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Standard I Review Ecology Scientific method • • • • Control? Used for comparison (kept constant) Theory vs. hypothesis Theory is a generalization that unifies many scientific observations. • What is the variable? • What you change. Scientists • New evidence often shows that old theories have problems so what should science do? • Modify and revise the old theories. • In developing a valid theory, scientists often use what? • observations and experiments of other scientists • Ex. Evolution (Darwin), Mendel (genetics), cell theory. What is Biotic? What is abiotic? What does the Ecosystem include? Ecosystem = the biotic and abiotic factors combined Biotic factors = living Abiotic factors = nonliving Some examples are? • • • • Examples of biotic factors? Plants, animals, bacteria, fungi, protists Examples of abiotic factors Think of things plants need to survive like water, soil and sun What is a limiting factor? • Abiotic or biotic factors that define weather or not an organism can survive are limiting factors. • Examples of limiting factors are? • food, temperature, water, predators. What is Symbiotic interactions? Can you name them? Can you put these words in order? Individual, Ecosystem, Biome, Population, Community, Biosphere What happens during geographic isolation? • They can no longer mate and exchange genes with the population which can lead to? • Divergent evolution • Speciation. Why do birds migrate? • What do birds gain by migrating to an area with seasonal abundance? • Think of the energy budget. How does energy flow through an ecosystem? What is the primary source of energy for everything? How do animals get nutrients they need? • BY EATING PLANTS!!!! Nutrition and Energy Flow • Autotrophs – Producers – Plants • Heterotrophs – Consumers – – – – Herbivores Carnivores Omnivores Decomposers Food chain • Can you draw a food chain and the arrows showing the way that the energy goes. • What do you need to know? • What the animal eats. • What is the energy molecule (animals)? • ATP • Where is it stored? • In the bonds. Food chains • Food chains show how energy and nutrients flow from autotrophs to heterotrophs then eventually to decomposers. Energy Pyramids 10% gets passed on to each level Notice that you lose 90% at each level. So how much Energy is lost between the primary producers and the tertiary consumers? What trophic level has the most organisms? The least organism s? Most energy? Least energy How do bacteria or decomposers help the nitrogen cycle? Decomposers • Like fungi and bacteria • Break down dead stuff releasing carbon in the form of carbon dioxide And putting nitrogen in the soil in a form that plants can use it. • See page 57. • What does the increase in human population do to the co2 and 02 balance? • Humans breath in what? And take out what? • What kind of things can mess up your Genes or chromosomes? • Radiation type stuff Tropical rain forest Tropical dry forest Tropical savanna Temperate grassland Desert Temperate woodland and Temperate forest Tundra Coniferous forest Mountains and ice caps Taiga Does species diversity increase or decrease as you move towards the equator? • Increase. • Why? • The warm moist climate allows plants to grow all year so that they can support a larger community. What is a likely adaptation of a desert plant? • Anything that will decrease water loss. • One example is a thick waxy layer, spines, no leaves, stomata that close during the day Rain fall • • • • • • • • If it gets less than 10 inches (25 cm) of rain it would be considered a ? desseret If an ecosystem receives 10 – 30 inches (25 – 75 cm it is a? Grassland. If it gets 30 – 60 inches ( 75-150 cm) it is? Temperate forest? If it gets 80 inches (200cm) it is a ? Rainforest. Increase biodiversity • As you move towards the equator. • Rainforest. What is Rapid growth? • expand exponentially and then die). Graphs J curve Growth is slow at first, then increases rapidly Steady rate of increase What is exponential growth? What is Carrying capacity? Carrying capacity What is Carrying capacity • The number of organisms of one species that an environment can support is its carrying capacity. This is when births exceed deaths. • But if the population overshoots the carrying capacity, deaths will exceed births until it levels off . Predator and prey What is the Green house effect? • Carbon dioxide increases in the atmosphere, traps heat and sends it to earth leading to what? • Global warming. • To reduce effect we do what? • Decrease car emissions (this seems to help the most) • Increase miles per gallon • Recycle • reforestation What effect do humans have on the ecosystem? • Create conditions that alter the abiotic factors • Like deforestation – • Desertification – • Pollution. Reintroduction • So when we reintroduce an animal into a new environment we should . . . • Study the animal in its natural environment and notice symbiotic interactions like predatorprey, competition etc. • • How would introducing wolves to an ecosystem effect the elk population? How would introducing wolves effect the grass population? Biodiversity • Which ecosystem has the most biodiversity? • Rainforest – has most • Is more biodiversity better or worse for the ecosystem • BETTER – DUH – it increases stability of an ecosystem.