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200 Unit 12—Ecology (& Populations) Ch. 30 Populations & Communities (sec. 1 & 4) Populations, Communities, & Ecosystems • What is a population? – All organisms of same type (species) living in an area • What is a community? – All different organisms (populations) living in an area • What is an ecosystem? – A community interacting with the non-living (abiotic) factors in an area Population Changes • What can cause an increase in the population size of an area? – births – immigration Population Changes • What can cause a decrease in the population size of an area? – deaths – emigration Visualizing Population Structures & Predicting Future Changes • population pyramids (a.k.a. age structure diagrams) – basic shape can help us predict what’s going to happen to the population in the future… – What do you think will happen to the population in each pyramid??? How Population Pyramids Are Made Video Animated Population Pyramid Rapid Growth Guatemala Nigeria Saudi Arabia Ages 0-14 Slow Growth Zero Growth Negative Growth U. S. Spain Germany Australia Austria Bulgaria Canada Greece Sweden Ages 15-44 Ages 45+ Population growth rate by country Population Pyramids (Age Structure Diagrams) Developing Countries – wide base – high #s of pre- & reproductive age • high birth rates – fast growth Census Bureau International Data-Pyramids Developed Countries – slightly wider base, width is same, or inverted pyramid – lower #s of pre- & reproductive age – low birth rates • slow growth, zero growth, negative growth (pop. shrinks) Population Clock Population Growth • Types of population growth: Exponential Growth – exponential growth • represents species’ biotic potential – ideal conditions – logistic growth • population reaches “carrying capacity” Logistic Growth point of maximum growth Population Growth • Why don’t populations increase forever? – limiting factors • provide environmental resistance • prevent population from growing indefinitely – reach “carrying capacity” • can be: – abiotic (non-living) – biotic (living) Examples of Abiotic Limiting Factors Examples of Biotic Limiting Factors • living factors in an ecosystem Biotic Limiting Factors • usually described in terms of interactions – especially who eats whom or trophic levels Decomposers are heterotrophs & must be part of every ecosystem to break down dead material & recycle nutrients! Energy Flow: Food Chains h e t e r o t r o p h s Fourth trophic level Tertiary consumers Carnivores/omnivores Third trophic level Secondary consumers carnivores Second trophic level Primary consumers herbivores First trophic level Decomposers are Primary producers autotrophs heterotrophs & must be part of every ecosystem to break down dead material & recycle nutrients! Energy Flow: Food Chains Food Web Interactive • Does energy only flow through individual organisms? – No… through community • in food chains & webs ***Arrow always points toward organism taking in energy & away from the organism “giving up” energy. Where do almost all communities get their energy? Energy Flow: Energy Pyramids • Energy cannot be recycled, it can only be transferred & transformed. – ~90% is lost as heat &/or used by previous organism for life functions – ~10% passed to next level • 10% Rule of Ecological Efficiency Lost Energy Lost Energy 20 J 80 Amount of energy passed on to the next level. Energy Flow: Food Chains • Another name for autotrophs? – producers • How do they get nutrients? – make their own food (sugars) • most by photosynthesis – What is the equation for photosynthesis? Energy Flow: Food Chains Another name for heterotrophs? consumers How do they get nutrients? absorption ingestion Energy Flow: Food Chains • Types of heterotrophs? – herbivores (eat plants) – carnivores (eat animals) • scavengers (feed on dead animals) – ex. vultures, buzzards, crabs – omnivores (eat plants & animals) – decomposers (break down dead material & recycle nutrients) • Must be part of EVERY ecosystem! Nutrients in An Ecosystem • Nutrients can be recycled! – Biogeochemical or nutrient cycles • Ex. carbon cycle & nitrogen cycle • Decomposers play major role… Carbon Cycle Other Relationships in a Community Predation Competition • one organism benefits• both organisms are (predator), the other is harmed (not necessarily harmed & usually killed) (-, -) killed (prey) (+, -) Other Relationships in a Community • symbiosis – when 2 species live closely together in a relationship over (a long) time • commensalism • mutualism • parasitism Other Relationships in a Community: Commensalism • one partner benefits from the relationship & the other neither benefits, nor is harmed (+, 0) Other Relationships in a Community: Mutualism • both partners benefit from the relationship (+, +) Other Relationships in a Community: Parasitism • one partner benefits (parasite) & the other is harmed, but not usually killed (host) (+, -)