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Transcript
What is
Ecology?
copyright cmassengale
1
What is Ecology??
• The study of interactions that
take place between organisms
and their environment.
• It explains how living
organisms affect each other
and the world they live in.
copyright cmassengale
2
A Key Theme in Ecology
• No single organism is isolated!!
– The interconnectedness or
interdependence of all organisms is central
to the study of ecology
– The survival of organisms depends on their
interactions with their surrounding
environment
• Ex: Humans cannot live without the plants that
produce food and oxygen
The Nonliving Environment
• Abiotic factors- the
nonliving parts of an
organism’s environment.
• Examples include air
currents, temperature,
moisture, light, and soil.
• Abiotic factors affect an
organism’s life.
copyright cmassengale
4
The Living Environment
• Biotic factors- all the
living organisms that
inhabit an environment.
• All organisms depend on
others directly or
indirectly for food,
shelter, reproduction, or
protection.
copyright cmassengale
5
Abiotic or Biotic?
Biotic
copyright cmassengale
6
Abiotic or Biotic?
Abiotic
copyright cmassengale
7
Abiotic or Biotic?
Abiotic
copyright cmassengale
8
Abiotic or Biotic?
Biotic
copyright cmassengale
9
Levels of
Organization
copyright cmassengale
10
What are the Simplest Levels?
• Atom
• Molecule
• Organelle
• Cell
• Tissue
• Organ
• OrganSystem
• Organism
copyright cmassengale
11
Levels of Organization
• Ecologists have organized the
interactions an organism takes
part in into different levels
according to complexity.
copyright cmassengale
12
1st Level of Organization
• Organism:
An individual
living thing that
is made of cells,
uses energy,
reproduces,
responds, grows,
and develops
copyright cmassengale
13
2nd Level of Organization
• Population:
A group of
organisms, all
of the same
species, which
interbreed and
live in the
same place at
the same time.
copyright cmassengale
14
3rd Level of Organization
• Biological
Community:
All the
populations of
different
species that
live in the same
place at the
same time.
copyright cmassengale
15
4th Level of Organization
• Ecosystem:
Populations of plants
and animals that
interact with each
other in a given
area with the
abiotic components
of that area.
(terrestrial or
aquatic)
copyright cmassengale
16
5th Level of Organization
• Biosphere:
The portion of
Earth that
supports life.
• The highest level
of organization
copyright cmassengale
17
The Biosphere
• Life is found in air, on
land, and in fresh and salt
water.
• The BIOSPHERE is the
portion of Earth that
supports living things.
copyright cmassengale
18
What level of organization?
Organism
copyright cmassengale
19
What level of Organization?
Community
copyright cmassengale
20
What level of Organization?
Population
copyright cmassengale
21
Organization of Ecology
Draw the diagram of hierarchical
organization of ecology from P.361
Habitat vs. Niche
Niche - the role a species plays in
a community; its total way of life
Habitat- the place in which an
organism lives out its life
Habitat vs. Niche
A niche is determined by the
tolerance limitations of an
organism, or a limiting factor.
Limiting factor- any biotic or
abiotic factor that restricts the
existence of organisms in a
specific environment.
Habitat vs. Niche
Examples of limiting factors •Amount of water
•Amount of food
•Temperature
•Amount of space
•Availability of mates
Niche Differences
• Generalists are species with broad niches
– Can tolerate a range of conditions and use a
variety of resources
• Ex: Virginia opossum  found all over the US and
can eat a wide range of food
• Specialists are species that have narrow
niches
– Ex: koalas  only feed on leaves from a few
species of eucalyptus trees
Organisms in a Changing Environment
Tolerance Curve: A graph of
performance versus values of an
environmental Variable
Tolerance Curve for
Cutthroat Trout –
Shows they can
tolerate temps
between 5 and 23°C)
Acclimation
• Acclimation is the process by which
organisms can adjust their tolerance
to abiotic factors
– Ex: Going to the mountains
• If you spend a few weeks in the mountains,
your body will acclimate to the lower oxygen
levels by producing more red blood cells in your
body
• This will allow your blood to carry more oxygen
– Acclimation IS NOT adaptation!!
• Adaptation is a genetic change in a species that
occurs over many generations – acclimation
occurs within the lifetime of a species
Acclimation
Question: If you raised the
temperature of a goldfish bowl a
degree every week, and your fish
was able to tolerate higher
temperatures than other
goldfish…Is this Acclimation?
How do organisms deal with change in
their physical environment?
• Strategy 1 – Conformers
• These organisms do not control their internal
conditions and change as their external
environment changes
• example: reptiles are cold blooded
• Strategy 2 – Regulators
• These organisms do control their internal
conditions and maintain within their optimum
range in spite of external conditions
• ex. Mammals maintain constant body temp
What if conditions change too drastically,
How does an organism survive?
• Some species become dormant (a state
of reduced activity) when the
environmental conditions aren't suitable
(like too cold, not enough food, too dry)
• Some species migrate (move to a more
favorable habitat) when conditions
become unbearable
Ch. 18-3 (Ecology)
ENERGY TRANSFER
Nutritional Relationships:
A. Autotrophs: can synthesize (or make)
their own food Ex.) Plants
B. Heterotrophs: can NOT synthesize
their own food and are dependent on
other organisms for their food
Feeding Relationships
Producer- all autotrophs
(plants), they trap
energy from the sun
• Bottom of the food
chain
Feeding Relationships
Consumer- all heterotrophs: they
ingest food containing the sun’s
energy
Herbivores
Carnivores
Omnivores
Decomposers
Feeding Relationships
CONSUMERS
1.Primary consumers
• Eat plants
• Herbivores
• Secondary, tertiary
consumers
• Prey animals
• Carnivores
TYPES OF CONSUMERS
Consumers can be grouped according
to the type of food they eat.
TYPES OF CONSUMERS
Herbivores- Eat Producers
Carnivores- Eat other Consumers
Omnivores- Eat both Producers and
Consumers
Other Consumers
Detritivors:
AKA Scavengers
– Feed on carrion, dead
animals
Decomposers
– Breakdown the
complex compounds of
dead and decaying
plants and animals into
simpler molecules that
can be absorbed
Trophic Levels
• Each link in a food chain is known as
a trophic level.
• Trophic levels represent a feeding
step in the transfer of energy and
matter in an ecosystem.
Trophic Levels
Biomass- the amount of organic matter
comprising a group of organisms in a
habitat.
• As you move up a food chain, both
available energy and biomass decrease.
E
N
E
R
G
Y
Trophic Levels
Tertiary
consumers- top
carnivores
Secondary consumerssmall carnivores
Primary consumers- Herbivores
Producers- Autotrophs
Energy Transfer
• On Average,
10% of Total
Energy is
transferred from
one energy level
to the next.
Trophic Levels
Food chain- simple model that
shows how matter and energy
move through an ecosystem
A Food Chain
Plant
Frog
Insects
Bear
Fish
People
Trophic Levels
Food web- shows all possible
feeding relationships in a
community at each trophic level
• Represents a network of
interconnected food chains
Food chain
(just 1 path of energy)
Food web
(all possible energy paths)