* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Scientific Method For centuries, people based their beliefs on their
Overexploitation wikipedia , lookup
Introduced species wikipedia , lookup
Molecular ecology wikipedia , lookup
Latitudinal gradients in species diversity wikipedia , lookup
Biodiversity action plan wikipedia , lookup
Island restoration wikipedia , lookup
Storage effect wikipedia , lookup
Reconciliation ecology wikipedia , lookup
Habitat conservation wikipedia , lookup
Human impact on the nitrogen cycle wikipedia , lookup
Natural environment wikipedia , lookup
Scientific Method For centuries, people based their beliefs on their interpretations of what they saw going on in the world around them without testing their ideas using the scientific method. Their conclusions were based on untested observations. Scientific Method Since the time of Aristotle (4th Century BC), people believed that simple organisms could come into being by spontaneous generation. This was the idea that non-living objects can give rise to living organisms. Spontaneous Generation Observation: Every year in the spring, the Nile River flooded areas of Egypt along the river, leaving behind nutrient-rich mud that enabled the people to grow that year’s crop of food. Along with the muddy soil, large numbers of frogs Appeared that had not been there in drier times. “Conclusion”: It was obvious that muddy soil gave rise to the frogs. Spontaneous Generation Observation: In many parts of Europe, medieval farmers stored grain in barns with thatched roofs. As a roof aged, it was not uncommon for it to leak. This could lead to spoiled or moldy grain, and lots of mice. “Conclusion”: It was obvious that the mice came from the moldy grain. Spontaneous Generation From this came a number of interesting recipes, such as: Recipe for bees: Kill a young bull, and bury it in an upright position so that its horns protrude from the ground. After a month, a swarm of bees will fly out of the corpse. Recipe for mice: Place a dirty shirt or some rags in an open pot containing a few grains of wheat, and in 21 days adult mice will appear. Scientific Method Scientific Method We guess what the answer to the problem might be: this is called the hypothesis Scientific Method We execute an experiment to test the validity of the hypothesis. Experiments must include a control and be able to be replicated Scientific Method Results Scientific Method Replication Scientific Method Components of Experiment Scientific Method Cyclical nature of the scientific method Levels of organization Atoms Water molecule Levels of organization Cell Levels of organization Tissue Levels of organization Organ Organ System Levels of organization Organism Population Levels of organization Community Ecosystem Levels of organization Biosphere Ecology: The study of how all species in an area interact with each other and the environment Organism Ecosystem Population Biosphere Community Symbiosis Mutualism Commensalism Competition Predation and Parasitism Energy flows through Ecosystems Recall the laws of Thermodynamics. #1 Energy is never gained or lost, only transformed. #2 Energy flows spontaneously in one directions, from ordered to less ordered. Heat is the ultimate destination of all energy. Energy in an ecosystem starts with the sun and flows through a given ecosystem. Model of an ecosystem showing the one-way flow of energy and the cycling of nutrients between autotrophic and heterotrophic organisms. Most of the energy originally fixed by the autotrophs is lost to the environment as metabolic heat. Food chain and trophic lines Simple Food Chains Food web Diatoms and dinoflagellates are single-celled photosynthetic organisms. They are part of the marine phytoplankton, which is the basis of most marine food webs. The phytoplankton synthesize at least 35 percent of all food made by photosynthesis. Pyramid of biomass and energy flow STOP Exponential or J-shaped growth curve Bacteria can grow exponentially Logistic or S-shaped growth curve Carrying capacity “K” Equilibrium Real World Population Curve Birth Rate – Death Rate Birth Rate Number of individuals born in a given time period (expressed as a proportion of the whole) Population is 1000 Number of births = 100 Birth rate is 10% or 0.10 Death Rate Number of individuals that die in a given time Population is 1000 Number of deaths = 80 Death rate is 8% or 0.08 r or intrinsic rate of increase Birth – death = r Intrinsic rate of increase Can use this number to predict what will happen to the population in the future. If r = 2 If r = 6 1000, 1020, 1420 1000, 1060, 3200 If r < 0 population is in decline A Population’s Potential for Growth Carrying Capacity or K The maximum population density of a given species that a given geographic area can sustain over time. Environmental Resistance begins to assert itself. K can be used to predict change in a population’s size (mathematic formula). Exceeding the Carrying Capacity Reproductive Strategies Characteristics that have the effect of increasing the number of fertile offspring that an organism bears. K - selected species (large species) limited by carrying capacity pressures are density dependent biological forces r – selected species (small species) limited by their reproductive rate pressures are density independent physical forces (rain, temperature, etc.) Not a perfect theory, there are exceptions. These affect K-selected species most These affect r-selected species most Survivorship Curves late loss, constant loss, early loss Also referred to as Type I, Type II, Type III Human Population Survivorship Curves Originally developed by British actuaries for life-insurance companies Also called population pyramids Population growth in a sampling of different countries Rate of human growth, estimated to be 9 billion by 2050. Age structure diagrams for the United States population. Gold bars track the baby boomer generation. Exponential growth of the human population Today it appears to be stabilizing. Human Population and the Environment Humans are the greatest threat to the environment. The use of natural resources (per person) Amount of waste pumped into the environment Reduction of the species habitat Decimation of species through hunting and fishing Communities Where populations interact Biodiversity, variety among living things 3 types Variety in a given area or species diversity Variety in populations around the globe or geographic diversity Variety within the genetics of a population or genetic diversity Effects of Diversity More productive community A measure of how much of the sun’s energy is used by