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ECOSYSTEM NOTES Video Clips 1-4 United Streaming H.I.P.P.O. THREATS TO BIODIVERSITY • Habitat Loss • Introduced Species • Population Growth • Population activites • Overconsumption What makes invasive species so successful? • Lack of competition • Lack of predators • New and abundant resources • Fill a new “niche” • Show United Streaming Clip 5 EXAMPLES OF NICHES Show united streaming clip 6 Can a species’ niche be influenced by competition? EXPERIMENT RESULTS What effect will the removal of Balanus have on Chthamalus? High tide Chthamalus High tide Ocean Ocean Balanus Low tide ? Low tide CONCLUSION FUNDAMENTAL NICHES - WHERE AN ORGANISM CAN LIVE REALIZED NICHES – WHERE AN ORGANISM ACTUALLY LIVES Studying nature • natural history --the study of plants and animals, including where they grow and live, what they eat, or what eats them • These data reflect the status or health of the world in which you live and ultimately you. What is ecology? • Branch of biology that developed from natural history • Study of interactions that take place between organisms and their environment Ecological research • includes using descriptive and quantitative methods – measurement and observation The Biosphere • biosphere -portion of Earth that supports living things • high in the atmosphere to the bottom of the oceans •Organisms affected by both the physical or nonliving environment and by other living things Abiotic factors • nonliving parts of an organism’s environment • effects on living things and often determine which species survive in a particular environment Examples: • • • • • air currents temperature moisture light soil Food production (mg of glucose/hr) Organisms are affected by abiotic factors Food Production in Salt Bush 15 10 5 10 20 30 Temperature (°C) 40 50 Biotic factors • All the living organisms that inhabit an environment. • living organisms affect other living organisms • All organisms depend on others directly or indirectly for food, shelter, reproduction or protection Levels of Organization • Ecologists study – individual organisms, – interactions among organisms of same species, – interactions among organisms of different species, – effects of abiotic factors on interacting species • Levels of organization: – organisms – populations – communities – ecosystems Organism • An individual living thing that is made of cells, uses energy, reproduces, responds, grows, and develops. Interactions within populations • A population - a group of organisms, all of the same species, which interbreed and live in the same area at the same time Interactions within populations • may compete with each other for resources – food, water, mates, or other • Competition always occurs – whether in short supply or not Interactions within communities • Several different populations make up a biological community • interacting in a certain area at a certain time Interactions within communities • A change in one population in a community may cause changes in the other populations. • can be minor – EX: a small increase in number of individuals of one population causes a small decrease in size of another population • can be more extreme – Ex: when size of one population grows so large it begins affecting food supply for another species Ecosystem • Populations of plants and animals that interact with each other in a given area and with the abiotic components of that area. • Includes both biotic and abiotic factors • Two major kinds of ecosystems— – terrestrial ecosystems and aquatic Table 2.1 Examples of Ecosystems Aquatic Other Sites for Terrestrial Ecosystems Ecosystems Ecosystems Human body Freshwater • Forest • Skin • Pond • Old farm field • Intestine • Lake • Meadow • Mouth • Stream • Yard Buildings • Estuary • Mold in walls, • Garden plot floors, or basement Salt water • Empty lot (marine) • Ventilation systems • Compost heap •Bathrooms • Ocean Food • Estuary • Volcano site • Any moldy food • Aquarium • Rotting log • Refrigerator • Freshwater ecosystems include ponds, lakes, and streams. • Salt content less than 3% • Marine or Saltwater • Salt content 3-7% • make up approximately 70% of Earth’s surface. Organisms in Ecosystems • Habitat • place where an organism lives out its life • Supplies food, water, shelter • Supplies its needs Organisms in Ecosystems • Habitats can change, and even disappear • due to both natural and human causes. Niche • Several species may share a habitat • resources are often used in different ways • A niche – the role or position a species has in its environment – how it meets its specific needs for food and shelter – how and where it survives – where it reproduces in its environment Niche • includes all of a species’ interactions with the biotic and abiotic parts of its habitat • Exclusionary Principle – Two species can’t exist for long in the same community if their niches are the same – There must be a variation – Adapt, move or die/extinct Symbiosis • relationship in which there is a close and permanent association between organisms of different species • Symbiosis means living together. • Three kinds – Mutualism – Commensalism – parasitism Mutualism • both species benefit Commensalism • Commensalism • one species benefits and the other species is neither harmed nor benefited Parasitism • harmful to one species, yet beneficial to another. • a member of one species derives benefit at the expense of another species (the host) Parasitism • Parasites have evolved in such a way that they harm, but usually do not kill the host species. Parasitism • A predator is a type of consumer. • Predators seek out and eat other organisms. Parasitism • Predation – found in all ecosystems – includes organisms that eat other • Prey - The animals that predators eat Question 1 The study of interactions that take place between organisms and their environment is __________. A. abiosis B. symbiosis C. ecology D. biology Question 2 Which of the following is found in the biosphere? A. ozone layer B. maria C. the Sun D. constellation Orion Question 3 Which of the following is a biotic factor? A. moisture B. soil C. earthworm D. light Question 4 A(n) __________ is a group of organisms, all of the same species, which interbreed and live in the same place at the same time. A. biological community B. population C. ecosystem D. habitat