Tapeworm • Mutualism – Clownfish and Sea Anemone • Commensalism – Orchid gets closer to the sun Competition • Competition determines the organism’s niche – Role that the organism plays in the community • Carving a Niche – Affects other organisms in the community – Niche vs Habitat • Habitat is where an organism lives • Niche is the role that the organism plays in that habitat Ecosystem Resiliency • Interactions between organisms and the number of species (biodiversity) in an ecosystem add to the resiliency of an ecosystem. • Resiliency – to withstand, resistant, tough, hardy, durable • Keystone species – Species that is critical to an ecosystem because the species affects the survival and number of other species in its community – Examples (wolves in Yellowstone, Sea Otters off the Pacific Coast)