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Introduction to Ecology Objectives: • I will be able discuss the interdependence of biotic and abiotic factors. • I will be able to discuss the laws of thermodynamics. Ecology Defined Ecology is the study of interactions between organisms and their environment. Abiotic vs. Biotic Factors The environment includes 2 types of factors: 1. Abiotic factors – the nonliving parts of the environment. Examples: water, oxygen, light, temperature, rocks, minerals, energy 1. Biotic factors – the living parts of the environment. Examples: plants, animals, bacteria, fungi, and protists The Laws of Thermodynamics • The First Law of Thermodynamics states that energy (or matter) cannot be created or destroyed, but can change forms. • The Second Law of Thermodynamics states that every energy transfer increases the entropy (amount of disorder or randomness) = some energy becomes unusable. • In biology entropy is usually referred to as heat. • Closed systems allow energy to enter but matter cannot enter or leave; closed systems are rare in biology. • Each time energy or matter “changes form” energy is conserved but the internal energy of a closed system changes as heat is transferred in or out of it. Abiotic and Biotic Interactions Levels of Organization Arrange the following terms from the smallest to the largest: • Population • Cell • Organ System • Tissue • Molecule • Ecosystem • Community • Organism • Organ • Biosphere Levels of Organization 8 Levels of Organization • Population – a group of organisms of the same species that live together in a certain area. • Community – a group of populations of different species living close enough to interact. • Ecosystem – all living and nonliving components in a certain area. • Biosphere – the entire portion of the planet that supports life. Review Vocabulary Habitat = • Place where an organism lives. • What is the habitat of a mushroom? Niche = • Ecological role and space that an organisms fills in the environment (the way of life of a species). • What is the niche of a sunflower? MATH CONNECTION The biomass (biological material from living or recently living organisms) of a deciduous forest is 50% carbon. Additionally, the biomass increases annually at a rate of 2.7 x 105 kg/hectare. Calculate the mass of carbon accumulated and stored in 1.0 hectare of this forest in one year. Give your answer to the nearest hundredth of 105 kg. Note: 1 hectare = 10,000 square meters or 2.5 acres Summary: • In your own words, paraphrase key points of the lesson. • Focus on the concepts you do not understand well; thinking and writing will help you master them. • You need to have a minimum of five sentences. • Example of a good summary sentence: “There are biotic/living components in environments, such as organisms, and many abiotic/non-living components, such as water and rocks”. • Example of a terrible summary sentence: “Today I learned about laws of thermodynamics.” This sentence only lists the topic and does not show what you know. Please never start with “Today I learned about…” Instead, dive into the explanations right away. There is no space for introductory sentences in your summary sections of notes.