Ecology - My CCSD
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Transcript Ecology - My CCSD
Ecology
Observing nature
Ecology
The scientific study of interactions among
organisms and their environments
Includes descriptive and quantitative data
to learn about relationships
Ecology
Biosphere – portion of Earth that
supports life
From high in atmosphere to bottom of
oceans
Ecology
Ecology includes non-living parts of
environment = abiotic factors
Temperature,
moisture,
air currents,
light, soil
Ecology
Living organisms in an environment are
the biotic factors
Living things affect others
Ecology
Levels of organization
To understand relationships you have to
look at more than one individual
Population
Community
Ecosystem
Levels of Organization
Population is a group of organisms of
one species that interbreed and live in
the same place at the same time
Individual frogs might
compete for the
same food source
Levels of Organization
Community is a collection of interacting
populations
A change in one population may cause
change in another population
more frogs = fewer flies
Levels of Organization
While population and communities
interact, they both interact with their
environment
An ecosystem is made up of interactions
among the populations in a community
and the physical surroundings,
or abiotic factors
Levels of Organization
Ecosystems
Terrestrial = on land, forest, meadow, desert
Aquatic = in water, 75% of Earth
Freshwater = pond, lake, stream
Saltwater = ocean
Ecology
Organisms in Ecosystems
Organisms in Ecosystems
Habitat is the place where an organism
lives out its life.
Prairie dog burrows in a grassland
Birds in trees of a beech-maple forest
Organisms in Ecosystems
Niche is the role a species has in its
environment
Several species may live in the same
place, but use different
resources = their
specialized niche
Organisms in Ecosystems
Some species improve changes of
survival by forming relationships with
other species
Some relationships benefit one, harm
other, like predator/prey relationship
Symbiosis = living together, close
relationship between species
Organisms in Ecosystems
There are several kinds of symbiosis
Commensalism
Mutualism
Parasitism
Organisms in Ecosystems
Commensalism = a symbiotic relationship
in which one species benefits and the
other is neither harmed not benefited
Clownfish lives
amongst stinging
anemone for
protection
Organisms in Ecosystems
Mutualism = a symbiotic relationship in
which both species benefit
Ants get nectar from acacia trees and attack
any animal that tries to eat from tree. This
protection allows trees to live longer.
Organisms in Ecosystems
Parasitism = a symbiotic relationship in
which one organism benefits at expense
of other organism.
Tick, flea, mosquito