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Ecosystems and Communities Role of Climate • Weather: day-to-day condition of Earth’s atmosphere at a particular time and place. • Climate: the average year-after-year conditions of temperature and precipitation in a particular region. Earth’s Temperature • Co2, methane, water vapor, and other gases trap heat energy and maintain Earth’s temperature. • Greenhouse effect: the natural situation in which heat is retained by the layer of greenhouse gases. Climate Zones • Different because of latitude and angle of heating. • Polar zones: cold areas; sun’s rays strike at very low angle. • Temperate zones: sit between the polar zones and tropics. • Tropical zone: near the equator; climate almost always warm Biotic Factors • The living influences on organisms within an ecosystem. • Ex: birds, trees, bacteria Abiotic Factors • Physical, or nonliving factors that shape ecosystems. • Ex: soil, water, temperature • Together biotic and abiotic factors determine the survival and growth of an organism and how productive that ecosystem is. Habitat • The area where an organism lives. • Niche: role in the ecosystem. – Ex: place in the food chain, temps for survival, how reproduces, types of food eaten. – No two species share the exact same niche Community Interactions • Competition • Predation • Symbiosis Competition • Occurs when organisms attempt to use ecological resources in the same place at the same time. • Resource: any necessity of life, such as water, nutrients, food, or space. • Usually a winner and a loser, with the loser failing to survive. Predation • An interaction in which one organism captures and feeds on another organism. • Predator: the organism that does the killing. • Prey: the organism being hunted. • Any relationship in which two species live closely together. • Mutualism • Commensalism • Parasitism Mutualism • Both species benefit from the relationship. • +/+ • Ex: flowers and insects Commensalism • One member of the association benefits and the other is neither harmed nor helped. • +/0 • Ex: shark and fish, barnacles and whales. Parasitism • One organism lives on or inside another organism and harms it. • The host organism is harmed. • +/• Ex: fleas and ticks Succession • As an ecosystem changes, older inhabitants gradually die out and new organisms move in, causing changes in the community. • Primary succession: succession that occurs on surfaces where no soil exists. • Pioneer species: first species to populate the area. • Secondary succession: occurs when land cleared and plowed for farming is abandoned; or after fires.