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Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis • Succession • Biomes Key Concepts • What factors determine climate? • How does competition shape communities? • How do communities change over time? • What biotic and abiotic factors characterize biomes? 4.1 Climate • Both weather and climate involve variation in environmental changes such as temperature and precipitation So what’s the difference?? • Weather includes day to day changes and conditions •Climate refers to averages over long periods of time •Climate tends not to be uniform within a region and microclimates can be created •Northern Hemisphere, the south side facing trees receive more sunlight creating warmer, drier area Factors that Affect Climate 1) Greenhouse Effect – gases (CO2, methane, water vapor) in atmosphere allow light energy in but trap heat • we need this to keep Earth at livable temperature • If concentration of greenhouse gas increases, temperature rises • If concentration decreases, temperatures lower Factors that Affect Climate 2) Latitude • Sun hits the earth more directly at the equator than at the poles - Causes more tropical environment at equator •Due to the curvature of the sun, the energy is spread over a much larger area Factors that Affect Climate 3) Heat Transport in Biosphere •Unequal distribution of heat creates currents and wind - Transports moisture and heat - Warm air less dense and rises, cold air more dense and sinks Winds • Up and down movements of the air masses create winds Currents • Similar heating and cooling patterns also create ocean currents 4.2 Niches and Community Interactions • Organisms occupy different places due to varying conditions that allow them to grow and reproduce • Varying conditions help define where organisms can live • 2 factors that shape where and how organisms live are biotic and abiotic factors • Any of these biotic or abiotic factors that restricts the number of organisms, their distribution, existence, or ability to reproduce is called a limiting factor • An example of limiting factor is the timberline – Elevation, winds, shallow soil, etc.. • Factors that limit one population may have an indirect affect on other populations within that community – Lack of water, decreases seed production, affects mice that are dependent on those seeds • Range of Tolerance – The ability of an organism to withstand fluctuations in biotic and abiotic factors – Catfish can withstand warmer water than trout or bass Organisms in Ecosystems • Habitat (address) = area where an organism lives – Includes biotic and abiotic factors Organisms in Ecosystems • Niche (job)=full range of physical and biological conditions in which the organism lives and the way the organism uses those conditions – Ex: place in the food web, range of temperatures the organism needs to survive, food the organism eats • If two species try to occupy the same niche, it creates competition – Result: one species will not survive extinction • No two species can share the same niche in the same habitat • Different species can occupy different niches that are very similar Interactions • Organisms in an ecosystem interact constantly – Shapes the ecosystem • Ways of interaction – Competition – Predation – Symbiosis • Mutualism • Commensalism • Parasitism Resource=necessity of life • Competition= when organism try to use a resource at the same place/time – Two lizards want to eat the same type of insect • Predation= one organism captures and feed on another – Bald Eagle (predator) eating fish (prey) • Keystone species = change in a single species within a population can cause dramatic changes in community – Examples: wolves of Yellowstone, sea otters, black-footed ferrets Symbiosis= two species live closely Mutualism= both species benefit from the relationship Flowers and insects Commensalism= one species benefits, the other is not helped or harmed Whales and barnacles Parasitism= One organism lives on/inside the other and harms it Tapeworm , trichinella 4.3 Succession • Ecosystems change—human intervention, natural disaster • Series of predictable changes that occur in a community over time = ecological succession • Primary succession= occurs on surfaces where there is no soil – Volcanoes build up an island – Pioneer species= 1st organisms to populate • Once a community becomes stable, mature, and little change in species, it is known as a climax community • Secondary succession = some kind of change happens, but soil remains – Fire – Land cleared/plowed • Change in species is also slow, as in primary succession, but… – Seeds in the soil from previous vegetation takes over 4.4 Biomes • Biome = large group of ecosystems that share similar climax community • Biomes are located on land (terrestrial) and in water (aquatic) • Aquatic Biomes 1. Marine - Refers to salt waters (oceans, seas) Contains the largest amount of biomass (living material) Photic zone: shallow, sunlit - - Rocky shores, sandy beaches, mudflats Aphotic Zone: deeper, no sun light • Areas where salt water and fresh water meet are called estuaries – Salinity (amount of salt) ranges between very salty to fresh water – Changes with the tides • Tides – Rise and fall of ocean tides are caused by the sun and moons gravitational pull. – Intertidal zone: portion of shoreline that is between high and low tides • Size varies depending on slope of land and height of tide 2. Freshwater biomes - streams, lakes, ponds - limiting factors: light and temperature Terrestrial Biomes • Two abiotic factors that affect terrestrial biomes are temperature and precipitation • 6 different types of biomes – Tundra, taiga, grassland, deciduous forests, rain forests, and deserts