Transcript File

Principles of Ecology
Ecology: Scientific study of how
organisms and their surrounding
environments interact
Abiotic vs. biotic factors –
presence/absence of these define levels of organization
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Abiotic – nonliving parts of an orgs
surrounding environment
Ex. Soil, moisture, light, temperature
(though nonliving, abiotic factors are an important part
of an organism’s life…)
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Biotic – all of the living organisms that live
in a particular area under consideration.
Ex. Goldfish in a bowl, other goldfish,
plants, algae
Levels of Organization
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Individual organism
Ex. One frog
Species
Ex. Bullfrogs
group of organisms so similar to one another that they can
breed and produce FERTILE offspring.
Population
Ex. Bullfrogs in a pond
group of organisms of ONE species that interbreed and live in
the same area at the same time.
Community
Ex. Bullfrogs, fish, insects, algae in that pond
made up of several populations that interact in the same area
Ecosystem
Ex. Pond ecosystem
collection of ALL the living things that live in a particular place
together with their physical environment
Biome
Ex. Tropical rainforest
group of ecosystems with the same climate and similar
dominant communities
Biosphere:
Ex. Earth and atmosphere above it
Consists of the portion of Earth that supports life. (includes
land, water, atmosphere)
Organisms in Ecosystems
where an org lives its day-
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Habitat – place
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Niche – the role and position a species occupies
in its habitat or location. HOW it lives in
to-day life.
(habitats can change dramatically due
to natural or man-made effects:
Ex. fire because of lightning or
careless campers...
the habitat…This includes all of the org’s
interactions with the living and nonliving parts of
the habitat.
Ex. Earthworms act as decomposers
Interactions in Ecosystems
Resource Availability and
competitive exclusion
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Gives structure to a community
Many species can share similar habitats and use
some of the same resources…
BUT, when two species use the same resources in
the same ways, Competitive exclusion comes in
to play:
DEF: when 2 species are competing for the same
resources, one species will be better suited to the
niche and the other species will be pushed into
another niche or become extinct
Ex. NA Gray squirrel vs. Red squirrel in Great Britain
Gray is larger, more aggressive
Other outcomes of competitive
exclusion….
 Niche
partitioning:
Natural division of resources based on
competitive advantages
Ex. One squirrel eats nuts from top of tree, one squirrel eats
nuts from the ground
 Evolutionary
response:
Divergent evolution (body forms
change over time)
Ex. Large teeth for large nuts, small teeth for small nuts
What happens in different
communities:
 Ecological
equivalents:
Species that occupy similar niches but
live in different geographical regions
Ex. Poison dart frog of SA
and
Mantella frog of Madagascar
Community Interactions
 Competition
 Predation
 Symbiosis
*for tomorrow’s lab, we will deal with
the symbiosis considerations….
Living Together –
species interactions
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Symbiosis – relationship where there are
close and long-lasting associations
between orgs of different species
Types of symbiotic relationships:
a. parasitism
b. commensalism
c. mutualism
Parasitism
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Symbiotic relationship where one
organism benefits and another organism is
harmed.
Ex. Ticks on a dog
-- tick gets food source, dog gets
hole in protective skin layer and possible
infection
Ex. Tapeworms in intestine
-- tapeworm absorbs nutrients in
pre-digested form, host loses weight, and
host never gets the nutrition that it
needs (malnutrition)
Each section of a tapeworm’s
body is called a
PROGLOTTID and
contains a full set of
reproductive organs…
Commensalism
 Symbiotic
relationship where one
species benefits and another is
neither harmed nor helped
Ex. Barnacles attached to a whale
-barnacles get a free ride to
areas where food is
available
Mutualism
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Symbiotic relationship where both species
involved benefit from the association.
Ex. Ants and acacia trees
– ants get shelter and nectar from
plant as food, plants get
protection from predators
Ex. sponges attached to crab shell
-- sponges get moved to new area
to filter food from water,
crab gets portable
camouflage