Download The Organization of Life

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
The Organization of Life
Chapter 4
Susquehanna River Ecosystem
 Draw all 10 circled items from the list, PLUS 5 more
uncircled items of your choice.
 Randomly scatter these items on your table.
 This is not a mural or picture of what the Susquehanna River
looks like!
 Label the biotic factors (LIVING components) with a “B”.
Label the abiotic factors (NONLIVING components) with
an “A”.
 Draw lines showing connections between components of
this ecosystem. On each line, write what the connection is
(1 or 2 words).
Section 1:
Ecosystems: Everything Is Connected
 Ecosystem
 All of the organisms living in an area together with their
physical environment
 Oak forest, coral reef, vacant lot
 Connected: no clear boundaries
Section 1:
Ecosystems: Everything Is Connected
 The Components of an Ecosystem
 Basic components: energy, mineral nutrients, carbon
dioxide, water, oxygen, living organisms
 Biotic factors: the living and once living parts of an
ecosystem
 Plants, animals, bacteria, dead organisms & dead parts, waste products
 Abiotic factors: the nonliving parts of the ecosystem
 Air, water, rocks, sand, light, temperature
Section 1:
Ecosystems: Everything Is Connected
 The Organization of Living Things
 Organism: an individual living thing
 Species: a group of organisms that can mate to
produce fertile offspring
 Population: all the members of the same species
that live in the same place at the same time
 Community: a group of various species that live in
the same place and interact with each other
 Ecosystem
 Biosphere
Section 1:
Ecosystems: Everything Is Connected
 Habitat
 the place an organism lives
 Has specific biotic & abiotic factors
Related documents