Download Organisms and their environment lecture 23.1

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Ecology wikipedia , lookup

Biodiversity action plan wikipedia , lookup

Latitudinal gradients in species diversity wikipedia , lookup

Ecological resilience wikipedia , lookup

Reforestation wikipedia , lookup

Ecosystem services wikipedia , lookup

Storage effect wikipedia , lookup

Biogeography wikipedia , lookup

Restoration ecology wikipedia , lookup

List of ecoregions in North America (CEC) wikipedia , lookup

Perovskia atriplicifolia wikipedia , lookup

Habitat conservation wikipedia , lookup

Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project wikipedia , lookup

Farmer-managed natural regeneration wikipedia , lookup

Ecosystem wikipedia , lookup

Natural environment wikipedia , lookup

Habitat wikipedia , lookup

Ecological succession wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
What shapes an ecosystem?
4-1, 4-2 A
Greenhouse effect
• CO2, methane,
water vapor
trap heat
energy
• Maintains
Earth’s temp
range
• Solar E is
trapped, heat E
doesn’t escape
into space
Latitude
effects
• Cause: Angle of sun’s heating and tilt of the earth
• Effect: Earth has 3 major climate zones
Polar
Temperate
Tropical
Heat
transport
Habitat = address
• Biotic factors:
All other living things in
the community
• Abiotic factors:
climate, temp, rainfall,
nutrients, sunlight
• Both determine
survival and growth of
organisms
Niche = job
• What it eats
• Place in the food
web
• Physical conditions
it needs to survive
• How it reproduces
Competition
• No two species can
share the same niche
in the same habitat.
• Ex: 3 types of warbler
share the same tree,
but feed at different
places to decrease
their competition
Figure 4-5 Three Species of Warblers and
Their Niches
Section 4-2
Cape May Warbler
Feeds at the tips of branches
near the top of the tree
Bay-Breasted Warbler
Feeds in the middle
part of the tree
Spruce tree
Yellow-Rumped Warbler
Feeds in the lower part of the tree and
at the bases of the middle branches
Succession
• A series of predictable
changes to an
ecosystem, in
response to natural or
human disturbances
• Primary: begins
where no soil exists
• Secondary: change
after a disturbance
like fire or farming
Succession at Mt. St. Helens following a volcanic eruption
Succession: from pioneer species
to climax forest
Lichens, moss create soil for succeeding plant species
Marine succession
• A whale dies and
sinks to the ocean
floor
• Fishes will eat the
meat
• Amphipods, worms,
bacteria complete the
process of releasing
nutrients back into the
ecosystem