plants to make living material or biomass A more stable community Species diversity leads to more stable communities Habitat – the physical surroundings in which a species can be found (neighborhood) Niche – a characterization of an organism’s way of making a living (habitat, food, behavior) Interspecific competition – competition between two or more species Usually indirect, a competition for resources Competitive Exclusion Principle – when two or more species compete for resources, one will outcompete and extinction will follow. Competitive exclusion in Paramecium species Grown separately Grown together Resource Partitioning Resource partitioning among root systems of weeds. Dividing up scarce resources among species that have similar requirements. Predation Predator – Prey Dynamics Social parasite: Cuckoo bird Mimicry The ability to fool opponent, one species evolves to assume the appearance of another A mimic, a model and a dupe Batesian mimicry – the evolution of one species to resemble a species with a superior protective capability. Müllerian mimicry – several species with protection against predators come to resemble each other. Example of a model and its mimics Fly Beetle Stingless wasp Batesian mimics Yellow jacket model Two South American butterflies are different in some ways but both taste bad to predators. Over time, they evolved to look alike. Covevolution Interdependent evolution of two or more species. Flowers and bees Fragrance to attract UV color patterns to guide The bee’s color vision evolved in response to the plant coloration. Camouflage When approached by a predator, the bittern thrusts its beak in the air and sways like the reeds that surround it. Examples of camouflage Prey Predators Lithops, hiding from herbivores Warning Coloration Succession In ecology, a series of replacements of community members at a given location until a stable final state is reached. Primary succession – succession in which the starting state is one of little or no life and a soil that lacks nutrients Secondary succession – the final state of a habitat has been disturbed by some force, but life remains and the soil has nutrients. Common Elements Lichens and photosynthetic bacteria are pioneer species A steady increase in Biomass General movement towards longer-lived species Trend towards species diversity Facilitation of the growth of some later species through the actions of earlier species Competition drives out other species Primary succession Glacial retreat Volcanic island Land surfaces consisting of rock, lava, volcanic ash, sand, clay, or some other exclusively mineral substrate. The soil lacks nutrients Primary succession Secondary succession fire abandoned farmland Secondary succession is caused by fire, flood, windstorm, abandoned cropland. Secondary succession Biochemical Cycling Water and nutrients move back and forth between biotic and abiotic realms. Carbon, nitrogen, sulfur, phosphate, water all have complex biochemical cycles. All the elements we will ever possess are on the earth now. The question is, where are they? Carbon Cycle Carbon is used by all living organisms. The most carbon is stored in the tissues of living organisms. Only 0.035% of the atmosphere is CO2 Carbon reservoirs Carbon Cycle The level of carbon dioxide in the earth's atmosphere is increasing as a result of the burning of fossil fuels and the removal of vegetation that could use it for photosynthesis. Reconstruction of a Carboniferous forest. Fossil fuels, including coal, petroleum (oil), and natural gas, are the remains of plants that lived millions of years ago. It took millions of years to convert such vegetation to usable fuels. Nitrogen Cycle Nitrogen is used by living organisms to make protein and nucleic acids (RNA and DNA) Most of the Nitrogen is found in our atmosphere (80% of the atmosphere is Nitrogen) Plants cannot directly access the atmospheric nitrogen. Bacteria fixes atmospheric nitrogen and makes it available to plants. Nitrogen Cycle Legumes such as peas, soybeans, and clover interact with mutualistic, nitrogen-fixing bacteria. The bacteria enter the root and take up residence in root nodules. These soybean plants are growing in nitrogen-poor soil. The plants on the right were inoculated with Rhizobium, one type of nitrogen-fixing bacterium. Notice that they are much larger and greener than the uninoculated plants on the left. Phosphorus Cycle Found in ATP and DNA Does not have atmospheric reservoir Always attached to oxygen Phosphorus Cycle Cycling of Water Water is stored in ice and in the oceans (95%). The ocean water evaporates and falls back to earth as rain. Water is also cycled through transpiration. 1 billion people lack access to sanitary water. 70% of the groundwater we withdraw goes to agricultural irrigation, a very inefficient process. Hydrologic cycle Hydrologic cycle Human Impact on Resources a. Nearly a quarter of the current atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration is produced by human activity, primarily through the burning of fossil fuels b. Over half of terrestrial nitrogen fixation comes about because of some human activity, including the manufacture of fertilizer for agriculture. c. Over half of the Earth’s accessible surface water is now diverted for use by humans, mostly for agriculture. Composition of Earth’s atmosphere Malignant melanoma, a type of skin cancer that can be fatal. Exposure to ultraviolet light is the major risk factor for the development of such cancers. Unless CFCs (ozone-depleting chemicals) are reduced, the rates of such cancers will rise. Nonrenewable energy sources Nuclear Coal, oil, natural gas Renewable energy sources Solar Hydrogen Geothermal Wind Biodegradable Capable of being broken down in nature Recyclable Possible to use again; can be reprocessed to form a new product Biomes Biomes Tundra Biomes Deciduous forest Taiga or Coniferous Forest Biomes Grasslands biome Biomes Kansas prairie African savannah Organisms in similar biomes, even on different continents are strikingly similar Chaparral Biomes Desert biome Tropical rainforest Ocean zones Coral Reefs Temperate Nearshore Ecosystems Estuary Intertidal Zone Lake zonation photic zone An oligotrophic lake. Such newly formed lakes are nutrient-poor, with low primary productivity. They tend to be deep, with steep banks and crystal-clear water. photic zone A eutrophic lake. Such lakes are nutrient-rich, with high primary productivity. They tend to be shallow, and the water tends to be of limited transparency. In warm summer months, the bottom of a eutrophic lake may become depleted of dissolved oxygen Wetlands