ENVIRONMENT IS CALLED ECOLOGY

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Transcript ENVIRONMENT IS CALLED ECOLOGY

PAP Bio 8/31-9/4
Don’t forget to
do you jobs!!!!!
• WU
• Biosphere
PowerPoint
• Study and work
on objectives
HW: No change in tb reading and assigned SG pgs
Computer/copier paper
Optional Project: Biomes Foldable due 9/17-18
Ecology
THE STUDY OF THE RELATIONSHIP
BETWEEN AN ORGANISM AND
ITS’ ENVIRONMENT IS CALLED
ECOLOGY
Biosphere
• While the earth is huge, life is found in a
very narrow layer, called the biosphere. If
the earth could be shrunk to the size of an
apple, the biosphere would be no thicker
than the apple's skin.
• The biosphere, like the human body, is
made up of systems that interact and are
dependent on each other.
Ecosystem
• The biosphere’s systems are called
ECOSYSTEMS.
• All ecosystems must have a constant source
of energy (usually the sun) and cycles or
systems to reuse raw materials. Examples are
the water, nitrogen and carbon cycles.
• An ecosystem is made up of all the biotic or
living and the abiotic or non-living
components in a given area.
Abiotic Factors
The nonliving things
in an environment are
called ABIOTIC
factors.
Examples of abiotic
factors are sunlight ,
temperature, rainfall,
climate and soil
conditions.
Biotic Factors
• Biotic factors are all the living things or their
materials that directly or indirectly affect an
organism in its environment. This would include
organisms, their presence, parts, interaction, and
wastes. Factors such as parasitism, disease, and
predation (one animal eating another) would
also be classified as biotic factors.
Some Biotic Factors
• parasitism
• disease
• predation
Population
• A population is all the members of a
given species in a given area.
Example - All the turtles in Town Lake.
Community
• Community - all the species in a given
area.
Example - all the living things in Town
Lake
Ecological Niche
• A plant's or animal's ecological niche is
a way of life that is unique to that species.
• Niche and habitat are not the same. While
many species may share a habitat, this is
not true of a niche. Each plant and animal
species is a member of a community.
• The niche describes the species' role or
function within this community.
• For example, the red fox's habitat, which might
include forest edges, meadows and the bank of a
river, is shared with many animals .
• The niche of the red fox is that of a predator which
feeds on the small mammals, amphibians, insects, and
fruit found in this habitat. Red foxes are active at
night. They provide blood for blackflies and
mosquitoes, and are host to numerous diseases. The
scraps, or carrion, left behind after a fox's meal
provide food for many small scavengers and
decomposers. This, then, is the ecological niche of the
red fox.
• Only the red fox occupies this niche in the meadow-
forest edge communities. In other plant communities
different species of animal may occupy a similar niche
to that of the red fox.