Transcript Ecology

Emily Zhu, Trevor Kelly, Hanna Hoyt,
Benton Bickett
Period 2
• The scientific study of interactions among organisms and
between organisms and their environment or surroundings.
• An individual is a single organism of a certain species.
• A group of organisms that are similar enough to breed and
produce fertile offspring.
• A group of individuals that belong to the same species and live
in the same area.
• A collection of different populations that live in a defined area.
• A collection of all the organisms that live in a particular place
together with their nonliving or physical environment.
• A group of ecosystems that have the same climate and similar
dominant communities.
• Contains the combined portions of the planet in which all life
exists, including land water and atmosphere.
• A producer is an organism that can produce their own food by
capturing light from the sun. Also called Autotrophs
• A consumer is an organism that relies on other organisms for
their energy and food supply. Also called Heterotrophs.
A diagram that shows the relative amount of
energy or matter contained within each trophic
level in a food chained or web.
• Energy
• Biomass
• Population
• Shows the relative
amount of energy
available at each
trophic level.
• Shows the amount
of organic matter
at each trophic
level.
• Shows the relative
number of individual
organisms at each
trophic level.
• A chart that describes the relationships among the various
organisms in an ecosystem that form a network of complex
interactions.
• Habitat: where a population lives
• Niche: the role a population fills in an ecosystem.
• Predation: when one organism captures and feeds on another
organism.
• Symbiosis: where 2 species live together closely.
• Mutualism: where both species benefit from the relationship.
• Commensalism: when one member benefits and the other is
neither harmed nor helped.
• Parasitism: where one organism lives on or inside another
organism and harms it.
• A series of changes in a community in which new populations
of organisms gradually replace the existing ones.
Primary
The colonization of new sites, which
takes place on bare rock with no soil.
Takes a very long time.
Secondary
The colonization of an existing site that
was disrupted by natural disasters or
human actions. Takes place on existing
soil. Much quicker than primary
succession.
Growth rate: # of births + #of deaths
population
Carrying capacity: the actual number of organisms that the
environment can support.
Limiting factors: environmental variables that limit the number of
individuals in a population (food, space, water, predators)
A.)an ecosystem
B.) a biome.
C.) the biosphere
D.) ecology
A.) energy pyramid
B.) pyramid of numbers
C.) biomass pyramid
D.) biogeochemical cycle
A.) rely on other organisms for their energy and food supply
B.) consume plant and animal remains and other dead matter
C.) use energy they take in from the environment to convert inorganic molecules into
complex organic molecules
D.) obtain energy by eating only plants
A.) An organism that breaks down and obtains energy from dead organic matter
B.) Organism that can capture energy from sunlight or chemicals and use it to produce its
own food from inorganic compounds
C.) Organism that obtains energy from the foods it consumes
D.) tiny, free-floating organisms that occur in aquatic environments
A.) the owl and the bird
B.) the mouse and the dragonfly
C.) the sunflower
D.) the ladybug, grass hopper, and caterpillar
A.) Birds, grass, temperature
B.) soil, insects, grass
C.) Birds, grass, insects
D.) temperature, soil
A.) Mutualism
B.) Commensalism
C.) Parasitism
D.) Symbiosis
A.) Primary Succession
B.) Secondary Succession
C.) Ecological Succession
D.) None of the above
A.) Ecosystem
B.) Community
C.) Population
D.) Biosphere
A.) human disturbances
B.) Immigration
C.) predation
D.) both A and C
1.) C
2.) C
3.) C
4.) A
5.) D
6.) C
7.) B
8.) B
9.) C
10.) D