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What is Natural History? • the study of the natural environment with an emphasis on identification, formation/origin of physical features, life-history, distribution, abundance, and inter-relationships. – It often and appropriately includes an Aesthetic component. The Natural Environment—Ecosystems • An interacting unit of living and non-living components. – Non-living things (abiotic)—the physical environment • Water, temperature/heat, sunlight, wind/air, soil/minerals, nutrients (found in air, water, & soil) etc… – Living Things (biotic) • Plants, animals, fungi, microbes • All the living things of an area = community Major Ecosystem Interactions • Nutrient uptake, transfer, and recycling. • Energy production, transfer, and loss • Resources and physical conditions determine what and where living things are found and in what numbers. • Ecological Succession • Symbiosis: very/unusually close relationships among organism How do living things get their food (trophic levels) • Producers (autotrophs)—they make their own through photosynthesis. – Use energy of sun to combine nutrients (from soil, water, air) to make food (and other molecules) – plants, algae, some bacteria • Herbivores—they eat producers • Carnivores—eat herbivores Consumers (i.e., animals) • Decomposers: eat the dead and detrius. – Bacteria, fungi, other microbes Energy Flow • The energy needed for life originates from the sun. • Is captured by plants (and other producers) • Is passed from one organism to another as they eat (or decompose) one another • A little energy is lost at each transfer so the amount of energy diminishes from one organism to another. Another example of a food web Trophic levels are color coded. Nutrient/Chemical Cycles • All the nutrients and molecules an organism needs are obtained from the surrounding physical environment (air, water, soil, or another living thing) • They pass from one organism to the next • Are returned to the environment through waste products or decomposition of the dead. • Nutrients are thus made available for use again. CARBON CYCLE — carbon passes from physical environement to producers (e.g., plants) to animals, to another animal (etc.) and returns to the physical env through waste and decomposition (of dead). Tolerance Ranges • For every physical aspect of the environment and for every substance used by an organism : – (e.g., temperature, water, wind, minerals, nutrients, pH, etc): – There is a minimum amount needed and a maximum amount that can be tolerated. – Between the minimum needed and maximum tolerable is the “tolerance range) Tolerance range a simple schematic too dry Tolerance range for the grass to survive there is enough to meet the grasses needs, but not too much too wet for the grass to survive water wet dry Competitive Exclusion • Two species sharing the same niche cannot co-exist forever – because they directly compete (for resources which reduces the amount of resources that either species successfully obtains) – The species that is the better competitor (in a given environment) will exclude the other specie from existing in that same location this is competitive exclusion The brown barnacle competitively excludes the gray barnacle from the lower area even though the gray barnacle could tolerate that area Distribution of Living Organisms across the landscape is determined by a combination of (things are where they are because): • Physical factors – specifically availability and tolerance of physical factors • Competition • Predation • Dispersal – has the organism been able to get to an area from its existing range THE CENTRAL IMPORTANCE OF PLANTS • Plants cannot move (animals can). – Thus they are reflective of the physical conditions at a particular area. • They form the base of the food chain – Biologically available energy and nutrients originate from plants • The type of plants in a location influences the type of animals at that same location – Via habitat structure and food availability (type and amount) • Ecosystems/communities are usually identified by the plants groups they posses. HOW PLANTS WORK • OBTAINING ENERGY • OBTAINING RESOURCES • REPRODUCTION HOW PLANTS OBTAIN ENERGY • Plants make their own food with photosynthesis. – H20 + CO2 sunlight C6H1206 + O2 Glucose/sugar • Glucose sugar is used as source of energy and as a building material for most everything else the plant needs and is made of. • Non-photosynthetic organism get all of their carbon and by eating plants (directly or indirectly) How plants obtain resources • Obtaining water: – from soil (except aquatic plants) by roots. – lose water through leaves, but some water loss is required to move it. – roots get it, leaves lose it. • Obtaining Sun: – Leaves • Obtaining carbon dioxide: – from leaves pores called stomata, but letting CO2 in allows water to exit. PLANT REPRODUCTION • Sexual Reproduction (flowers, cones, spores, etc) • Since plants can’t move: – their sperm needs to disperse to eggs • animal pollinators, wind, or water) – offspring (seeds and spores) need to disperse away from parents • by animals, wind, water, or “explosive propulsion” • Asexual (roots, stem base, runners, fragments) – Alternative reproduction includes self-fertilizing and vegetative propagation (cloning). Abiotic (non-living) factors affecting the distribution of organisms • Temperature • Water Large Scale • Sunlight • Wind • Soil Conditions – pH – salt content/salinity – sandy – tightly packed – organic content Small Scale All Organisms Face the Same Problems • How to get energy and nutrients (including water). – These are obtained from the environment • How to cope with/respond to the physical environment (e.g., heat, cold, wind) • How to ____ with other organisms. • How to reproduce.