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Ecology ecology : the study of the interactions of living organisms with one another and with their environment Populations A population consists of all the individuals of a species that live together in one place at one time. All the E. coli in your gut All the people on earth The two goldfish in your bowl A population’s future survival is determined by its size, density, and dispersion. How are size, density, and dispersion factors in the success of ants? Patterns of dispersion How can each pattern affect the success of a population? Carrying capacity the population size of the species that the environment can sustain indefinitely, given the food, habitat, water, and other necessities available in the environment. Why will the human population growth curve eventually change from an exponential curve to a logistic curve? Density dependent vs density independent factors • Density dependent: resources that are depleted such as food and water • Density independent: environmental factors such as weather and climate Are predators density dependent or density independent factors? The Hardy-Weinberg Principle • The frequencies of alleles and genotypes remain constant in populations in which evolutionary forces are absent • Evolutionary forces include: mutation, migration, non-random mating, genetic drift, and environmental changes. Will the population in your goldfish bowl evolve? Why or why not? Ecosystems • A community is a group of species that lives together in the same place • An ecosystem is the community plus the non-living environment Ecosystems change through the process of succession Primary succession occurs in a newly formed habitat Example: After a glacier recedes, the newly exposed land has few nutrients Pioneer plants (lichens & mosses) begin to grow. Then grasses and shrubs take over. They add nitrogen to the soil. As the amount of soil increases, trees become plentiful and create shade, eliminating the short plants. Can you think of other examples of newly formed habitats? Secondary succession occurs in habitats that previously supported growth Example: A field that has been cleared of forest. No two successions are alike. They depend on initial conditions, chance, weather, etc. How is the soil different in primary and secondary successions? Energy moves through ecosystems • Energy cannot be created or destroyed. It can only be changed from one form to another. • All of the energy on the earth originates from the sun. • The radiant energy from the sun is stored as chemical energy in plants through the process of photosynthesis. Energy Flow in Ecosystems The sun: the source of all the energy on the earth Producers capture and store energy. Examples: plants, cyanobacteria, algae. Also known as autotrophs Consumers eat (consume) other plants and animals to obtain energy. Examples: everything except for producers. Also known as heterotrophs. Trophic Levels A Trophic level is a step in a food chain or food pyramid • “Troph-” means “food” or “nutrition.” • “auto-” means “self” • “hetero” means “different” or “other” A food chain is a single path of energy in an ecosystem Food Webs • Energy doesn’t flow in simple straight paths • Animals often feed at different trophic levels Why does a food web make a more stable ecosystem than a food chain? Energy pyramid trophic levels Carnivores eat animals Omnivores eat plants and animals Herbivores eat plants Why are the lower levels more diverse and more stable? Wait! What about the “The circle of life?” worms bacteria • Decomposers, also called detrivores, obtain their energy from waste and dead bodies at all trophic levels. • This releases the energy back into the environment to be used by others. fungus Energy transfer • The chemical energy in food is transformed by an organism into kinetic energy (movement) and heat energy, which is lost to the environment. • The energy stored in a trophic level is one tenth of that stored in the lower level. Community Interactions • Some interactions among species are the result of a long evolutionary history in which many of the participants adjust to one another over time. • Back-and-forth evolutionary adjustments between interacting members of an ecosystem are called Coevolution Symbiosis: two or more species living in a close, long term association Predation • One organism killing another for food predator prey parasitism • One organisms feeds on and harms another A tick feeding on a dog Mutualism • Both organisms benefit Aphids secrete honeydew for the ants Ants protect the aphids commensalism • One organism benefits and the other is not affected. The sea anemone protects Nemo, the clownfish The anemone does not seem to benefit Biogeochemical Cycles Or, Nature Doesn’t Throw Anything Away The Carbon Cycle • All organic life consists of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and sulfur in large quantities • Other inorganic molecules are also necessary • They pass through the nonliving environment through the living environment, and back to the non-living environment. All organic molecules have carbon • Is there carbon in sugar? • Is there carbon in CO2 ? Matter cannot be created or destroyed • The Earth has only a fixed amount of carbon. • Carbon is the ultimate form of recycling. Carbon enters living organisms through plants and other autotrophs • How do plants use carbon? – Photosynthesis – • Takes CO2 from atmosphere and combine with water Heterotrophs Eat the Plants • Heterotrophs are non-photosynthetic organisms – Cannot create their own food – Break down sugar and starches through cellular respiration – What are the products of cellular respiration? – Energy – H2O – CO2 – CO2 goes back to the atmosphere to use again. What Eats Animals at the top of the food chain? • Decomposers are involved in the carbon cycle – Break down organic materials • Dead plants and animals • Feces – Produces gasses • CO2 and Methane Carbon atoms may return to the pool of carbon dioxide in the air and water in three ways. 1. Respiration. 2. Combustion. 3. Erosion. p. 352 The Nitrogen Cycle • What is Nitrogen? – An element just like carbon – Nitrogen is a part of PROTEINS – Nitrogen is a part of DNA • Where is Nitrogen? – 97 of the atomosphere – Most plants and animals cannot use it in its diatomic state (N2) – It must be fixed (put in a biologically useful compound) Nitrogen Cycle 1. Nitrogen fixing bacteria in plant roots convert it to ammonia 2. Decomposers also convert waste into ammonia 3. Then bacteria convert the ammonia to nitrates 4. Plants absorb the nitrates through the roots Nitrogen Cycle 5. Herbivores eat plants and convert many of the amino acids into new proteins Omnivores eat both plants and animals and convert into new proteins. The final step 6. Nitrogen atoms are returned to the soil in feces and dead animals Once in the soil the process happens again! Nitrogen Cycle: Bacteria carry out many of the important steps in the nitrogen cycle, including the conversion of atmospheric nitrogen into a usable form, ammonia. p. 353 The Water Cycle clouds Condensation Precipitation Water vapor Transpiration Runoff Evaporation ocean lake groundwater Evaporation Percolation into soil BIOM ES 60 N 30 N E 30 S 60 S A Biome is a major biological community that occurs over a large area. Biomes are influenced by latitude, temperature, rainfall, soil, wind, and elevation Tropical Rainforest Latitude: Temperature: Rainfall: Importance: Tropical Savanna Latitude: Temperature: Rainfall: Importance: Taiga Latitude: Temperature: Rainfall: Importance: Tundra latitude: Temperature: Rainfall: Importance: Desert Latitude: Temperature: Rainfall: Importance: Temperate Grassland Latitude: Temperature: Rainfall: Importance: Temperate Forest Latitude: Temperature: Rainfall: Importance: Deciduous Pine Aquatic Biomes Freshwater Limnetic Profundal Life Zones Littoral Marine