Transcript Ecology
Ecology
An Introduction…
Ecology
– the study of the interactions that take
place between organisms and their
environment
What would be considered an organism’s
environment?
2 factors that make up the
environment…
Biotic Factors – all of the
living organisms that
inhabit an environment
all organisms depend
on others directly or
indirectly for:
food
shelter
reproduction
protection
what else?
Abiotic Factors – the nonliving parts of an
organisms environment
air currents
temperature
moisture
light
what else?
Food Chain
• Shows one pathway of energy flow
Food Web
• Shows all of the energy pathways in an
ecosystem
Trophic Levels
Literally means
“energy levels” or
“feeding levels”
Energy is lost at
each trophic level
How much?
Energy Loss
Food Chain In Action
Levels of Organization
From simplest to
most complex…
Organism
individual living
thing
Levels of Organization
Population
group of organisms
all of one species
which live in the
same place at the
same time
Community
all of the populations of
different species that live
at the same place at the
same time
Ecosystem
populations of plants and animals that interact with each
other in a given area at the same time and with the
abiotic components of that area
Biosphere
the portion of
the earth that
supports life
Biosphere
- the portion of the earth that supports living
things
- extends from high in the atmosphere to
the bottom of the oceans
- Shrink the earth to the size of an apple,
the biosphere would be thinner than the
apple’s peel.
Levels of Organization
Organism
▼
Population
▼
Community
▼
Ecosystem
▼
Biosphere
Symbiosis
- Long term relationship that exists between
organisms of different species
(memorize this)
- Animal/Animal?
yes
- Animal/Plant?
yes
- Plant/Plant?
yes
Symbiotic Relationships
• Mutualism – both benefit (+1,+1)
• Commensalism – one benefits, one is
unaffected (neither benefits nor harmed)
(+1,0)
• Parasitism – one benefits, one is harmed
(+1,-1)
Bees drink the nectar from flowers. In doing so,
pollen grains from the flowers collect on the legs
of the bees and are then carried to other flowers.
Mistletoe gets the nutrients that it needs to survive
from the tree that is hosting it. If there are too
many mistletoe on one tree, the tree could die.
Some species of wasp actually lay their
eggs inside the body of a caterpillar. As
they grow and become larvae, they begin
to eat the caterpillar and eventually kill it.
Cattle Egrets (the birds) live on and around livestock.
They eat the mites, ticks, and fleas off of the cattle.
The clown fish can swim into the tentacles of the sea
anemone but will not be paralyzed by its sting. By staying
within the tentacles of the anemone, it is protected from
fish that may prey on it. However, the anemone does not
apparently benefit from this relationship.
Labroides dimidiatus
inspecting the mouth
of a giant moray eel.
L. dimidiatus is better
known as a cleaner
fish. It cleans the
mouth of the eel of
lodged fish
particles…kinda like
a dentist.
Ants and Aphids. The Aphid (plant) gets protection from the ants, while
the ants live off of the honeydew type nectar the plant produces.
Lampreys have disc shaped mouths by which they
attach themselves to fish and literally eat the fish
alive.
Pin Worms in Humans
tapeworms
…