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ECOSYSTEMS AND COMMUNITIES BIOTIC VS. ABIOTIC FACTORS Biotic factor: living component of an ecosystem Abiotic factor: nonliving component of an ecosystem HABITAT VS. NICHE Habitat: the area where an organism lives, including the biotic and abiotic factors that affect it Niche: an organism’s habitat plus its role in an ecosystem COMMUNITY INTERACTIONS Competition: when organisms of the same or different species attempt to use an ecological resource at the same time Example: in a forest, broad-leaved trees may compete for sunlight by growing tall, spreading out their leaves and blocking sun to shorter plants Competitive exclusion principle: no two species can occupy the same niche at the same time COMMUNITY INTERACTIONS Predation: an interaction in which one organism captures and feeds on another organism Example: Some types of bears capture and eat fish COMMUNITY INTERACTIONS Symbiosis Parasitism: symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits while the other is harmed Example: fleas, ticks and lice feed off the blood and skin of mammals COMMUNITY INTERACTIONS Symbiosis Mutualism: symbiotic relationship in which both organisms benefit Example: oxpeckers eat the insects off large mammals in Africa Cleaner wrasse COMMUNITY INTERACTIONS Symbiosis Commensalism: symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits while the other is neither harmed nor does it benefit Example: Remoras eat the small pieces of food that are created when sharks eat Shark and a remora A whale with barnacles Learning Targets • Learning Target: I can learn about the limiting factors and how they can affect population dynamics. I can properly construct and interpret graphs. POPULATION GROWTH Exponential Growth: rapid period of growth that occurs under conditions with unlimited resources Logistic Growth: when a population’s growth slows or stops after a period of exponential growth. How might this happen? Limiting factors: factors that limit the growth of a population Food Sunlight Water Dissolved oxygen Nutrients in soil Disease Carrying capacity: the largest number of organisms that an environment can consistently support