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CHAPTER FOUR: THE
ORGANIZATION OF LIFE
Section One: Ecosystems: Everything is
Connected

Ecosystem: all the living organisms living in an
area together with their physical environment
 Have
no clear boundaries
 Things move from one ecosystem to another
Section One: Ecosystems: Everything is
Connected

Components of an Ecosystem
 Biotic
factors: the living and once living parts of an
ecosystem
 Abiotic factors: nonliving parts of an ecosystem
Section One: Ecosystems: Everything is
Connected

Organism: an
individual living
thing
 Species:
a group of
organisms that can
mate to produce
fertile offspring
 Humans
are members
of the Homo sapiens
species
Section One: Ecosystems: Everything is
Connected

Population: all the
members of the same
species that live in
the same place at the
same time.
 Members
of a
population only breed
with members of their
same population
Section One: Ecosystems: Everything is
Connected

Communities: a
group of various
species that live in
the same place and
interact with each
other
 Made
of only biotic
components
Section One: Ecosystems: Everything is
Connected
Section One: Ecosystems: Everything is
Connected

Habitat: the place where an organism lives
 Has
specific biotic and abiotic factors organisms need
to survive
Section Two: Evolution

Charles Darwin proposed
natural selection



Said some traits were
hereditary
Natural selection: survival
and reproduction of the
organism with particular
traits
Evolution: a change in
the genetic characteristics
of a population from one
generation to the next
Section Two: Evolution

Evolution and Natural Selection
 Nature
selects for certain traits
 Survival of the fittest
Section Two: Evolution

Evolution and Natural Selection
 Adaptation:
an inherited trait that increases the
organisms chance of survival and reproduction in a
certain environment
Section Two: Evolution

Evolution and Natural Selection
 Coevolution:
the process of two species evolving in
response to long-term interactions with each other
Section Two: Evolution

Evolution by Artificial Selection
 Artificial
selection: selective breeding of organisms
by humans for specific characteristics
Section Two: Evolution

Evolution of Resistance
 Resistance:
the ability
of one or more
organisms to tolerate
a particular chemical
designed to kill it
 Pesticide resistance
Section Three: The Diversity of Living
Things

Archaebacteria and
Eubacteria
 Both
lack a nucleus
 Some can cause
diseases
 Archaebacteria: found
in extreme places
such as hot springs
 Eubacteria: common
bacteria found in soil
and animal bodies
 Examples:
E. coli
Section Three: The Diversity of Living
Things

Fungi
 Fungus:
an organism whose cells have a nucleus
and cell walls
 Some
can cause diseases
 Break down bodies and body parts of dead organisms
 Some are used to add flavor to food
Section Three: The Diversity of Living
Things

Protists
 Protists:
a diverse
group of one-celled
organisms and their
many celled relatives
 Some are animal-like
and some are plantlike
 Algae are the most
important protists
Section Three: The Diversity of Living
Things

Plants
 Lower
Plants
 Gymnosperms
 Angiosperms
Section Three: The Diversity of Living
Things

Lower Plants
 Ferns
and mosses
 First land plants
Section Three: The Diversity of Living
Things

Gymnosperms
 Woody
plants that
produce seeds not
enclosed in fruit
 Pines
Section Three: The Diversity of Living
Things

Angiosperms
flowering plants that
produce seeds in fruit
 Some have small
flowers that produce
pollen

Section Three: The Diversity of Living
Things

Animals
 Invertebrates:
animals that lack backbones
 Examples: Insects, squids, coral
Section Three: The Diversity of Living
Things

Animals
 Vertebrates:
animals that have backbones
 Examples: reptiles, amphibians, mammals, birds