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Green Generation Part 1 Review of General Ecology • • • • ECOLOGY – how organisms interact with one another and with their environment ENVIRONMENT – living and non-living components ABIOTIC – non-living component or physical factors as soil, rainfall, sunlight, temperatures BIOTIC – living component are other organisms. Review of General Ecology • Levels in a Food Web – – – – – Producers Primary Consumers Secondary Consumers Tertiary Consumers Top Consumer is called the Apex Consumer Energy Pyramids Energy in a Living System • All living things need energy • Energy made by plants (through photosynthesis) is transferred to an animal that eats it. • The organism then transfers the energy to the next organism which eats it, and so on, and so on. • A graphic representation of this system is called an Energy Pyramid How is an energy pyramid organized? Trophic Levels • The feeding position in a food chain or energy pyramid that an organism occupies based on what it eats. • Energy decreases from lower to higher trophic levels. • Biomass (living or organic matter) decreases from lower to higher trophic levels. Energy Pyramids Producers • Get their energy from the Sun • Make their own food through the process of photosynthesis. • Autotroph - makes its own food Consumers • Unable to make their own food • Heterotrophs - Cannot make their own food, so they have to eat other things like plants or animals Food Chain rose plant aphids beetle chameleon hawk • • • • • • Producer 1st order Consumer or Herbivore 2nd order Consumer or 1st order Carnivore 3rd order Consumer or 2nd order Carnivore 4th order Consumer or 3rd order Carnivore Decomposers – consume dead and decaying matter Food Web Energy Pyramids Primary Consumers • First level consumers • Herbivore - cannot make their own food – • Consume Plants Heterotrophs Energy Pyramids Secondary and Tertiary Consumers • Eat primary consumers and each other • Carnivores (eats other animals) • Omnivores (eats both plants and animals) • Heterotrophs Energy Pyramids Quaternary Consumer • Apex predators • Top of the food chain (animal upon which nothing preys) • Typically carnivores • Heterotrophs Ecological Organization INDIVIDUAL – individual organisms POPULATION – organisms of same species in same area (biotic factors) COMMUNITY – several populations in same area (biotic factors) ECOSYSTEM – community plus abiotic factors BIOSPHERE – all ecosystems on earth Growth Curves Survival Curves • Survivorship is the percentage of remaining survivors of a population over time; usually shown graphically. – Type I survivorship curve: most individuals live out their life span and die of old age (e.g., humans). – Type II survivorship curve: individuals die at a constant rate (e.g., birds, rodents, and perennial plants). – Type III survivorship curve: most individuals die early in life (e.g., fishes, invertebrates, and plants). Ecology of Communities • Closed vs. Open communities – – • • Closed – sharp boundaries Open – Lack boundaries Species abundance and diversity Trophic Structure of Communities – – – Food chains Food web Trophic pyramid Types of Species Interactions • • • • • Neutral – two species do not interact Mutualism – both benefit Commensalism – one benefits, other neutral Parasitism – one benefits, one harmed but not killed Predation – one benefits, other killed Predator – Prey Relationship Numbers Pyramid Biomass & Energy Flow Pyramids Hydrologic (Water) Cycle Phosphorous Cycle Nitrogen Cycle Carbon Cycle