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Transcript
Lecture 01
Ecology
Ecology as a Science
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What is ecology?
Characteristics of living things
Levels of organization of living things
Levels of organization of ecosystems
Basic relationships within ecosystems –
terminology
• Scientific logic – how we know (what we
think) we know
• Ecology:
– From Greek – oikos logos = knowledge of or
study of one’s home
– Study of distribution and abundance of living
things and their interactions with each other
and with their environment
– Ecology as a Branch of Biology – study of
living things
What are the Characteristics of Living
Things?
All living organisms share five basic
properties:
1. Cellular Organization – cell is basic unit of life
2. Metabolism – use energy
3. Homeostasis - maintain stable internal
conditions
4. Growth and reproduction
5. Heredity
living things come from living things
Information for traits coded in DNA
(deoxyribonucleic acid)
Living things are organized as organisms:
Atoms  compounds cells tissues 
organs and organ systems  organisms
All living things composed of cells
Not all organisms show all these levels of
organization!
Populations – single organisms – basic unit
in ecology - fill a niche (‘job’ or function)
communities - populations of many
types of organisms
ecosystems: All organisms
living in an area, and the physical
environment (habitat) with which these
organisms interact.
Organisms in an Ecosystem are Interrelated
with Each Other and Their Environment
• Every organism in an ecosystem has its
niche
• "When we try to pick out anything by itself,
we find it hitched to everything in the
universe.“ John Muir
• Review of Ecological levels of
organization
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Individual/organism
Population
Community
Ecosystems
Bioshphere
• The Organism
• Functioning together with great precision,
the organ systems make up the complex
multicellular organism. Organisms interact
to form still more complex levels of
biological organization.
• Populations
• All the members of one species that live in
the same area make up a population.
• Community
• The population of organisms that inhabit a
particular area and interact with one
another form a community.
• Thus a community can be comprised of
hundreds of different types of life forms.
The study of how organisms of a
community relate to one another and with
their non-living environment is called
"ecology".
• Community
• A community, together with its non-living
environment is referred to as an
"ecosystem".
• Pond
Tundra
• Largest Ecosystem is the Biosphere
Ecology vs. Environmentalism
Environmentalist:
• Save the world!
– An emotion, a cause
Ecologist:
• Understand the world!
– How does it work – uses scientific method
– Poses specific questions in the form of
hypothesis
– Involves controlled experiments and detailed
study
Observation: Hydrangeas of the same variety but
growing in different parts of the garden have
different colors.
Hypothesis: Something about the soil is different;
perhaps acidity (pH).
• Set up experiment to test hypothesis:
– Grow one group of Hydrangeas in acid pH
– Grow second group of hydrangeas in soil with
basic pH
– Keep everything else the same
– Observe:
Acid pH
Alkaline pH 
Scientific Theory
• Hypotheses are tentative explanations
– phenomenon in a particular situation
• Theories are widely accepted
explanations
– Support from many lines of evidence
– Basis of understanding
– May be revised or modified
– Theory of Evolution
Warbler Feeding Zones
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Observation Studies in Ecology
• Investigates questions concerning (for
example)
– Species distribution
– What species are present
– Populations, reproductive success
– How species interact
– Changes in species make-up of a habitat
– Migratory patterns and routes
• Answers may
– lead to more questions
– Management decisions …
Organisms Require Resources
• Energy flows through ecosystems
– Trophic levels = ‘feeding’ levels
– Some energy is lost during transfer to each
higher trophic level
• Materials cycle
– Carbon, phosphorus, nitrogen, water cycle
through biotic and abiotic aspects of
ecosystems
– Global in scale
Biotic cycling
Biotic and Abiotic
Nutrients Cycle
• Include things like carbon, nitrogen,
phosphorus
– Some required in greater concentrations than
others
– Excesses may be toxic
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Top carnivores
Carnivores
Birds of prey
Herbivores
Photosynthesizers
Decomposers
Humans
Birds
Mammals
Mammals
Birds
Inorganic
nutrients
Arthropods
Fish
Meiofauna
Inorganic
nutrients
Bacteria and fungi
Algae
Inorganic
nutrients
Mollusks
Annelids
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Summary
Ecology is an investigative science that relies
on the scientific method
The scientific method requires observation,
creation of a hypothesis, and data collection to
refute or support the hypothesis.
Ecology and evolution are two separate
disciplines that overlap in their investigation of
the natural world.
An understanding of ecology may lead us to
sound environmental decisions