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Ecology Ecology The study of the interactions of organisms with their physical environment. Population A group of individuals on one species living in one area who have the ability of interbreeding and interacting with each other. Community Consists of all the organisms living in one area. Ecosystem All organisms in a given area as well as the abiotic (nonliving) factors with which they interact. Abiotic Factors Nonliving Temperature, water, sunlight, wind, rocks, soil Biosphere Global Ecosystem Five Properties of a Population Size Density Dispersion Survivorship Curves Age Structure Diagrams 1. Size The total number of individuals in a population. 2. Density Number of individuals per unit area or volume. Scientists use sampling techniques to estimate the number of organisms living in one area. Mark and recapture. 3. Dispersion Pattern of spacing of individuals within the area the population inhabits. Clumped Uniform Random Dispersion: Clumped The most common pattern. i.e. Fish traveling in schools. Dispersion: Uniform Even distribution of population in environment. i.e. some plants may secrete toxins that keep away other plants that would compete for limited resources. Dispersion: Random Absence of any special attractions or repulsions. i.e. trees can be spaced randomly in a forest. 4. Survivorship Curves Survivorship or mortality curves show the size and composition of a population. Type 1 Type 2 Type 3 Type 1 Show organisms with low death rates in young and middle age. High death rates in old age. Parenting accounts for the high survival rates of the young. i.e. Humans Type 2 Describe a species with a death rate that is constant over the life span. i.e. Hydra, Reptiles, Rodents Type 3 Very high death rate among the young, but then shows that death rates decline for those few individuals that have survived to a certain age. Fish and vertebrates that release thousands of eggs. Age Structure Diagrams Diagrams that show the relative number of individuals at each age. Undeveloped Population “Pyramid Shape” Normally half the population is under 20 years of age The population in 20 years will be enormous. Developed Population Stable Population Zero Population Growth Number of people at each age group is the same, and the birth and death rates are equal. Carrying Capacity The limit of the number of individuals that can occupy one area at a particular time. Limiting factors that limit population growth Density-Dependent Density-Independent Density-Dependent Factors that increase directly as the population density increases Competition for food, buildup of wastes, predation, and disease. Density-Independent Factors whose occurrence is unrelated to the population density. Earthquakes, storms, and naturally occurring fires and floods. Competition Competitive exclusion principle Two species cannot coexist in a community if they share a niche (they use the same resources) One species will drive the other to extinction. Predation Refers to one animal eating another, or an animal eating plants. Plants have evolved spines, thorns, and chemical poisons. Animals have developed active defenses: Hiding, fleeing, or defending themselves Aposematic Coloration “Warning Coloration” Very bright, often red or orange, coloration of poisonous animals as a warning that possible predators should avoid them. Batesian Mimicry “copycat” coloration where one harmless animal mimics the coloration of one that is poisonous. Monarch and Viceroy Butterfly Mullerian Mimicry Two or more poisonous species resemble each other and gain an advantage from their combined numbers. Predators learn more quickly to avoid prey with that appearance. Mutualism A symbiotic relationship where both organisms benefit (+/+) i.e. bacteria that live in the human intestine and produce vitamins. Commensalism Symbiotic relationship where one organism benefits and one is unaware of the other organism (+/0). i.e. barnacles that attach to the underbelly of whales gain access to a variety of food sources as the whale swims. Parasitism One organism, the parasite, benefits while the host is harmed. i.e. Tapeworm in the intestine. Food Chain Pathway along which food is transferred from one trophic or feeding level to another. Energy moves from producers to herbivores to the carnivores. Food Web Producer Convert light energy to chemical bond energy Have the greatest biomass of any trophic level Green Plants Primary Consumers Herbivores Eat the producers i.e. grasshoppers, zooplankton Secondary Consumers Carnivores Eat the primary consumers Examples: Frogs, small fish Tertiary Consumers Carnivores Eat Secondary Consumers Top of Food Chain Have the smallest biomass of any other trophic level Least stable i.e. Hawk Decomposers Bacteria and Fungi Recycle nutrients back into the soil to nourish plants. Without decomposers there would be no life.