Transcript Ecology
S. Dickinson
Biology HHS
Ecology is the scientific study of interactions
among organisms and between organisms and
their environment/surroundings
The living world is a household
Biosphere is the part of the earth in which all
life exists
Interactions produce interdependence
Interdependence contributes to change
Species/Individual – can breed and produce
fertile offspring (already have)
Population – groups of same species in same
area
Community – different populations that live
in an area
Ecosystem – collection of organisms and their
environment
Biome – group of ecosystems with same
climate
Biosphere – earth
Can a group of rabbits and a group of field mice
make up the same population in an ecosystem?
Why/Why not?
No, because individuals that make up a __________
must be of the same ________.
Could a biome in Brazil near the equator be the same
as a biome in northern Canada? Explain.
No, because those two biomes would have different
climates and different dominant communities
Observing
Experimenting
Modeling
Since ecological phenomena occur over long
periods of time or on large spatial scale, need
modeling because difficult to study
Matter and energy flow through living and
nonliving systems
How do organisms at each trophic level get the
nutrients and energy they need to function?
One of the most important factors that
determines the system’s capacity to sustain
life
Sunlight is the main energy source for life on
earth
Some organisms rely on the energy stored in
inorganic chemical compounds
Mineral water
Cannot harness energy directly from the
physical environment
Need to eat other organisms for energy
Energy flows from sun to heterotrophs
through autotrophs
Food chains show one way flow of energy
How energy stored by producers can be passed
through an ecosystem
Food webs show all feeding relationships in
an ecosystem
Producers make up the first trophic level
Each consumer relies on the trophic level
below it.
How is a food web
different from a food
chain?
A food web contains
many overlapping
food chains, so it is
much more complex
than a single food
chain
In energy pyramids, only about 10% of the
energy available within one trophic level is
transferred to the next trophic level
The other 90% is lost as heat
At the lab tables you have scenarios.
It is your group’s job to sort these
scenarios according to their
appropriate symbiotic relationship.
When you think you have it, call me
over to check you.
GOOD LUCK!
Matter is recycled within and between
ecosystems
Matter is not used up, but transformed
Matter is recycled within and between
ecosystems
Energy flows one way
Biological systems transform matter
Biogeochemical cycles connect biological,
geological, and chemical aspects of the
biosphere
Pass the same molecules around again and
again within the biosphere
How elements, chemical compounds, and other
forms of matter are passed
How can a molecule that’s swallowed by a
dung beetle “combine into” – or become part of
– the body tissue of a tree shrew and then an
owl?
The tree shrew takes in the molecule when it
eats the dung beetle, then an owl takes in the
molecule when it eats the tree shrew.
Water moves between the ocean, atmosphere,
and land through transpiration, evaporation,
condensation, precipitation, runoff, seepage,
and root uptake
Figure 3-11
What are two ways that water can enter the
atmosphere?
Evaporation and transpiration
What process moves water from the air to the
ground?
Precipitation
What are two routes by which water might make its
way to the ocean?
Runoff and Seepage
Every living organism needs nutrients to
build tissues and carry out essential life
functions
Like water, nutrients are passed between
organisms and the environment
Carbon is key ingredient of living tissue
Carbon can take on many forms in many
compounds; ex. Calcium carbonate
Also a component of carbon dioxide
1.
2.
Biological processes, ex. Photosynthesis,
respiration, decomposition, take up and
release carbon and oxygen
Geochemical processes, ex. Erosion and
volcanic activity, release carbon dioxide into
the atmosphere and oceans
3.
4.
Mixed biogeochemical processes, ex. Burial
and decomposition of dead organisms and
their conversion under pressure into coal and
petroleum, store carbon underground
Human activities, ex. Mining, cutting and
burning forests, and burning fossil fuels,
release carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
Be able to “translate” diagrams pictures, labels,
and arrows into complete sentences
Nitrogen is required to make amino acids
Used to build proteins
Nitrogen in many forms occurs naturally in the
biosphere
Nitrogen gas – 78% of earth’s atmosphere
Ammonia – nitrogen containing substance
Nitrate and nitrite ions – in wastes produced by
many organisms and in dead and decaying organic
matter
Bacteria convert nitrogen gas into ammonia
Live in soil and on the roots of plants called
legumes
Convert ammonia into nitrates and nitrites
used by plants to make proteins
Then eaten by consumers and so on
Bacteria in general
Some cause disease
Some live inside and help with digestion
Some decompose
Some are producers
Decomposers return nitrogen to soil as
ammonia
Some bacteria take ammonia and use it to
convert nitrates into nitrogen gas
Be able to “translate” diagrams pictures, labels,
and arrows into complete sentences
What types of information are given on the nutrition
label?
Serving size, total number of servings in container,
specific nutrients, amount of the nutrient in one
serving, percentage of daily value each amount
represents
What do you think a “daily value” is?
How much of a nutrient a person should take in each
day
What does percentage of daily value mean?
How much daily value is in one serving of the
vitamin
Skittles