Transcript Chapter 3
The
Biosphere
Chapter 3
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Biotic
= living
Plants, animals, bacteria, fungus,
etc…
Abiotic
= non-living
Rocks, water, air, temperature,
sunlight, dirt, etc..
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3-1 What is Ecology?
Ecology
= scientific study of interactions
among organisms and between organisms
and their environment
The biosphere contains the combined
portions of the planet in which all of life
exists, including land, water, and air, or
atmosphere.
8 kilometers above Earth's surface to as far
as 11 kilometers below the surface of the
ocean.
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Levels of Organization
Individual
= a single organism of a
species (a species is a group of organisms
so similar to one another that they can
breed and produce fertile offspring)
Population = groups of individuals that
belong to the same species and live in the
same area.
Community = groups of different
populations that live together in a defined
area.
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An
ecosystem is a collection of all
the organisms that live in a particular
place, together with their nonliving, or
physical, environment.
A biome is a group of ecosystems
that have the same climate and
similar dominant communities.
A biosphere = highest level = all the
biomes combined
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3–2 Energy Flow
Autotroph
(Producer) = organism
that can capture energy from sunlight
or chemicals and use it to produce its
own food from inorganic compounds
Photoautotrophs (photosynthesis)
• Plants, protists
Chemoautotrophs (chemosynthesis)
• bacteria
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Consumers
Heterotrophs
(consumers) =
Organisms that rely on other
organisms for their energy and food
supply
Types of consumers:
Herbivores
Carnivores
Omnivores
Detritivores
Decomposers
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Feeding Relationships
the sun or inorganic compounds
autotrophs (producers) various
heterotrophs (consumers)
from
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Food Chains
a
series of steps in which organisms
transfer energy by eating and being eaten
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Food Webs
network
of complex interactions
formed by the feeding relationships
among the various organisms in an
ecosystem
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Trophic Levels
step
in a food chain or
food web
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Ecological Pyramids
a
diagram that shows the relative amounts
of energy or matter contained within each
trophic level in a food chain or food web
There are 3 different kinds of pyramids:
1.Energy
Pyramids
2.Biomass Pyramids
3.Pyramids of Numbers
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Energy Pyramid
Shows
the relative amounts of energy
available at each trophic level.
Organisms store about 10% of this energy;
90% is used up in life processes
Much energy is lost as heat.
Therefore, usually 4-6 levels in an energy
pyramid.
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Biomass Pyramid
Represents
the amount of living organic
matter at each trophic level.
grams of organic matter per unit area
represents the amount of potential food
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Pyramid of Numbers
Shows
the relative number of individual
organisms at each trophic level.
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Water Cycle
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The Carbon Cycle
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The Nitrogen Cycle
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The Phosphorus Cycle
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